Updated 10:01 a.m.
Good Friday morning to you.
It is still cold: 30 degrees at 10 a.m. But it will warm up a bit.
With all the grim news out there â" the search for survivors in East Harlem, a scathing report on Metro-North â" we were looking for something less unsettling.
We found it in nature.
Thursday was rough.
Painfully cold, terrifically windy.
Imagine if you were a flower.
âThe poor little witch hazels were all curled up,â said Kristin Schleiter, the senior curator of outdoor gardens at New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx.
âThe adonis amurensis did not want to open all day for shock.â
âThe crocuses were brave little souls. They opened, a bit.â
But it turns out that theyâre going to be O.K.
Windswept and a little wilted, but fine.
Because of the long, cold winter, the cityâs gardens are running weeks behind schedule, bloom-wise.
So whatâs out there now â" low-lying flowers, bushes of witch hazel, a few daffodil shoots â" is winter-ready.
âThey can handle the cold,â said Ronnit Bendavid-Val, the director of gardens and grounds at Brooklyn Botanic Garden.
The crocus, wee harbinger of spring, grows flush to the ground.
That helps when it gets very cold, because it doesnât have to move water up through long stems (which can freeze, like pipes).
âWhen there are fluctuations in the temperature, weâre shocked and bitter,â Ms. Bendavid-Val said.
âBut plants are used to dealing with that.â
Hereâs what else you need to know for Friday and the weekend.
WEATHER
A mostly sunny 45 degrees this afternoon. Warmer Saturday with a possible early shower. Chillier Sunday.
And then.
Snow on Monday, maybe a few inches, but maybe up to six. Sorry, St. Patrick.
COMMUTE
Subways: Check latest status.
Rails: Check L.I.R.R., Metro-North or N.J. Transit status.
Roads: Check traffic map or radio report on the 1s or the 8s.
Alternate-side parking is in effect.
Weekend Travel Hassles: Check subway disruptions or list of street closings.
COMING UP TODAY
- Mayor de Blasio visits a Red Cross shelter in East Harlem where people displaced by Wednesdayâs building explosion are staying, at noon.
- Rallies against human rights abuses of sex workers, at State Supreme Court in Staten Island and in Times Square. 10:30 a.m.
- Horses and bicycles parade through Borough Park, Brooklyn, to drum up donations for a pre-Passover food drive. Starting at 11:30 a.m.
- The plaintiff in a 1950s bus desegregation lawsuit, Pvt. Sarah Keys Evans, speaks at the Veterans Affairs hospital on East 23rd Street. 11 a.m. [Free]
- Just in time for Pi Day (March 14 â" 3.14, get it?), the pie purveyor Four & Twenty Blackbirds opens a cafe in the main Brooklyn Public Library. 8:30 a.m.
- More pi-jinks: Bedford Stuyvesant Collegiate charter school students hold a pi-reciting contest. The winner throws a cream pie at a teacher. 3:30 p.m.
- A talk on âEdith Wharton: A Writing Lifeâ at the main New York Public Library. 2:15 p.m. [Free]
- A curator at the Brooklyn Museum gives a tour of the current exhibit âWitness: Art and Civil Rights in the Sixties.â 2 p.m. [$12]
- Asia Week, a celebration of Asian art, begins with exhibits and lectures at several museums and auction houses.
- The Whitney is free from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Fridays if you want to check out the Biennial.
IN THE NEWS
- An eighth body was found in the wreckage of the East Harlem building collapse. The search â" for a last victim, and a cause â" continues. [New York Times]
- A blistering federal report on Metro-North found a âdeficient safety cultureâ that prizes on-time trains âto the detriment of safe operations and adequate maintenance.â [New York Times]
- Michael Bloomberg gave his first major interview since leaving office to Katie Couric, now of Yahoo News. [Watch]
- Bonus tracks: a refurbished CD drive sold at a store contained a disk with personal data from 15,000 M.T.A. workers. [Associated Press]
- Some Flushing residents mourn the imminent closing of a McDonaldâs, an island of traditional American cuisine in a sea of Asian fare. [Daily News]
- A vintage clothing dealerâs $15,000 blue mink coat was stolen off the back of her chair at a Starbucks downtown. [DNAinfo]
- And a well-dressed woman (not in a mink) stole a replica of Dorothyâs âWizard of Ozâ slippers from a Hilton hotel display case in Staten Island. [Staten Island Advance]
- Scoreboard: Wild tame Rangers, 2-1.
THE WEEKEND
Saturday
- The âDegenerate Artâ show of work condemned by the Nazis is up at Neue Galerie on Fifth Avenue.
- A show of quilts about Grand Central opens inside Grand Central. [Free]
-The Persian new year starts, sensibly enough, in spring. Celebrate it at the Asia Society. 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. [$12]
- âThe Secret Lives of Presidentsâ Wives,â a talk at the New York Public Library branch on West 100th Street. 2 p.m. [Free]
- Gotham Radio Theater recreates the 1930s radio series âColumbia Workshop,â live with music, at the Public Library for the Performing Arts. 2:30 p.m. [Free]
- A gardening session for children at the Queens Botanical Garden. 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. [Free]
- The Eterniday festival of the Language Arts at the Queens Museum. [$8]
- Whoa. A romp through the golden age of musical industrial films at Jalopy in Brooklyn features the world premiere of âThe Bathrooms Are Coming.â Thatâs the âlegendary 1969 American-Standard musical.â 8 p.m. [$10]
Sunday
- A hike to look for leprechauns at the Greenbelt Nature Center in Staten Island, for children and other wee folk. 1 p.m. [Free]
- Toot toot. Itâs the New York Flute Fair, a day of recitals, workshops and competitions. Starts at 9 a.m.
- St. Patrickâs Day parades in the Bronx (at noon in Throgs Neck) and Brooklyn (1 p.m. in Park Slope).
- A full-moon tour of Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. [$15]
- Shhhh, itâs a party: A silent reading party at Muchmoreâs bar in Williamsburg. 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. [Free]
- For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.
- And if youâre looking for stuff to do outside New York City, The Timesâs Metropolitan section has suggestions for Westchester, Long Island, New Jersey and Connecticut.
AND FINALLY â¦
Ever want to get close to a bike that has won the Tour de France?
Until Sunday you can, at a shop in the meatpacking district.
Behind a rope at Rapha Cycle Club on Gansevoort Street are the machines Greg LeMond â" the first American winner of the tour â" rode in 1986, 1989 and 1990.
His jerseys are on display, too.
âCycling fans see these pictures over and over again of someone crossing the finish line,â said Mike Spriggs of Rapha. âNow you can see the bike in person.â
Joseph Burgess contributed reporting.
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