There was more than a little ray of sunshine this morning, it was plain hot.
This morning was the “Anniversary Parade” and I was lucky enough to receive a “Parade Pass” to partake in the parade.
Assembly was at Miller Park for a 20 minute parade ride to the Lakefront, the setting for the 105th celebrations as seen in the picture and described in yesterday’s blog.
I had not even got into Miller Park at around 7.30 am, when we were told there were some 75,000 bikes (yes 75,000) expected to ride in the parade and that they had been assembling since 6.00 am.
Well that did it for this little black duck, so after a quick u-turn and some 45 minutes later, I was out of there and off to the “House of Harley” dealership.
The whole block was closed and lined with vendors stalls, bars and a very long queue to get into the actual dealership shop itself.
This alone was as big as Gold Coast Bike Week, I had to park 2 blocks away with the few thousand bikes.
Wouldn’t Gold Coast Harley love to have this many bikes in their dealership car park.
Again this exercise took a few hours of strolling in the hot sun, eating on the run, the obligatory dealership T-shirt and back to the hotel around 3.30 pm.
I have tickets for the Bruce Springsteen concert, which is at Veterans Park at 8.30 pm (finishing at midnight) and together with a couple of other Aussies staying at the hotel, we are contemplating either getting a cab to the concert or giving it a miss as we leave Milwaukee at 8.00 am tomorrow morning.












We left Johnson City and headed north towards Lake Ontario, on the way passing through Mt. Morris, the birth Place of “Frank Bellamy”, who wrote the words for the American “Pledge of Allegiance”.
The falls themselves are very impressive, the sheer power of the water sends tingles up your spine (or was that the tourist next me), but this beauty of nature is totally surrounded by commercialisation, including hotels and casino’s.
OK, its Saturday and we are not feeling crash hot, but we catch the subway again, over to Battery Point on Manhattan.
Now, Broadway is one enormous and busy street and it took us 40 minutes in a cab to get from the battery point end to the other end where “Times Square” and the “Empire State Building” are located.
It was mid afternoon and we were starving, so hit what must be the world’s largest Hard Rock Cafe, where the resaurant part comprised 3 levels.