
O.M.G.
There’s no-bo-dy.
Winter Storm Stella has scared selfie snappers from their favorite spot in DUMBO, the intersection of Washington and Water Streets.
On Tuesday afternoon, the only person at the photographers’ scenic hot spot was a Brooklyn Eagle reporter who doesn’t know enough to come in out of the rain. Or in this case, sleet.


There was a lone pedestrian a block away, walking up the middle of the street, where a snow plow had cleared a path. That doesn’t count.
We don’t blame the selfie snappers from staying away. Standing out on the wind-whipped streets of waterfront Brooklyn today is fun only if you like having fistfuls of icey needles thrown at your face.



Also, it’s not worth risking frostbite to snap the scenery in nearby Brooklyn Bridge Park when the air is thick with sleet. Just look at our photos instead.
We took pix of the iconic Brooklyn Bridge and Manhattan Bridge — and Jane’s Carousel, which wisely isn’t operating today.
It’s too bad that the snow changed to sleet in Brooklyn before dawn today. The white flakes that had been falling since just after midnight were so much prettier than the nasty stuff that’s now pelting us.
Before the sleet swooped in, the forecast had been for a foot or more of snow in New York City.
According to Weather.com, since 1869 only four March storms have dumped a foot or more of snow on New York City. The last one occurred in 1960 — the final year that Dwight D. Eisenhower was president.














SUNSET PARK — “As a resident of Marine Park, one of the great surprises I found biking around Industry City and visiting Japan Village was to discover Bush Terminal Park. I continue to be amazed at the serene hideaways that the city offers in some of the busiest places — and, still, with an iconic view.”

BROOKLYN HEIGHTS — ‘A miracle that no one was killed …’ That’s what neighbors are saying about the collapse of the Hotel St. George marquee. Shown in this photograph are workmen beginning the removal and repair of the historic, old neon sign at the corner, referencing a relic of Brooklyn Heights’ past: the St. George Hotel.

ATLANTIC AVENUE — Exhausted shopper with cluster of bags and goods from mall at Boerum Place stops to look at huge construction site across the street. “Is that REALLY going to be a jail??” Her male companion is reassuring, “Nothing like Rikers … this is 21st Century.”
BROOKLYN HEIGHTS — Overheard in line at one of most popular pastry outlets on Montague Street: “Hope I can get them into a camp …” A mother with two pre-schoolers in tow was showing a friend the Dodge Y flyer for Healthy Kids Day on Saturday, April 18.