Sunday, March 19, 2006

The Tourist Update - March

Planned in 1938 to show of San Francisco, the 49-Mile Drive provides visitors with an overview of San Francisco's scenic attractions and historic highlights. The markers are easy to spot, marked by a blue and white seagull signs that lead you through the winding city route. I can assume that traffic wasn't such an issue as it is today and at one point included Coit Tower and the curvy part of Lombard Street.

The entire time I've lived here I've never driven the route and thought it would be a good thing to do on a lazy Saturday, especially since God gave us realy sunshine instead of the liquid sunshine we've been enjoying for the past week or so.

A quick Internet search provided a map (required) and we jumped in the car, rolled down the windows and headed to the starting point, City Hall. According to the information on the web, we were supposed to allow 4 to 5 hours to complete the journey. We assumed that it would not take us as long, since we were not going to make unnecessary stops (bathroom stops excluded). If you take the time to view the pictures, you'll note that 90% are taken from the car.

Driving in San Francisco can be a challenge and while the signs are fairly easy to follow, they don't always give you a lot of warning and the map came in handy for those unexpected detours which occured throughout the afternoon. Our first detour occured at City Hall where we encountered the anti-war demonstration to mark the third anniversary of the Iraq conflict. The Civic Center area is impressive but the route quickly skirted into the Tenderloin and the area now labled "Little Saigon." Sketchy is a good word to describe the area and one had to wonder what it looked like in 1938.

From there we drove through Cathedral Hill and made a short tour of Japan Town where the signs are posted in English and Japanese. The drive down to Union Square and China Town were easy to follow and then we headed up to Grace Cathedral and the second of our detours. My clutch was enjoying the hilly start and stop and we wondered whether there was a big truck convention because there seemed to more than a usual number of inappropriately sized vehicles on the road with bumper stickers like "Real Men Drive Fords" and "Bush/Cheney." We were supposed to drop down Clay to get to North Beach but a cop blocked the street and we had to figure out how to get back on track off of Powell St. when there are no left turns. This is where being a local came in handy. A couple of turns and we were back in traffic and stuck behind a tour bus.

We didn't move for ten minutes and a large woman in a VW bug chatted with us and crossed three lanes of traffic to head over a couple of streets. We followed, thinking that there must have been an accident. Nope. A funeral and apparently a large one that included a band, though Frank thinks the two groups were not connected. At this point the coffee from the morning was starting to say hello and I had options of pulling over and playing homeless on the street. Luckily, the cops cleared and we were back on track and heading up Grant street where with Doris Day parking stopped in front of the French Italian Bakery from a couple of bear claws and a bathroom break.

Surprisingly, the tour through North Beach was more of a skirt the edges of North Beach and did not include a drive by of Washington Square or the main drag. Oh well, we had Fisherman's Wharf to drive by and the Marina Green. This is where we picked up some time and really enjoyed the guided drive throuh the Presidio and a short stop at Baker beach.

From here we wandered past the Legion of Honor, the Cliff House and Lake Merced. The path through Golden Gate park did not seem as up to date and we created our own path and made it up to Twin Peaks. The interesting part of the drive is the trying to figure out why the choices to include certain streets were included and how people without a map could do it without a map. It was at this point that we realized that Frank pretty much lives on one part of the route and we could have started at his house and ended at his place.

Aside from Dolores Cathedral and Dolores Park the end of the Scenic Drive seemed a bit contrived. Originally, the drive included a trip on the Bay Bridge and a stop at Treasure Island. Now, you end up on the Embarcadero and wander through a bit more of downtown before working your way back to City Hall. At this point, we've spend a good four plus hours in the car and I was glad to see the garage door opening on California Street. It was a full day and we can say we've marked another tourist option off of our list of things to do.

Pictures: Click to View

Eye to Eye with History


I have to admit that Frank is usually the first to spot a celebrity ... but sitting in the Phoenix airport waiting to return to San Francisco from a training I saw a group of security escorting a person to the gate. The hamster in my head started spinning around and finally I recognized Sandra Day O'Conner.

I have to admit that prior to the recent judicial nominations, I wouldn't have put to much on my knowledge of the woman but there she was sitting in first class and when we made eye contact, she gave me a nod and a smile, which I returned.

Here's a little bio or our first female Supreme Court justice ... which I found on Yahoo and did not write myself.


On March 26, 1930 the first woman of the Justice Supreme Court was born. Her name was Sandra Day. Her home was the Lazy B Ranch, it had 170,000 acres and 6,000 heads of cattle.

Sandra was a bright child. Even though she lived on a ranch, her main activity was reading. Her parents wanted her to attend a good school, so they sent her to live with her grandparents in the Texas city of El Paso. She skipped several grades and graduated high school at sixteen. Sandra was accepted to Stanford University where she graduated and attended law school. It is in law school where she met her husband John Jay O'Connor III. They would have three sons together, Scott, Brian, and Jay.

It was hard for Sandra to get her first job as a lawyer. In the 1959's there were very few women lawyers. She was an attorney for the government and was active in the Republican Party. She was also an Arizona State Senator. After a while she left the senate to become a judge. Judge O'Connor had an excellent reputation for being very prepared to hear each case brought before her. In 1981 President Reagan appointed her to the U.S. Supreme Court (the highest court in the United States.) She was unanimously confirmed.

Kitty Update
















She seems the picture of health but underneath that fine coat is a kitty that time caught up with and blessed with kidney disease and a hyperthyroid.

What does this mean?

First, it means hiding a lovely little pill in a "treat" and tricking her in to eating it. This is a better alternative to holding her down and "pilling" her with the pill gun or shoving a finger down her throat. I'd say it was cute when she struggled with her paws to prevent the pill but at 6:00 in the morning, it was not fun.

Second, we now get to inject subcutaneous fluids under the scruff of her neck to get 100 ml of fluids in to her body. Not to mention the bubble of fluid that moves around her body like a small turtle under her skin. Ick. Surprisingly, I've dealt with the needle. Personally, I used to have to sit down during some test where they put fluid under the skin to test for something I can't remember and at one time purposely volunteered to donate blood just to try to get over my fear of needles. Kitty? She doesn't like it but doing the treatment before breakfast seems to work and she had gotten to the point where she simply lies on her side and meows softly during the process. Good girl.

We take her back to the vet on the third to see if the current regimine is working and if so will continue for the rest of her life. So far she seems to be holding her weight up a bit and has a healthier apetite.

Sunday, March 05, 2006

Oscar Pool - The results are in!

After a one-year hiatus the Miller Oscar Pool came back to life with 8 participants. It was a rainy night in the Castro and the Castro Theater was filled to the brim with film enthusiasts, lesbian coal miners and of course gay cowboys.


Here's the breakdown.

First Place - TIE
Allyson/Kim: 18
Douglas: 18

Second Place
Sylvia: 17

Third Place
Frank: 16

Fourth Place - Tie
Bev:12
Randy: 12
Paul: 12

DIXIE CUP HONOR
Dana: 8

Pictures: Click to View