Sunday, June 23, 2019

Day 2: The San Francisco Treat


Today we woke up fairly early (for us!) at 7:30.  After showers and the hotel continental breakfast (nothing remarkable there), we called an Uber.  We had him drop us off in the downtown area.  We remarked on the $4.75/gallon price for gas that we saw and the Uber driver said that housing is bad too.  A person needs a full-time job paying $50 an hour to rent a decent apartment.  (For those not from Minnesota, we pay about $2.80/gallon). 


Once downtown we walked around looking at buildings.  I like older Victorian or classic architecture, while Joshua likes new, shiny high rises.  We saw both.  The streets were pretty bare of people walking and some of the buildings and mall areas were closed.  Granted, it is Sunday, but I’m guessing that they don’t have a lot of people living downtown for it to be that barren.   Randy slipped in a puddle near the curb and fell down, so his knee hurt him the rest of the day.   





There were rainbow flags everywhere downtown, probably for Pride month.

Joshua

cool fountain

this is an elevated walkway going on for several blocks, probably modeled on the High Line in New York.  Access was closed until July 1.

Note the reflection of another new building in this building.




See the statues of people near the top?

 Next we walked into Chinatown.  We walked around looking at shops and signs.  We had thought of going on a tour of the Fortune Cookie Museum, but decided against that.








Next we walked up (and up and up) to the Coit Tower.   A person I encounted as she was going down and I was climbing up said that there were too many flipping stairs! 


The crazy lengths people go to to live on the hill!

Having to park at 90 degree angles to the curb

From the hike up, the Bay Bridge in the background

Almost to the top of the hill

From the front door of the tower

Coit Tower
Coit Tower is on what used to be Signal Hill then Telegraph Hill.  There were originally semaphores on the hill to let the people below know when a ship was coming in and what it was carrying.  Then, with the invention of the telegraph, that took over the job.  Eventually those weren’t needed and a prominent citizen, Lizzie Hitchcock Coit, bequeathed enough money to build the tower as a gift to beautify the city she loved.  Evidently, she was quite the character, even wearing pants so that she could gamble in the downtown bars.  The building was built in 1933 and frescoes were painted in the interior by local artists funded through the US government’s Public Works of Art project during the depression.  It was designated in 1983 as an historic landmark.  We noticed how nicely the paintings still looked and if they were original or redone.  I asked and was told that by the 1960s they were in horrible shape, so they erected a railing to decrease people touching them and redid parts of the frescoes.  Now a specialist comes in once per year to touch up what needs touching up.  I also asked about a set of eyes above one doorway and a fist above another and was told that they were masonic symbols and the docent showed us another surprise in one of the paintings that you can see below. 






the frescoes even make use of the recessed areas of the wall


look over the shoulder of the man working--frescoed graffiti on the post

from the top



from the top looking down

Walking down from the tower to 
the Embarcadero, the staircase ran through backyards and provided access to people's homes with creative and jungly gardens.






The Embarcadero runs along the coast.  We saw the piers and wharves, eventually getting to the infamous Fisherman’s Wharf.  It was filled with tourists and sidewalk artists and performers.  Joshua and I walked up to Ghiardelli Square and got two free pieces of chocolate.  Joshua was looking for a bag to collect some sand in.  Sheer willpower kept me from buying chocolate.  Then we rejoined Randy at the beach and Joshua collected some sand.  He has a big supply of snack-size ziploc bags that he wants to use to collect some sand from each country that we go to.  He has little containers at home that each sand will go into. 



Street performers

We have a picture of this van from our last trip here!

We were wondering where Ghirardelli was, then we turned around !

Randy and Joshua

Ghirardelli Square

What is visible of the Golden Gate Bridge


We walked out onto the pier that goes between the Golden Gate bridge and Alcatraz Island and took photos, thought you couldn’t see much of the bridge through  the fog.  By that time, we were exhausted and our feet and legs hurt so we sat by the water and watched the crabs crawling on the rocks below us.  There were other things we wanted to see, but they were all too far for us to walk to in our weakened condition!   We finally decided to try to walk to the closest –only about a mile away (all uphill).  We went up Hyde from the beach—bad mistake.  Hyde is very steep—four blocks was torture.  We made our way to Lombard because Randy wanted to see the twisty hillside on Lombard.  We drove down it last time we were here.  It is twisty and filled with flowers from the houses on each side.  They have cops directing traffic at the top and the bottom.  We walked down the hill on the sidewalk. 

Near Lombard

the top

halfway down

at the bottom



Next, we tried to make our way to the closest BART stop, but gave up and called an Uber.  We went to “The Painted Ladies” by Alamo Square.  Painted ladies are Victorian and Edwardian houses that are painted in three or more colors that embellish or enhance the architectural details.  There are a row of them across the street from the park that are frequently photographed.  While we were sitting quietly on the crowded hillside, a man started running up and down the park path with only a thong on.  He was obviously looking for attention.  Whatever floats his boat and I don’t need to look if I don’t like it (so I didn’t).  Later, Randy noticed him laying a ways away and we looked to see him almost completely naked.  He had removed the thong and it looked like he had laid it over or wrapped it around his privates.  Hmmmm.  Well, we walked around the park, looking at some of the other painted lady houses nearby then called another Uber to go back to the hotel. 

The Painted Ladies

Some other painted ladies

And another

Joshua and I

Joshua visited the man offering Free Advice


We had eaten lunch at a café near the pier, so we just ate dinner again at the hotel restaurant (since our feet still hurt too much to walk a few miles to find dinner).  Tomorrow we head to Hong Kong after breakfast.
 


Saturday, June 22, 2019

Day 1: First leg--MPS to SFO


This summer we are going to Asia for the first time.  My husband Randy thought it would be fun to completely circumnavigate the globe.  We fly from Minneapolis to San Francisco for a few days, then to Hong Kong, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia), Jaipur and Delhi (India), Dubai (UAE), Cairo (Egypt), Istanbul/rural Turkey, New York City, and finally back to Minneapolis.  Lots of flights between cities.  Egypt is in Africa though it doesn't seem like an African nation; so I guess we're going to both Asia and Africa this summer.  

(image from 123rf.com via Google photos)


We left our house at 12:30 and our daughter Shelby gave us a ride to the light rail station (which goes to the airport).  She is housesitting for us while we are gone.  She needs to stay in Minneapolis to finish her internship, work, and take a class.  She is a pre-vet major at the University of Minnesota in Wildlife Management.  This year it is just Randy, Joshua, and I.  We saw some people at the light rail station dressed to go downtown to the Pride celebration.  I've only been once since we are usually gone during it.  I marched in the parade with the Minneapolis Public Schools group that year.

Joshua on the light rail train to the airport.


Sun Country requires you to check your bags now (checking is less expensive than carry-on and you don't have to deal with the liquids thing at security).  So we checked our bags and had an uneventful flight to San Francisco.  Sun Country has a thing now where you can check into their wi-fi and watch movies and shows.  

Short arms make a slightly weird looking group selfie in the airplane!


At the San Francisco Airport (SFO), we took the hotel shuttle to an airport hotel in San Mateo.  When we went to our room, we discovered one bed instead of the two that we had reserved, so we had to go back to the desk to get our correct room. 

The hotel is in a slightly industrial area without any restaurants in walking distance, so we ate at the restaurant in the Holiday Inn next door.  Nothing else to do, we are in the hotel trying to access the wi-fi and I've pulled out the deck of cards.  We're also trying to figure out what we want to see tomorrow.  One day in San Francisco, then on to Hong Kong on Monday.  We do the weird little dance crossing the international date line, so we lose a day and land in Hong Kong (via a short layover in South Korea) late Tuesday night.