Towse: views from the hill

April 27, 2007

2901 Broadway, SF

Filed under: architecture,real estate,San Francisco — Towse @ 7:29 pm

The folks selling 2901 Broadway (Broadway at Baker) have finally come up with a price. (They originally said the place was priceless and anyone wanting to buy it would have to come up with an offer that reflected what it was worth.)

Price? $55m

SFNewsletter has an entertaining take (Comparison Shopping) on the price. Puts the price in perspective, doesn’t it?

Reminds me of those descriptions of a trillion dollars and how many times a trillion dollar bills laid end to end would wrap around the Earth. (four thousand times)

Some history on 2901 Broadway.

Real estate porn from the listing agents.

April 23, 2007

Dang! Meeting notes. Port of San Francisco: January 25, 2007

Filed under: damn,photographs,politics — Tags: , , — Towse @ 10:41 pm

Meeting notes. Port of San Francisco: January 25, 2007

I’d been searching for more information about the proposal to develop San Francisco’s new (and needed!) cruise ship terminal using the existing terminal at Pier 35 and the overflow terminal at Pier 27 (instead of Piers 30-32) when … buried there in the midst of it all in the January 2007 Port Authority meeting notes, “Port will fund demolition of P36 in Port’s FY 07-08 budget.”

No… no… nonononononono….

 

  Posted by Picasa  Posted by PicasaTaken 10 Aug 2006

Funny. We’d been at the Telegraph Hill Dwellers meeting on 26 Feb 2007. Monique Moyer, Port Director, was the speaker. I specifically asked during the Q&A session what was happening with Pier 36 and she did not say they were putting funding to take it down in the next budget.

sigh

I asked her later about it too after the meeting was over and she did not say it was a done deal. She said it would cost $5m to demolish Pier 36. She also said that if anyone wanted to refurbish it, they’d have to spend $5m to take it down and then spend whatever it took to rebuild it.

If I could only win the Lotto!

Baldwin sez sorry for ripping his 11-year-old daughter, but Basinger has driven me ‘to the edge’

Filed under: life,people — Towse @ 6:53 am

Baldwin sez sorry for ripping his 11-year-old daughter, but Basinger has driven me ‘to the edge’

Yah yah yah. Wah wah wah. Excuses. Excuses.

sniff — I’m so sorry for ya, Alec.

I think the most telling thing of this (yes, brutal) phone message (text here) left for Baldwin’s eleven-year-old daughter is this

I don’t care that you’re twelve or eleven or whatever, are you pig [or so the transcript reads. maybe should be "big"?] enough to pick it up? I’m a good father, and you’re a pig. I don’t give a shit. Good father. You think this is abuse? You think this is abuse, you thoughtless pain in the ass?

So. Does Alec think his daughter that he loves so much is twelve? or does he think she’s eleven?

Why doesn’t he even know fer sure how old she is?

What a darling he is.

April 22, 2007

Walk around in the neighborhood

Filed under: food,life — Tags: , — Towse @ 7:04 pm

A few neighbors had a walk around in the neighborhood last evening from 6 until, well, after getting home and clearing up our messes, it was 2 a.m.

The first of more I hope.

The original idea was something K and I hatched when she was new to the neighborhood and didn’t know anyone. She’d dropped in at a party next door hosted by P & Y and introduced herself.

We both left at the same time and I invited her in to take a look around. We talked about how entertaining it would be to have a party where everyone could poke noses into each other’s places instead of having to wait until the place was for sale and the agents were showing a real estate open house.

But then we were gone, and then K was gone and then we were gone again and then P and Y were gone and we were …

Finally in February Y and I were talking about it again.

“We’ll be gone in late March/early April. March isn’t good.”

“Let’s just choose a date and a few people and we’ll plan a smallish gathering and expand it to include more neighbors later if we have fun.”

“How about later. How about April. How about the weekend after taxes are due. Okay by you?”

“Okay by me.”

“If the date’s okay with K, we’re on.”

And it was. …

We sent out invites. Y sorted out who would be where on the walk around. We all gathered at K’s down the walk where she and M, who lives in the same building, provided cocktails and hors d’oeuvres at 6p. Then, on to A’s next door for salad (and to catch a glimpse of S and B’s brand-new (as of Sunday) baby) and then to P and Y for tapas and then here for more tapas and then down to the next walk down (in the pouring rain) to J’s for dessert and coffee, hosted by J with help from J and G.

Fun time was had by all.

Tapas here were empanadas: (1)cashew chicken with a honey/soy sauce (2) homemade pesto and toasted pine nuts (3) marinated beef with onion and peppers (4) sausage and peppers and cheese.

The pastry was kind of tossed together because I couldn’t find the butter pastry recipe I remembered so I checked what ratios Christopher Kimball used for fat to flour (he used part butter and part vegetable shortening) and made up two batches of pastry. Chilled in frig. Rolled and filled and pat-a-cake pat-a-cake. The pastry ingredients for both batches combined were simply 5C flour, 1 pound butter and about 12T cold water. Easy peasy.

The cooking of the various fillings, the cooling of same, the making of the pastry, the rolling of circles, the filling of the pastry circles and the crimping and the baking until almost done so I could finish the baking in just a few minutes after the party arrived here took far longer than I’d thought it would, but it all turned out as good as I’d hoped and there were a few left over.

Reheated empanadas for bfst. Ym.

We’re already talking of another one. More neighbors. More fun. Next time!

Have to start planning now, though. I checked this morning. That original party where I met K and we started talking about a walkaround party? November 2005.

April 20, 2007

Gonzales "has the full confidence”

Filed under: politics — Towse @ 7:01 am

Bloomberg.com: U.S. — “Gonzales ‘has the full confidence’”

Reminds me of my corporate days back when when someone would be “advanced” and moved to an office (with a window!) to pursue five-year plans.

“Full confidence”

“heck of a job, Brownie”

April 17, 2007

[WRITING JOBS] Funny media-spoofing writer? This one’s for you!

Filed under: writing-market — Towse @ 9:50 pm

FUNNY WRITERS WANTED for media spoofing

Archer, this one’s for you! SG, you too. (You could be the EU correspondent!) Kos.

Or …

Have at it, folks.

April 15, 2007

RIP Jill May

Filed under: damn,life,San Francisco — Towse @ 7:45 am

Her children pay their respects.

No one should ever ever die this way.

Ever.

April 11, 2007

I’ll be with you in cherry blossom time …

Filed under: life,photographs,travel — Towse @ 11:29 pm

As luck would have it, that’s when we arrived.

As luck would have it.

Japan - cherry blossoms

Hana-mi (cherry blossom viewing) is a BIG DEAL in Japan. The weather reports for weeks beforehand track and predict when the cherries will bloom and which weekend will be the “official” weekend for sakura viewing so that everyone can make their plans. (Typical plans: picnic in the park under the cherry trees with friends. Drink sake. Maybe to excess.)

All the usual sites were swarming with locals on holiday to see the cherry blossoms. Some of the sites were open free for the public in honor of the season. Several of our guides warbled the sakura song over the bus speakers for us. (Some better than others, but all with enthusiasm.)

***

A few years back, we decided to take the oldest grandchild on a trip with us, sans parents or siblings, after she turned twelve. My friend Susie had done this with her grandchildren and thought it was an excellent experience. Twelve is just old enough, she said, and not too far into the teen years. A perfect age.

“Anywhere in the world,” we told W. (Disney* and USAn spots excepted. …)

W. chose Japan because she likes sushi and octopus and squid and gardens and anime and manga. Could we arrange all that? We could.

We started planning long before she had her bday in January.

A woman on our trip last fall to Xingiang Province (China) and the Hunza Valley (Pakistan) said she’d made a trip with her grandchild at about that age and suggested we use the service she had, a service that arranges group tours for grandparents and their grandchildren.

Um. No.

The point wasn’t just to go traveling with a grandchild. The point was to have adventures, to break out of your cocoon, to get lost and found again. We wanted to do this trip as a welcome-to-the-rest-of-the-world, not as a guided and safe tour with a batch of other twelve-year-olds and their grandparents.

We’d arrange for touring so we could get to and around the sights, but we would not be caught in a group with the same people for day after day. We’d be on our own — with the safety net of tours booked and hotel rooms and transportation arranged.

We confab’d on a date with her mother. Which should it be, after school gets out in June (when it can horribly hot and sticky in Japan) or sometime in spring (when W’d have to miss some school for the trip)?

We settled on Spring Break which, when teamed up with a teacher-in-service day that the students got off, gave us enough time to fly W. out from the wilds of the back of beyond, layover one day in San Francisco (in case her flight out was delayed), fly to Japan and spend nine days or so poking around, fly back and layover one day in San Francisco, before sending her home in time for her family Easter. She’d only miss a few days of school.

We set up plane tickets on our own and arranged hotel rooms and transport and Sunrise tours with JTB, on the advice of a work mate of his nibs, who had successfully taken her own family groups to Japan using JTB’s services. “Here’s what we offer,” JTB says. Choose the poshness of hotel you’d like. Tell us what you want to see. Abracadabra!

If we were taking a train from here to there to get to a hotel they’d booked or to hookup with a sight-see they’d arranged, a JTB staffer would make sure we had our tickets and didn’t miss our rendezvous.

The trains in Japan run on time.

Schedule:

25 Mar W. arrives from the hinterlands, flying solo. Southwest allows twelve-year-olds to fly without requiring “unaccompanied minor” status. W’s first adventure: flying on her own without an adult keeping tabs on her. We made sure the flight was non-stop; we didn’t want her to have the adventure of missing a connecting flight. Southwest gave her mom a pass that allowed her past security so she could sit in the waiting area until W’s flight boarded.

27 Mar Leave SFO before lunch.

28 Mar Arrive Narita. Airport bus to hotel in Shinagawa district.

29 Mar We grabbed a Sunrise Tours shuttle from our hotel that took us to the Hamamatsucho Bus Terminal next to the World Trade Center. We turned in our chits for tour tickets and boarded our Sunrise tour bus for a morning tour of Tokyo spots: Tokyo Tower, Imperial Palace,

Imperial Palace, Tokyo

drive through Ueno and the Akihabara on way to Asakusa Kannon Temple

Japan - Asakusa Kannon Temple

and Nakamise Shopping Street. The tour ends (surprisingly, eh?) at the Tasaki Pearl Gallery which gave us an explanation of how cultured pearls are produced, gave us an opportunity to look at their wares (Shop! Shop! Shop!) and then, very nicely, drove us and the other scores of folk who had also been dropped off at Tasaki back to our hotels.

His nibs and W. went back to Akihabara by train to check out the manga offerings. Some buildings had five! six! floors of manga!

30 Mar The bus picked us up at the hotel again and took us to the Hamamatsucho Bus Terminal, again. We were starting to get a feel for how JTB worked. We caught the Sunrise tour to see Toshogu Shrine at Nikko,

Toshogu Shrine, Nikko

Irohazaka zigzag drive up to Kegon Waterfall and Lake Chuzenji at the foot of Mt.Nantai. Irohazaka zigzag driveway down the mountains, and bus back to Tokyo with a drop-off in the Ginza district after dark when all the neon was blazing.

The bus had a problem getting to its usual stopping spot in the Ginza when the driver found the left lane of the street blocked off. When the guide tried to move the cones so we could pull up to the curb, a police officer came over and yelled at them.

“I’ve never seen this before,” our guide said, as the bus circled around for ten minutes to find a spot to drop us off somewhere near the train station.

What’s this? Turns out the left lane of the main drag had been blocked off for a political action march. Streams of people were marching down the main Ginza drag in the far left lane, making noise and waving signs. Multiple unions represented, hundreds of folks, signs.

The guide claimed she couldn’t really tell what it was all about. She said she’d never seen anything like it before.

Man, I need to learn to be halfway proficient in kanji and kana. I wondered what the signs really said.

Had no grasp of the language this time. Oh,well. For sure before we go again. Caught the train back to the hotel.

31 Mar Leave Tokyo. Caught the shuttle bus at the hotel. Off to the bus station with our bags. Onto the Sunrise tour bus with our bags and on to Mt. Fuji. Up to the fifth stage for viewing. Snow. The bus continued on to Hakone and Lake Ashi. The winds were wicked up at the fifth stage and elsewhere. The cableride we were scheduled for at Hakone was swapped for a less gusty one as the cable we’d intended to ride had shut down for safety reasons.

01 Apr Our bags for Kyoto were whisked away and we bus’d to Odawara with minimum luggage to catch the Shinkansen to Nagoya where we picked up Kato-san, our guide for the next three days. Took the limited-express train to Takayama where we checked into hotel and walked about with Kato-san to the Yatai Kaikan Hall (festival floats) and the Kusakabe Folkcraft Museum and roamed the old town.

We stopped by a soy sauce manufacturer and had some delish miso soup and nuggets of sesame candy. I bought some tasty sesame candies for our beast sitter, who does not need any more trinkets.

Something to eat, I thought. That’s the ticket. (Hi, Auntie K!)

Our hotel room’s “third” bed this time was a tatami room instead of the sleeper sofa we were routinely given as our third bed. We let W. sleep in the authentic tatami room style.

02 Apr Miyagawa morning market in Takayama and shop! shop! shop! (I am such a shopper! as everyone knows …) We took the bus toward Lake Miboro and along the Shokawa River. Folk museum of the old Toyama family. On to Shirakawago, a village under heritage protection.

Japan - Shirakawago

(Nothing like the protections at St Cirq Lapopie in the Dordogne, France, but still strict enough that it’s no cakewalk to make a living or live in Shirakawago. The younger population is moving away. …)

On to Gokayama for a demo of Washi paper making, including making our own to take home as a souvenir. Continue to Kanazawa, singing Karaoke on the bus. No, really!

03 Apr Kanzawa tour. Kanazawa Castle’s Kenroku-en Garden. Lovely.

Japan - Kanazawa. Kenroku-en Garden.

Admission to the Kenroku-en Garden was free for the day in honor of sakura. Then we were off to Kutaniyaki Pottery kiln where we watched potters throw pots and poked our heads into the kiln building and elsewhere. I bought a very pretty little bowl made by the fifth generation potter/owner. On to Higashi-chaya street and the Eastern Pleasure Quarter with a tour of a geisha house then on to Farmer House “Shima”.

Said “Sayonara” to Kato-san and off on a train to Kyoto. Dinner at a restaurant next door to the hotel and up a floor. The staff had no English, but they’d had their pictures out front, so his nibs put restaurant slippers on and went out with the purveyor to point out which dishes we wanted. I had tobiko sushi. His nibs had unagi. W. had grilled cuttlefish. We were all happy campers.

04 Apr Kyoto: Golden Pavilion,

Japan - Asakusa Kannon Temple

Nijo Castle, Kyoto Imperial Palace. Lunch at Handicraft Center. The buffet was booked out for anyone without a reservation so if we’d shown up there without a ticket, we’d’ve been out of luck. The buffet was just so-so. Why so popular? Busy times, these cherry blossom days. Sanjusangendo, Heian Shrine, Kiyomizu Temple.

Japan - Asakusa Kannon Temple

Popped on the bullet train and back to Tokyo. We wanted to get off at the Shinagawa station, where our hotel was, but the staff handing us our train tickets told us QUITE EXPLICITLY that we were to get off at the Tokyo station, that the JTB staff was expecting us at the Tokyo station and wanted to make sure we’d arrived before they popped us into a taxi back to our hotel in the Shinagawa area. OK. If you say so. Cost an extra 3000¥ and forty-five minutes, but they made sure we hadn’t somehow got lost between getting on the Shinkansen and arriving.

05 Apr Hotel bus to Narita. Flight was to leave around 9:30a, but we had a three hour delay for “mechanical problems.” Long line of people at the counter, rearranging connecting flights. Not us. We were back to SFO, through Customs some time after noon and home-again home-again riggety-jig.

Photos will get appropriate labels that reflect what they are better than DSCN6*** some time soon-ish.

For now, the batch of trip photos (sans labels) are here.

Added comment: Something we’d never had before on any trip we’d been on. We were the only Americans we encountered on the entire trip until we were in Narita waiting for a plane back to SFO. Throughout our Japanese adventures, we were always in English-language tours, but the tourists were from Finland, Wales, England, Australia (loads of Australians), a multi-generational family of eight from Singapore and tourists from other parts of the world eastwestnorthsouth.

No other Americans. How weird is that?

For Paula: What to ask for for Mother’s Day.

Filed under: food,life,URL — Towse @ 10:25 pm

« Newer Posts

Powered by WordPress