Towse: views from the hill

March 14, 2007

Found at Cliff House on Monday (12 March 2007)

Filed under: books,life,quakes,San Francisco — Towse @ 6:47 am

A long ramble (perhaps) to follow about our excursions on Monday and dinner at the Cliff House.

Suffice to say, that we were pumped to find one of Hough’s books

at the Cliff House gift shop when we stopped by to check out the merchandise before dinner.

March 8, 2007

Pastorio

Filed under: life — Towse @ 10:28 pm

For those who know him who haven’t heard about his dire health situation, Carol has setup a LiveJournal site to keep people informed and to serve as a repository for notes from people who know him.

I’ve been reading every single email and blog comment to Bob, and he’s been surprised and touched that he is so well thought of.

Addendum:Here’s the post that explains what follows.

VisualDNA™

Filed under: life,misc,URL — Towse @ 5:56 pm

Read my VisualDNA Get your own VisualDNA™

[via Sour Grapes @ tumblr]

March 7, 2007

Free beer! and bushi-tei

Filed under: food,life,San Francisco — Towse @ 10:01 pm

Went to dinner last night at bushi-tei in Japantown. … for the third time.

Those who know us know that we seldom eat anywhere more than once, maybe twice. We must think bushi-tei is yummy. We do. It is. There are so many good restaurants in this town, that eating anywhere more than once or twice is absurd unless we think the restaurant is a keeper.

bushi-tei’s appetizer to die for is /Seared fresh foie gras, pumpkin pot de crème, pistachio, red onion marmalade/. The pumpkin pot de crème sounds like it would be weird with the seared foie gras (the foie is settled in the middle of the pot de crème), but the pairing is perfect. Delish. Mine!

His nibs had /Lobster and Crab, Chrysanthemum leaf, papaya, bacon, ginger cream, curry oil/. A salad of sorts only there’s very little greenery and LARGE CHUNKS OF LOBSTER! Tasty dressing. The bacon and papaya bits add intriguing shots of flavor. The salad is more crab and lobster than anything else. Tasty. We swopped our plates halfway through.

For the main course I had /Pan roasted Sonoma duck breast, spinach, mascarpone-mustard, dried chutney/, cooked medium rare. I figured if I had duck liver for the appetizer, it was only fair that I should carry on with the rest of the duck for the main course. The duck was cooked perfectly. The mascarpone-mustard was smooth and mellow and didn’t overwhelm the duck.

His nibs had /Pan seared Maine scallop, black rice tabbouleh, eye berry- cucumber yoghurt/. Delish as well. Have we ever had anything not delish here? No. For dessert his nibs had an apple dumpling served with a scoop of vanilla bean ice cream, a drizzle of caramel and a sprinkling of crushed pistachio. I had a glass of Ichinokura Himezen saké.

LaWand Mathern wrote a fine review of bushi-tei last August that I won’t even try to compete with except to say the food is great, the setting is calm and serene and the bathrooms! Well! We have friends with toilets that do everything but sponge the spilt wine off your shirt. These are those kinds of toilets.

But wait! you say. What about the free beer?

Well, Muni cooperated (don’t say it never does) and we walked down to Washington Square Park where we were whisked off on the 30Stockton which dropped us at Union Square just in time to catch 38LGeary and we found ourselves at Bushi-Tei a half-hour before our 7p reservation. (Early reservation because his nibs was due for a conference call concerning raises and staff bright and early this morning.)

The early start to dinner meant that we finished at an unheard of early hour and (backtracking on the 38 and the 30) found ourselves back in North Beach, getting off the 30 at Panta Rei some time around 8:15p. We were walking up Green from Columbus when his nibs decided that the night was still young and we should stop into Maggie McGarry’s for a pint of Anchor Steam before making that last push up the hill.

The barkeep said, “You here for the trivia?”
“No,” we answered. “Just stopping by on the way home from dinner.”

And yet … we were still there when the trivia contest (every Tuesday!) started ’round about 8:30p. The quizmaster gave us a pencil and an answer sheet booklet. The night was still young. Why not try our luck and our smarts — the luck being in the quizmaster asking a question we knew the answer to.

His nibs won a free pint at a drawing mid-session. The session went on for six rounds. We were totally skunked for the music round. We made unexpected points in the hip-hop ’round. We were lagging behind, but made it up in the last “last call for know-it-alls” round and wound up in third place out of maybe eight teams competing. We were clearly a couple decades older than the rest of the contestants. Yay, us!

One of the youngsters came over ostensibly to get another round of drinks but in actuality to ask his nibs if he could tell her who sang Leader of the Pack (one of the answers in the music round). She must’ve figured we were old enough to know, but we couldn’t help her. Did I mention total skunkage in the music round?

Our third place finish earned us chits for two more pints of beer.

Free Anchor Steam. Can’t get much better than that.

March 4, 2007

Jayson Wechter’s Chinese New Year Treasure Hunt

Filed under: life,San Francisco — Towse @ 9:34 pm

Had fun last night at Jayson Wechter’s Chinese New Year Treasure Hunt.

(I’d won a pair of tickets from sfist.com. Thanks, Jon!)

We’d never played before and were in the Beginner category. Hundreds (and hundreds and hundreds!) of people showed up to pickup their clues before getting the rah-rah-rah and go-ahead from Jayson hisself ’round about 5p at which point we all ripped open our clues and hunkered down to plot a plan before taking off from Justin Herman Plaza. We had until 9p to solve the clues, write down the treasure answers and get back to the Plaza to turn in our scorecard.

Oh, those clues were tough, tough, tough, even for my comrade-in-arms, his nibs, who is a fifth generation San Franciscan.

As we hunkered down for our initial clue solving, a middle-aged man in suit and tie stopped beside us. “What is going on?” he asked.

“A treasure hunt,” we replied.

“Oh.”

We thought we had it tough until we bumped into our DiMaggio Playground cohort, GregC, whose team was doing the challenging Master Hunt. Whoo boy. Those clues are far beyond my wee comprehension.

We didn’t get all the clues, didn’t find all the treasures, but we had fun and then headed home to roast lamb and parsnips with mashed potatoes and lamb drippings gravy.

Next year we’ll have a better idea of what’s in store, what makes sense to bring (brighter flashlights for one), and what can be left home. (I should’ve left my heavy HarleyD corduroy shirt home instead of carrying it along in my accoutrements bag — we were moving too fast to ever get cold — and it was just an added burden.)

Besides GregC, we bumped into a flock of wild RNs who used to work with his nibs at the startup in South City. I’m sure there were others in the crowd we would’ve known, but there were just sooooo many folks out hunting last night, not to mention the thousands who lined the streets of Chinatown for the New Year’s parade.

February 27, 2007

Landslide In S.F. North Beach Prompts Evacuations

Filed under: life — Tags: , — Towse @ 8:08 pm

We were woken up around 6 am by the sound of helicopters, multiple helicopters, hovering nearby. The helicopters were all news helicopters, though, we could tell, because you couldn’t hear the high pitch whine of the Aérospatiale Alouettes that the Coast Guard uses. Something newsworthy was up on our sweet little hill.

We turned on the radio (KCBS 740) and heard this: Landslide In S.F. North Beach Prompts Evacuations. Traffic on Broadway detoured around the block between Montgomery and Kearny. Morning commute traffic a mess. No one hurt. Lots of mud and rock.

The CBS5 site has pictures, raw video and a live Webcam setup to look at the slide.

455 Vallejo is teetering.

The helicopters went away for a few hours but now are back. We’ll wander over to see what we can see at some point.

February 26, 2007

5.4 up near Petrolia

Filed under: book promotion,books,bookstores,life,quakes,writing — Towse @ 7:26 pm

Recent Earthquakes – Info for event nc40193932:

A moderate earthquake occurred at 4:19:54 AM (PST) on Monday, February 26, 2007.

The magnitude 5.4 event occurred 52 km (32 miles) W of Ferndale, CA.

The hypocentral depth is 0.4 km (0.2 miles)

Right at the seaward edge of the Cascadia subduction zone.

We’ll be having dinner with Susan Hough on Thursday after her author talk at Kepler’s down in Menlo Park for her newest book: Richter’s Scale: Measure of an Earthquake, Measure of a Man

(In the area? Stop on by! Thursday March 01, 2007 — 7:30 p.m. at Kepler’s in Menlo Park)

(Buy now!)

I’m sure the our dinner conversation talk will turn to local earthquakes and Cascadia and Hayward and San Andreas. It always does.

February 22, 2007

News! Cocoa may improve brain blood flow

Filed under: life,news,science — Tags: — Towse @ 3:45 pm

One of the sessions I missed at AAAS was a session Sunday titled, “The Neurobiology of Chocolate: A Mind-Altering Experience?”

Harold Schmitz of Mars, Inc. co-organized the symposium. Mars, Inc. happens to be sponsoring research into why chocolate is good for you and how they can make it even better. (Heard of CocoaVia?) I’d spent time in a session a few years back covering similar and/or earlier research on the subject. This session covered recent research including a presentation by Ian MacDonald (University of Nottingham Medical School) on “The Effect of Flavanol-Rich Cocoa on the fMRI Response to a Cognitive Task in Healthy Young People.”

Yee haw.

Luckily, there were science writers in the audience to suck it all up for me. CNN reports: Cocoa may improve brain blood flow

Sunday, I was elsewhere — in an all-day seminar on Virtual Worlds which included papers like “Comparing Mental Health Applications Using Individually Administered Virtual Reality and Second Life: Conceptual and Ethical Issues” from Skip Rizzo, USC, and “Virtual Publics: Youths’ Lives in Emergent Social Worlds” from Danah Boyd at UCB.

John Lester (AKA Pathfinder Linden) at Linden Labs organized the seminar. Linden Labs, just down the hill from me, is the creator (are the creators?) of Second Life, which I messed around with playing with after a panel at the Commonwealth Club that we attended last December.

I finally signed up yesterday but with my computer’s hiccupy-response to requests to turn and move and change the color of my coat, my experience wasn’t optimal. Problems with scaling? Problems with my computer? I’ll try again later today and see if I get further.

Sorry I was to miss out on the latest scoop about cocoa, but the Virtual Worlds seminars were crack.

[Thanks for the cocoa link, Sam]

February 14, 2007

A to-do list for the City

Filed under: life,peeves,politics,public transit — Tags: , — Towse @ 8:22 pm

Above the fold this morning in the Chron was an article detailing the City’s plan to take over liability insurance and maintenance responsibility for the pair of cypress trees downhill from here that I’ve written about before , the trees that Mark Bittner flung himself in front of chainsaws to save, the trees that are, according to Bevan Dufty, who proposed the legislation, one of the parrots’ favorite roosts.

The operative words there are “one of the…”

The parrots have many favorite roosts. This clump of trees is not even the most favorite roost within a one hundred yard radius. Preserving these trees because the tourists like watching the parrots is a flawed argument. Mark lives right next to the trees in question, which is why he wants them preserved above all others. I understand his personal stake in all this.

… but the number of tourists who climb up and down the Greenwich Steps and are enchanted by the birds (and ipso facto and all that the trees MUST be preserved!) are far outnumbered by the number of tourists who climb up and down the Filbert Steps and are enchanted by the birds. The parrots are hanging out more often than not in the trees and on the wires above the Filbert Steps when they are hanging out on this side of the hill.

And, boy, am I tired of explaining to people I talk to at parties and gatherings that the parrots are fine, they’re happy, they’re healthy, they’re squawking all the time, when they’re here. There are scores of parrots in the flock and it is still growing. Concerned people say, “But I thought their tree was cut down.” or “I thought they had flown away.”

No, it wasn’t. No, they haven’t. They don’t even sleep here, I tell them. The parrots show up in the morning and squawk around and come and go and usually head back to the north end of town, to the Presidio or Fort Mason or wherever it is they lay their weary heads, when the sun starts heading toward its evening meetup with the ocean. Get here after 5P or 4P or some days even 3P and there won’t be a parrot to be seen. “Come back tomorrow,” I tell the disappointed tourists. “They’ve gone home to tuck in but they’ll be back tomorrow.”

And, whoo boy, the Steps especially near Napier Lane, outside Aaron Peskin’s place (the wires near his house are a new favorite place for them) are sprinkled with guano these days. We noticed a note from Judy Irving (TPOTH filmmaker and Mark’s wife) tacked onto Aaron’s fence the other day asking people not to feed the parrots.

The Northeast San Francisco Conservancy has collected $5K to give to the City to pay an arborist to trim the trees so at least that expense won’t be the City’s, but the other associated staffer expenses?

The City, which has a wide variety of ills that need attention, is spending time, staffing $$ (and perhaps real $$ if the trees topple) on a pair of trees that imosho don’t deserve the extraordinary attention they’ve been getting.

A guy from AP asked us last Sunday at Gavin’s campaign HQ opening, what we thought was the most serious problem in the City that needed addressing.

Oh, so many to choose from …

The City should be paying attention to:

(1) Muni/taxis/public transport/traffic meters/bike lanes/traffic and oh, the list could go on. Let’s talk about bus fares. Let’s talk about waiting for a 30 for much longer than expected and having two show up simultaneously. Let’s talk about reworking Muni and dropping the fares for everyone. (What’s with the proposed deal to give 18-24 year olds deals on their Muni passes when there are plenty of thirty- and forty-something dishwashers and grocery clerks who deserve a fare shake too.)

And maybe, just maybe, if we improve the Muni safety record we will have extra money in the budget. Last year Muni paid out $6.6 million in claims. Woo hoo! A million less than the year before! SIX MILLION SIX HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS. Yikes.

(2) trash/litter and the scum bums who toss crap in the streets or toss coffee cups in the gutters or leave papers on benches for the winds to blow afar. Add in the City’s trash picker uppers who need to pickup the trash bins (especially the ones at the bottom of the Vallejo Steps at Montgomery) far more often than they do, the lack of trash bins on busy corners and at bus stops which gives people the excuse that they would have thrown their trash in a trash bin but there was not one to be found, and oh, the list could go on.

And then there’s the neighbor at the top of the Filbert Steps at Montgomery who doesn’t like the people down the Steps bringing their recycle up to the top of the Steps for recycle pickup. Every once in a while, when the recycle offends him for whatever reason, maybe the neighbor’s noise disturbed his tube watching, he kicks the recycle down the steps and makes a giant mess of things just because of because. Grow up, neighbor.

Let’s all take the “one for the road” pledge.

(3) crime, violent crime, hurting people, busting windows, busting jaws, killing people, robbing people, theft, property damage. People, some of them quite young, running amok.

(4) free WiFi — just get on with it. Let Earthlink and Google provide the service and use us as their guinea pigs and don’t even think of having the City set up its own bureaucracy to handle the problem. Oh, the bureaucrats handle Muni so well, why not give them this new box to play in?

(5) the building inspections department and the planning process … both busted by some accounts with the added fillip that no one can agree on the right thing to be done so nothing gets done

… until someone like kink.com buys a building and promises that all they’ll do is get rid of the graffiti, add outdoor lighting and … make movies inside away from the public view. The site’s zoned for commercial use. The building won’t change. Nothing that needs planning or historic preservation.

BUT WE DON’T WANT THAT! Well, over the years you didn’t want anything else either. No one could agree. It’s been over thirty years since the Guard left the building. ‘sides which kink.com’s been making movies in a warehouse not that far away for years now and nobody even noticed. Peter Acworth had a column on the op-ed page Monday about the purchase and his plans.

A new head’s been hired for the Building Inspection department and maybe he’ll work wonders. Planning’s problems don’t have an easy fix. Can’t we all just get along?

Don’t get me started on the ongoing snags affecting Angelo Sangiacomo’s efforts to rehab Trinity Plaza. He’s getting tired of the wrangling. What if he just says tahellwithit like the previous owner of the Armory did? I doubt we’ll ever find a buyer like kink.com that wants Trinity Plaza and will keep it just like it is, which seems to be the intent of the folks who are asking Sangiacomo to promise this, and when he does, asking him to promise that, and when he does, saying they’ve changed their minds and want him to …

(6) the Port and the piers and the wrangling there over what will be done. Leave things as some people seem to want and the piers will all look like Pier 36 in a few years.

(7) people who need health care. people who need housing. people who need jobs. people who need a shrink or drugs or food or a hug.

“Choose one?” we asked the reporter. “Muni, parking, taxis, anything to do with getting people around this town without adding cars on the streets but that’s just the beginning of what needs addressing.”

The pair of cypresses downhill from us didn’t even cross our minds. There are other trees that the parrots flock to. The parrots are thriving. I’m not a tree hugger, obviously. I don’t believe every tree deserves saving just because it’s a tree. I do believe in planting more trees in the city. We’re Friends of the Urban Forest. My problem with Dufty’s well-intentioned, if misguided, efforts is that I don’t cotton to the idea that rules should be changed and these trees deserve special efforts because of the parrots. They don’t. The parrots are fine. The City has more important troubles to address.

February 6, 2007

More QM2

Filed under: life,ships — Tags: , — Towse @ 3:39 am

Oh, my. Was traffic snarled today.

We knew there’d be some problems. Yes, indeed. TPTB had set electronic signs on the Embarcadero days ahead of time warning that traffic would be a mess from Broadway to Bay.

Broadway to Bay?

Try all the way back to 280 to way past Bay … in both directions.

We swung by the Post Office to drop off a card (Happy bday, SP!) around noon. His nibs decided that traffic wouldn’t be that bad on the Embarcadero after he missed hanging a right on Filbert and a right on Kearny and heading out that way. He drove (with detours) down to the Embarcadero where we waited through four traffic signal changes to hang a right and get out of town.

… thirty minutes later we were across from the ball park and almost out of town.

The traffic was nuts. Too many people on the crosswalks so drivers couldn’t turn. An extra cruise ship berthed over at Pier 35, adding to the carnival atmosphere.

I predict Letters to the Editor in tomorrow’s Chronicle from the folks at 101 Lombard, who insist that any new anything on the Embarcadero should be squelched because of traffic concerns.

“See?!?!! See?!?!!” they’ll say.

Give it a rest, I say. Everyone else in the City tells the neighbors who complain about the traffic when the team’s playing at Candlestick that they should chill. It’s only ten days a year, we tell them. Live with it.

So we live with the cruise ship traffic jams, magnified today because there was not only a cruise ship BUT ALSO the QM2 AND all the people who came down to gawk at the QM2.

Taxis everywhere. Tour buses.

The F-line was running extra cars, which were jammed so they were running buses as well.

CurbedSF checks in and! includes a link to a YouTube video of the ship (“transoceanic liner”) coming in under the GGBridge yesterday.

We decided to return home (from a busy day of sorting stuff and victuals runs to Costco and Trader Joe’s) on a route that didn’t use the Embarcadero.

Good thing.

We double-parked at the top of the Steps and ran our purchases home at around 6P or so. His nibs took the MINI to its stall and said that while he was walking back up Union, he encountered a well-dressed woman of a certain age, talking to someone on her cell. “Didn’t I tell you several times NOT TO GO NEAR THE EMBARCADERO?”

Not a happy camper. Her ride had failed her. She was walking down Union to find a ride to wherever it was she needed to go.

I wonder how many passengers will be left behind because the bar pilot MUST leave with the changing tide some time around 8P. Passengers that are not back on board will need to catch up with the ship … somehow.

[8P] His nibs is checking with our telescope and can see the bar pilot up on the bridge. (Bar pilot’s in suit and tie.) The ship isn’t moving yet. Heck, the lines are still engaged, but at least there’s action up on the bridge.

How long can the ship wait and still make it out the Gate safely?

[His nibs is watching the action and adds that the airplane with the lighted signage is flying back and forth over the crowds watching the ship, running an ad for Big-O Tires. Someone in marketing is making their momma proud.)

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