the angle of the photo is the angle of the street |
You could lose yourself here for several days. The streets look like every American TV show I have ever watched.
Let me start by saying that the better
parts of San Francisco are away from the wharves simply because the waterfront
and surrounds is losing it’s quirky attractiveness and becoming a cheap tourist
mecca where the food is less than good and everything is way overpriced. That
said, you must see Fisherman’s Wharf once and try the crab, not clam, chowder
and then leave quickly. Crab over clam because the clams are all imported and
the crab is local and fresh!
There are so many things to do and places
to see that a plan of attack will serve you well. The high-end stores in Union
Square are a distraction and the 50% off Macy’s sale was too tempting. After
some retail therapy catch the big red bus in Union Square and a quick
circumnavigation of San Francisco puts you back on track.
An important piece of tourist advice is to pre-book your Alacatraz visit on the internet as it is regularly booked out several days ahead.
Crab Chowder, not clam! |
San Francisco’s 850,000 locals live across
steep 43 hills in the second most densely populated city in the USA (New York
is first). The larger San Francisco
metropolis houses 7.4 million people. You are either walking or riding up or
down a steep incline for most of your time here and you certainly get a good
workout.
In 1776 colonists from Spain, who were just
sailing past, liked the place so they made friends with the Ohlone Tribes, who
appear to have inhabited the area since 3000BC, built a fort in honour of St.
Francis of Assisi and moved in. In the mid 1800’s the town of 1000 people grew
as the Great Gold Rush attracted over 50,000 mainly Chinese immigrants seeking
their fortune. San Francisco holds claim to the oldest Chinatown in North
America.
Up top is great but cold, Macy's behind |
IN 1873 the famous cable cars were
introduced allowing easy access to the hilltops of San Francisco. These cable
cars are one of the worlds most well known moving historic attractions. In
1906, three quarters of the city was destroyed in an earthquake and subsequent
fires, similar in devastation, but on a larger scale, to what we have seen in
Christchurch New Zealand recently. The rebuild took 10 years.
Today, San Francisco ranks
35th out of the 100 most visited cities worldwide, and is renowned for its fog,
steep rolling hills, eclectic mix of architecture, and
landmarks including the Golden Gate Bridge, cable cars, Alcatraz
Island, and Chinatown. Sydney is 42nd as at
2011.San Francisco is spread over 120 square kilometres so the best way to explore, as mentioned, is the get on-get off red buses and the trams. For $US35 we got to see all the tourist must-do’s and drove across the fog bound Golden Gate Bridge, upstairs in an open top bus. We froze, got wet, and saw nothing due to a dense fog but it was great fun. When we got to the other side, the bus turned around to re-cross the bridge.
Golden Gate Bridge and the famous San Francisco fog |
Can you imagine the travel to work injury claims in Australia?? |
Did you know?
·
The “fortune cookie” was invented by a Chinese cook in
the San Francisco Japanese Tea Garden, in the 1800’s.
·
Denim jeans were invented during the San Francisco
gold rush for miners wanting strong comfortable pants.
·
The era and phrase “Flower Power” came from San
Francisco which was originally Spanish named as “Yearba Buena” meaning “good
grass”. The Hippie generation was very
strong in San Francisco and they took on the descriptive phrase.
·
Over the 30 years that Alcatraz was operational as a
jail, 36 prisoners made 14 attempts to escape the island, unsuccessfully.
In summary, San Francisco looks a little tired and has a large and
visible homeless population who are unpleasantly verbose about their views of
passing tour coaches. Fishermans Wharf has also fallen away in the last few
years and is a garish collection of tourist shops that are outlets for low
quality chinese made tourist trinkets.
Still a great time was had. Some say Sydney's Darling Harbour needs a makeover............
I agree with the tired look of San Fran and the high visibility of the homeless. On our trip from the hotel to the trams, and within 10mins we witnessed:
ReplyDeleteThe aftermath of a beating, as the bleeding man stumbled to his feet.
A crystal meth drug deal
A pump and his girl.
Our girls were petrified. We reminded them of why home is called "the lucky country"
Better start packing.... almost home!
ReplyDeleteAre you kidding! I have to scuba dive with the sharks in Bora Bora, go go-karting on Moorea, Tahiti and then deliver all my second hand thongs to the New Zealanders as a philanthropic gesture. Home is where the heart is and right now it is right here, right now !!!!
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