Website Photo Day – Day 77

Website Photo Day

Day 77 – June 16, 2003 – Monday

We extended our visit today with son Ryan in San Francisco. We decided to add a day in San Francisco to take care of various “housekeeping chores.” I took the day to try to catch up on the website photos. Boz and Ryan got the oil changed in the PT Cruiser, but we learned that we needed a minor brake repair, so we will have to get that done tomorrow.

It seems we may also be able to help Ryan with his business. So, it looks like we will spend a couple of extra days in San Francisco. We don’t get to San Francisco often, and we’d just flat like to spend more time with The Dude (aka Ryan). We are changing our flight arrangements for Alaska as a result.

We planned to get it all figured out tomorrow.

I worked until 2:30 am, and I finally had photos posted to the website with captions through today! We envy those parents who have their children and grandchildren living near them. This is one of the things that we did not recognize or appreciate in regard to our parents.

The Daily Journal of Round America:

Each day, we collect our thoughts on a web page just like this. We drop in some of the photos from the day. Our goal with the Daily Journal is to write about the towns we visit, the sights we see, the people we meet, and the pie we eat. We write about where we are, where we’ve been, and where we are going, but we also make observations about what we’ve seen and done as well as about life in general.

You can follow our travels from the Daily Journal section of this website. Other pages of interest include the running report of “vital statistics” on the Trip Scorecard, our nominations for the Best & Worst of the trip, as well as a rating of the pie we eat. If you’d like to see information for a specific state or town, click here, and then click on the state of interest, and the full itinerary is shown.

 

More Information on the Sights Visited Today:
San Francisco California
 

Fathers Day on the 17-Mile Drive – Day 76

Fathers Day on the 17-Mile Drive

Day 76 – June 15, 2003 – Sunday

We spent a wonderful Father’s Day with son Ryan in Carmel, Monterey, and Santa Cruz, California. We had great conversations with PaPa in Dallas, Texas and Great Grandpa in Orlando, Florida. We also spoke with daughter Brittanita (aka The Beetmeister or Brittany) and son-in-law Ace (aka Robert).

We started the day at the Marin Headlands. The Marin Headlands side of the Golden Gate Bridge is a great place to take photos and watch freighters and sailboats cruise under the bridge as you enjoy a view that stretches from Golden Gate Park and Twin Peaks to the Bay Bridge and beyond.

Boz, Ryan, and I drove from San Francisco to Carmel to take the 17-Mile Drive and have lunch. We planned to return via Monterey and Santa Cruz. We had planned to see these sights on the way to San Francisco, but nightfall caught us. We lived in San Francisco for a year back in the early 80’s, and Ryan has lived here for several years, but it had been 20 years or so since any of us had taken the scenic 17-Mile Drive.

We grabbed a dozen Krispy Kreme donuts and hit the road. They weren’t hot, but they were excellent. As donut experts, we can tell you that the quality of a KK will vary from location to location. These were as good as we’d had, and I’d probably been to as many as 30 KK locations around the country.

17-Mile Drive is a scenic drive through the Del Monte Forest, along the rugged coastline of the Monterey Peninsula in Carmel, and by the world-renowned Pebble Beach Golf Links. It is one of the most famous drives in the country.

17-Mile Drive was originally navigated by horse-drawn carriages back in the 1880’s. Folks would drive through the Del Monte Forest and along the spectacular coastline usually ending up at a picnic spot at Pebble Beach. Samuel F.B. Morse was the property manager of the Del Monte Forest who is credited with taking the steps necessary to maintain the unique beauty of the coast and forest. He must have been a golfer. In 1916, he contracted with Jack Neville and Douglas Grant to design Pebble Beach Golf Links. Construction began in 1917, and the course opened to the public in 1919. The first national tournament was held in 1929. Over the last 30 years, four U.S. Opens have been held at Pebble Beach. Jack Nicklaus is quoted as saying that if he had just one round left to play in his life, he would want it to be at Pebble Beach. It’s a stunning golf course. Barbara Gray Windsor said that if she was a golf course, she would want to be Pebble Beach.

The drive is a loop, and there are 21 stops; we managed to stop for photos at almost all of them. There are five golf courses along the way — Pebble Beach Golf Links, Poppy Hills Golf Course, Links at Spanish Bay, Spyglass Hill Golf Course, and Peter Hay Par 3 Golf Course. The drive goes through the Del Monte Forest and includes native pine and cypress trees as well as huckleberry bushes. The Lone Cypress is perhaps the most recognized landmark along the 17-Mile Drive. The tree has survived on its rocky perch for over 250 years. The coastline is rugged and very beautiful.

It wasn’t the most beautiful of days. Hazy blue sky. We enjoyed the drive, but to be honest, it wasn’t nearly as impressive to us as it was 20 years ago. We weren’t sure if our perspective has changed (having seen a lot of beautiful places in the last 20 years), if the weather was just much better when we were there before, or if construction over the last 20 years has changed the look and feel of the area. There were some gorgeous homes along the drive, but there were also some places that didn’t fit. It’s a beautiful place. I’m sure we were just on sensory overload at this point after having seen so much beautiful scenery all across the country.

We walked around Carmel — a quaint community filled with art galleries and beautiful shops. See www.carmelfun.com. Clint Eastwood was mayor here, and he owns the Hogs Breath Inn, among other things. We took the kids to Hogs Breath 20 years ago, so we stopped in for a late lunch / early dinner at 4 pm. The Dirty Harry Burger is one of the best hamburgers you will ever eat anywhere. We put a penny on top of a beam in the patio when we were there in 1983, but it was no longer there.

As with most of our days, the day was just about over, and we still had Monterey and Santa Cruz to visit.

We just drove through Monterey. We saw Cannery Row and the Monterey Fisherman’s Wharf. The water was a pretty blue in Monterey Bay. We saw the Monterey Bay Aquarium.

In Santa Cruz, we stopped and saw the Santa Cruz Boardwalk — a Coney island-type amusement park. We walked up and down the Boardwalk. I tried a newfangled ice cream called Dippin Dots. Tiny little dots of ice cream. It was REALLY expensive, and there just wasn’t much there. I’ll stick with regular old ice cream and frozen yogurt.

We missed some sights we wanted to see between Carmel and San Francisco, but it was far more important to enjoy a more leisurely Father’s Day with The Dude.

The thought for the day: Sometimes things aren’t as special the second time around.

The Daily Journal of Round America:

Each day, we collect our thoughts on a web page just like this. We drop in some of the photos from the day. Our goal with the Daily Journal is to write about the towns we visit, the sights we see, the people we meet, and the pie we eat. We write about where we are, where we’ve been, and where we are going, but we also make observations about what we’ve seen and done as well as about life in general.

You can follow our travels from the Daily Journal section of this website. Other pages of interest include the running report of “vital statistics” on the Trip Scorecard, our nominations for the Best & Worst of the trip, as well as a rating of the pie we eat. If you’d like to see information for a specific state or town, click here, and then click on the state of interest, and the full itinerary is shown.

 

More Information on the Sights Visited Today:
San Francisco California — Marin Headlands — Carmel California — 17-Mile Drive — Hogs Breath Inn — Monterey California — Santa Cruz Boardwalk
 

Behind the Scenes at Circus Chimera – Day 75

Behind the Scenes at Circus Chimera

Day 75 – June 14, 2003 – Saturday

We spent a wonderful day in the San Francisco area with son Ryan.

Ryan took us to meet one of his friends, Richard Tuck. Among other things, Richard owns a circus. Before we knew what was happening, we were meeting the circus performers and enjoying a behind-the-scenes tour of Circus Chimera — www.circuschimera.com. We then enjoyed a special performance of the circus. It was a special day, and Richard is a special person.

Circus Chimera is not your typical circus. It is a blend of the traditional circus with theatre and international flair. Circus Chimera features extraordinary human feats. The ensemble consists of acrobats, aerialists, daredevils, and clowns from 25 countries around the world. It is a real team effort as everyone fills a variety of roles. For example, the high wire aerialist was taking tickets and managing the ushers before changing costumes and performing death-defying routines. The young man selling the programs changed into his costume and did the Walk of Death — walking upside down 50 feet above the circus floor (with no net).

Former Cirque du Soleil artist, Tom Dougherty, developed the theme for this year’s circus — “Moondreams.” It was the story of a little girl’s triumph over self doubt as she and her brother are swept into the magical world of the circus. They were taken on a circus adventure where they encountered aerialists, jugglers, teeterboard acrobats, daredevils of various types, and a very funny clown. The story was told not through words, but through scenes, sets, and circus techniques.

Each of the 16 performances was excellent. Highlights included Fridman’s incredible Walk of Death where he walked upside down the full length of the circus ring — 50 feet in the air with no net. It was amazing when he makes the walk, and it took our breath away when he repeated the feat walking backwards! Hernan Nunez was also incredible. He demonstrated exceptional strength and balance as he supported his outstretched body seemingly forever on one hand. In the next act, he balanced on his head and spun rings with his arms and legs, and they rotated so fast that the rings became just a blur.

Perhaps the most impressive acts to us were by Alex Chimal. He is the world’s fastest juggler. You can’t even believe how fast he juggles balls, knives, and fire. In the second act, he juggled what seemed like 100 balls as he bounced them off the floor.

Tom Dougherty was world-class as the circus clown.

We loved the Lunar Aerial Hoop routine as Mariana Chimal did a beautiful and dangerous aerial act on a single hoop high above the circus floor. The act was excellent, but it was far more entertaining as Richard told us the story behind the act. Mariana met Alex Chimal, and they fell in love and were married. Mariana was an accountant. Alex travels 11 months of the year with the circus as the world’s fastest juggler. So, Mariana joined the circus troupe. Not content to sit on the sidelines, she developed the aerial act after never having done any type of performing ever before. She is now the only CPA in the world who does a Lunar Aerial Hoop act high above a circus floor.

At one point, seven members of the Chimal family plus one Alvarado built a human tower as they launched performers one at a time off a teeterboard until they are stacked five high. Then there were the two young men riding motorcycles inside a steel ball. We just couldn’t imagine how they could keep but ending up in a tangled pile of metal, but they flew around in the ball in a perfectly synchronized way. Oh, the real grabber — Luis Fernandez hangs by his ankle from the top of the tent holding a cable, and his wife Sandra spun like a top on the cable — and she is holding it only with her teeth. And never a net at Circus Chimera.

At the end of the show, the little 10-year-old girl, Alina Sergeeva, spun a pile of hula hoops from just about every part of her body. All made even better by Richard who has told us inside information about the acts, the performers, and the people behind the scenes who help make it all happen.

Richard is a fascinating man who stepped in a few years ago to save the circus. He had also salvaged many artifacts from a San Francisco landmark that was destroyed — Playland at the Beach. In the back of his large computer consulting company’s offices, he has built Playland Not At The Beach. He also has the world’s largest miniature circus there (300,000 pieces). In addition, he has miniature San Francisco, miniature North Pole, miniature Disneyland, miniature Chinatown, miniature Dicken’s Village, miniature Candyland, and much more. See www.playland-not-at-the-beach.com.

And if all of that isn’t fascinating enough, Richard’s HOME has a name; it’s called “It Must Be Magic!” The home features a complete magic theatre, a room with over 450 clocks, a collection of 750 wizard figurines, movie memorabilia from the golden age of Hollywood, a room filled with roller coasters, a real roller coaster, and much, much more. Rooms include the Dickens Parlour, Wizard of Oz Room, Pinball Alley with a huge assortment of pinball machines and video games, a Soda Fountain, and a Movie Theatre with over 18,000 movies available. 100 circus people lived in Richard’s home for several months after he invested in the circus.

When Richard Tuck and Tim Sauer moved into the house looking out over the San Francisco Bay, they never dreamed of what they would someday be creating. With a reputation from hosting friends and family for meals and movies for over a decade, they now had the property to expand their generosity to larger groups. And the construction began. And never stopped. For thirteen years, construction crews and electricians have been adding new surprises.

Although small looking from the street, the house just seems to continue on forever. Visitors are disoriented and confused as walls melt into doorways, closets lead into whole new sections of the house, and illusion is the order of the day. When Frank Biafore joined the household in 1995, he brought another level of expertise to the growing merriment. Frank had studied architecture and design. By combining Frank’s design and construction experience and wild ideas with Richard’s magical touches and flair for the mysterious, the construction of some of the most memorable areas in the home was accelerated.

It Must Be Magic! is strictly a hobby — a part time endeavor to share fun and joy with the world. The three men behind the scenes work full time to support their generosity. Featured in numerous newspaper and magazine stories, It Must Be Magic! is one of those unadvertised special places that most of us never know about. Richard, Tim, and Frank live in the home; it is not open to the public.

Richard does a lot of good for a lot of people, and he enjoys the heck out of life. Those who have heard about Richard Tuck but don’t know him may think he is an eccentric. Not everyone turns their home into a magical world, but Richard is a corporate CEO who is more grounded than the vast majority of us. He just likes to have fun and share the fun with others.

We met a lot of folks who we would have thought were “eccentric” before the Round America trip, but after getting to know them a bit, we found they aren’t strange after all. This will be one of the most important lessons we have learned on the trip. Try to avoid prejudging people. Realize that we are all different and have our own unique interests and thoughts. And what may look bizarre to someone else may have a reasonable explanation once you take a look from the perspective of those involved.

I know what some people are thinking when they see me wearing my beads. They think I’m a weirdo of some type. I much prefer those who smile and ask about the beads, and I know they have a lot more fun when they hear a few stories about the trip and enjoy a laugh or two. The others just stare, pass by muttering to themselves, and miss out on the opportunity to meet some nice folks who are just having fun and writing a book.

Ryan took us to see more sights in San Francisco. We went up to Twin Peaks for a great view of the skyline of San Francisco. Twin Peaks is the highest point overlooking the city — fabulous views. We walked around Pier 39 at Fisherman’s Wharf where we paid a visit to the sea lions and enjoyed a variety of street performers. Our favorite was Bushman — a man who has two pieces of shrubbery on sticks. He holds them in front of him and jumps out and yells boo when poor unsuspecting folks obliviously wander by. We saw City Hall, Coit Tower, Ghirardelli Square, and San Quentin.

We also visited the famous hippy area of Haight-Ashbury where we stopped by to see the Grateful Dead House at 710 Ashbury. The members of the Grateful Dead lived there communally from 1966 to 1968. Jerry Garcia once described the atmosphere: “People trying to start various spiritual movements would be in and out. Friends trying to organize benefits would be in and out. There would be a lot of energy exchanged. It was a real high in those days because Haight-Ashbury was a real community.” Most of the band subsequently moved to upscale suburban Marin County.

There’s a great deal of rock-and-roll history in San Francisco. If time permitted, the Airplane House, the Avalon Ballroom, the Carousel, the Cow Palace, the Fillmore Auditorium, Fillmore West, Golden gate Park, the Pit, Slim’s, Winterland, and a number of other locations offer a lot of rock music history.

“The Haight” was the center of the 1960’s counter-culture movement, the center of the Summer of Love and Be-Ins, and home to music greats like Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix as well as Jerry Garcia and the Grateful Dead. Patty Hearst was held hostage in a home in the area.

There’s still a hippy feel to the area, and it was packed with tourists. There were a lot of would-be hippies there, though. The area was filled with health food stores, retro, costume, and head shops, cafes, and body shops. Most of the shops are locally-owned and individualistic. I understand that Safeway moved into the area, but the locals didn’t like it. Protesters filled carts with food, and then left the store. Safeway was gone in just three months.

We went to see two unusual hotels with funky theme rooms — the Triton and the Red Victorian. The Red Victorian is a historic hotel in the world-famous Haight-Ashbury, and you can rent a room and live like a hippy. If you are a hippy, you can rent a room and feel at home. Sami Sunchild designed each room to inspire, amuse, relax, or enlighten you. There are 18 guest rooms, from luxurious with private baths to fanciful economy rooms with private sinks and shared use of one of the Love Bathrooms. Theme rooms have names like “Summer of Love” and “Flower Child.” One of the bathrooms has an aquarium in the pull-chain toilet tank. There’s a meditation room, motivational videos, meditative art, and visual poetry. One of the best parts of the stay is said to be the family-style breakfast where guests from a variety of cultures, lifestyles, and professions gather for breakfast and conversation. See www.redvic.com.

The Triton is a very nice hotel, so if you want to have some fun in San Francisco, it looks like a great place to stay. The Triton features fabulous theme suites, rubber ducks in every bath, celebrity wake-up calls, nightly tarot card reading, feather boa rentals, and more. The hotel bills itself as “an Atlantean kingdom of sophistication and irrepressible charm.” The Triton is known for wacky publicity stunts such as putting stunt men on the roof and drag queens in the lobby. It’s a really nice hotel with massive creativity and a great sense of humor. Very refreshing. See www.hotel-tritonsf.com.

Our evening ended with a trip to Celia’s in San Rafael — The Dude’s favorite Mexican restaurant. It was excellent!

One of the most important lessons we have learned on the trip is to try to avoid prejudging people. Realize that we are all different and have our own unique interests and thoughts. And what may look bizarre to someone else may have a reasonable explanation once you take a look from the perspective of those involved.

The Daily Journal of Round America:

Each day, we collect our thoughts on a web page just like this. We drop in some of the photos from the day. Our goal with the Daily Journal is to write about the towns we visit, the sights we see, the people we meet, and the pie we eat. We write about where we are, where we’ve been, and where we are going, but we also make observations about what we’ve seen and done as well as about life in general.

You can follow our travels from the Daily Journal section of this website. Other pages of interest include the running report of “vital statistics” on the Trip Scorecard, our nominations for the Best & Worst of the trip, as well as a rating of the pie we eat. If you’d like to see information for a specific state or town, click here, and then click on the state of interest, and the full itinerary is shown.

 

More Information on the Sights Visited Today:San Francisco California — Circus Chimera — Haight-Ashbury — Triton Hotel — Red Victorian Hotel
 

Alcatraz – Day 74

Alcatraz

Day 74 – June 13, 2003 – Friday

We spent a wonderful day with son Ryan in San Francisco, California. In addition to an Internet business, Ryan owns a tour company (see www.alcatraz.us), and we got the deluxe tour. When you travel to San Francisco or anywhere in North America, please contact Ryan’s company for tours. 

The tour of Alcatraz departs daily from Fisherman’s Wharf in San Francisco. Alcatraz was used as a federal maximum security prison from 1934 until 1963, when it was closed due to high costs and security issues. Allowing tourists to visit Alcatraz has proven far more popular and much more profitable. Many tourists come to San Francisco and are disappointed when they can’t get tickets to Alcatraz. Alcatraz is so popular that tours are often sold out a week or more in advance, and there are often long lines at Fisherman’s Wharf, and you never know what times or dates will be available until you get up to the ticket window. The best way to ensure a tour at the right time for you is to book a tour as far in advance as possible. Son Ryan is one of the biggest tour operators handling Alcatraz tours, so getting to Alcatraz has not been a problem for us. See www.alcatraz.us.

Ryan’s company offers two tours — a City Tour with Alcatraz or a Muir Woods – Sausalito Tour with Alcatraz. If you’ve never gotten a good look at the many sights of San Francisco, the City Tour with Alcatraz is best. In about five hours, you see Alcatraz and the major sights in San Francisco. It would take much longer if you tried to find each of the sights on your own, and the tour guides provide a lot of great information. If you’ve seen San Francisco but have never seen the nearby redwood forest, then take the Muir Woods – Sausalito Tour with Alcatraz. Alcatraz is the most popular tourist attraction in San Francisco, so it really is a must-see.

The Alcatraz Tour begins with a ferry boat ride from Fisherman’s Wharf over to Alcatraz Island. It’s an erie feeling as you approach the island and think about the stories you’ve heard or read and the movies you’ve seen about Alcatraz aka The Rock. The tours are self-guided with a great audio tour that provides fascinating information. The tour includes a movie about Alcatraz history and a 35 minute audio headset tour of the Alcatraz cell block. This tour is available in seven languages: English, Chinese, French, German, Italian, Japanese and Spanish. After the tour, there is time to visit the Alcatraz Museum, the bookshop, and to just wander around the island. The museum contains interesting displays and artifacts, but we enjoyed the cell block tour the most. Al Capone’s cell is marked, and we saw where the Birdman of Alcatraz spent his time, but few cells are marked, and the audio tour is the only way to know who was in what cell and what happened where.

The cell block has been maintained, but parts of Alcatraz have been destroyed or deteriorated. The Warden’s House was destroyed by fire when Indians took control of Alcatraz a few years ago. You can stay at Alcatraz as long as you like, but it takes two hours to get a good look — longer if you like to read a lot of what is offered in the museum. Once we felt we had a good tour, we went back and caught the next ferry (they run every 30 to 45 minutes going back to Fisherman’s Wharf).

City Tour sightseeing includes three or four scheduled stops of 10 to 25 minutes at selected sights, including the Golden Gate Bridge, Twin Peaks, the Palace of Fine Arts, Cliff House, and City Hall. We also saw the Marina, Nob Hill, Chinatown, the Financial District, Presidio, Golden Gate Park, Civic Center, and North Beach. This is the most popular tour in San Francisco, and it is an excellent way to see San Francisco in a short period of time. It would have taken us a day or longer to see all of this…with a lot of frustration in the always jammed streets of San Francisco.

San Francisco is such a beautiful place.

In addition to Alcatraz, we saw the sights of Fisherman’s Wharf, took a walking tour of Chinatown, saw a building with furniture all over the outside of the building, saw beautiful Victorian homes, drove down the crookedest street in the world, enjoyed Musee Mecanique, had lunch at Ryan’s favorite spot, and had a delicious gourmet dinner prepared by Ryan’s personal chef (a lady who prepared gourmet meals and delivered them to Ryan’s home).

Chinatown is fun to see, and the food is great. Enter Chinatown at the Dragon’s Gate at Bush and Grant Streets. This gate was a gift to San Francisco from the Republic of China in 1969. The characters above the gate translate to read “Everything in the world is in just proportions.” San Francisco’s Chinatown is one of North America’s largest Chinese communities. It covers 18 square blocks centered along Grant and Stockton, bordered by Bush and Columbus. The streets are lined with restaurants, shops, and trading companies. Souvenirs, silk, jade, and antiques are all offered from numerous vendors. Ross Alley is located between Grant and Stockton and runs from Jackson to Washington. Ross Alley was once lined with opium dens and brothels, and it has been a backdrop in many movies, including “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom,” “Karate Kid II,” and “Big Trouble in Little China.” The Golden Gate Fortune Cookie Company is a fun stop. You can see how fortune cookies are made. Other attractions in Chinatown include the Chinese Cultural Center, Portsmouth Square, and Old St. Mary’s Church (built in 1852, it was one of the few buildings to escape the fire of 1906).

Fisherman’s Wharf is the hot spot in San Francisco. Lots to see and buy, and even more people. There are fishing boats, fish restaurants, shops of all types, museums, and various street entertainers (folks spraypainted silver, reggae bands, and the like). Across the street from Fisherman’s Wharf are a wide variety of shops and attractions, including the Wax Museum.

Musee Mecanique is very interesting. It is a museum filled with fully operational arcade games of all types. It was really a treat to see all of these wonderful old games, fortune tellers, and other attractions. We especially liked the looks of the shop “After The Quake” as it looks like what’s left after an earthquake did serious damage. San Francisco is the headquarters for several chocolate companies, so there’s always plenty of chocolate to be had.

Ryan took us around Sausalito for a few minutes. He lived in Sausalito when he first moved to the area, so we’ve seen it before. It’s a beautiful area surrounded by some of the most expensive homes in the San Francisco area. We went down to the marina and saw some of the yachts that Ryan rents for VIP tours. We also saw some multimillion dollar houseboats! We had lunch at the Sausalito Gourmet Deli — Ryan’s favorite spot for lunch. The sandwiches were great as was the carrot cake, and the folks who own and operate it were delightful. Bozzie Jane and I love Victorian architecture, so we enjoyed just driving around and seeing the beautifully restored Victorian homes. The real estate is outrageous here. A home that might sell for $150,000 in Atlanta could be $750,000 here. Many people will live in the San Francisco area their whole lives and never own a home.

Just about everyone has heard of the crookedest street in the world. It’s Lombard Street in San Francisco. It is one giant curve after another — speed limit is 5 miles-per-hour. It’s impossible to drive any faster due to the turns and the ever-present tourists taking the drive. We never saw it when we lived here, so we enjoyed taking the drive today.

High on our Quirk-o-meter for San Francisco was the building with furniture all over the outside. We asked a man in the street, and he gave us general directions. Then Ryan called a friend who got us to the right place. It’s an abandoned tenement at Sixth and Howard streets (rough part of town). Artist Brian Groggin launched a project he called “Defenestration” — defined as the act of throwing something or someone out a window. Furniture hangs out windows and runs down the side of the four-story building. There are over 30 pieces of furniture and home appliances welded and rigged to the two street sides of the empty building. There are also a variety of sideshow-like pieces of art surrounding the building. The building was for sale on March 9, 1997 when Brian held an Urban Circus to do the installation, and the building was still for sale (with or without the furniture). If in a safer part of town, it could be the ideal location for our collection of hotel shampoo and ballpoint pens. See www.defenestration.org.

We met several of Ryan’s friends and business associates today including Chris the Airborne driver.

We met Vanessa in Chinatown as well as some folks from Washington state and Geesa and Kim from Germany.

We had no problems on Friday the Thirteenth, but one of Ryan’s tour buses did have mechanical problems out in the Muir Woods redwood forest, so that tour took a little longer than planned. We were impressed with how another tour operator came to Ryan’s aid by dispatching an idle bus.

Always enjoy every moment you can with your children as you never know when they will move completely across the country to California.

The Daily Journal of Round America:

Each day, we collect our thoughts on a web page just like this. We drop in some of the photos from the day. Our goal with the Daily Journal is to write about the towns we visit, the sights we see, the people we meet, and the pie we eat. We write about where we are, where we’ve been, and where we are going, but we also make observations about what we’ve seen and done as well as about life in general.

You can follow our travels from the Daily Journal section of this website. Other pages of interest include the running report of “vital statistics” on the Trip Scorecard, our nominations for the Best & Worst of the trip, as well as a rating of the pie we eat. If you’d like to see information for a specific state or town, click here, and then click on the state of interest, and the full itinerary is shown.

 

More Information on the Sights Visited Today:
San Francisco California — Alcatraz — Chinatown — Defenstration — Crookedest Street in the World — Sausalito California