Neighbor Shane discovered a brilliantly placed poker table on the north side of Bernal Heights Boulevard:
I love my neighborhood, always finding fun things on the hill.
Who’s dealing?
PHOTO: Neighbor Shane
Neighbor Shane discovered a brilliantly placed poker table on the north side of Bernal Heights Boulevard:
I love my neighborhood, always finding fun things on the hill.
Who’s dealing?
PHOTO: Neighbor Shane
Miss Darcy from Heartfelt on Cortland tells us that her store will host a kid-centric event at 2 pm on Sunday, with a a few special guest stars: two chickens, a duck, a rabbit… and maybe even a baby goat. Oh, and they all live in Bernal Heights.
The event is a celebration for the newest book in the Mrs. Mustard oeuvre, Mrs. Mustard’s Beastly Babies. And just like the chickens, the duck, the rabbit, and maybe the baby goat, Mrs. Mustard herself — aka Jane Wattenberg — also lives here in Bernalwood.
Here’s everything you need to know:
Clean Team is a San Francisco volunteer program that matches city agencies with City residents and merchants to clean San Francisco neighborhoods and spiffy-up public spaces.
The next Clean Team event will happen Saturday morning in Bernal Heights(!), and the City seeks volunteers to join. Bernalwood’s sources tell us the effort will focus on weeding and litter pickup along the Bernal Cut, with another group working around Holly Park.
All the details are right here:
Join Mayor Ed Lee, Supervisor Scott Wiener, Supervisor David Campos, and the Community Clean Team as we clean and green San Francisco in Districts 8 and 9! Volunteers will work on tree care, landscaping and gardening projects, remove weeds and overgrown vegetation, paint over graffiti, and help clean up litter around the neighborhood. Lunch will be provided.
Kickoff site:
Fairmount Elementary School
65 Chenery StreetSaturday
June 9, 2012
9am – 12pm
PHOTO: Mayor Ed Lee
Neighbor Orlando has issued an all-points-bulletin seeking help to recover a chicken that has gone missing in the area of Folsom and Ripley streets near the summit of Bernal Hill:
My neighbor Rick who lives across the street from me in the place better known as the “farmhouse mansion,” (yes the one built in 1870) lost a white chicken, size small. Please, would you kindly announce the loss and if anyone finds it they can ring my doorbell and I will handle it from there.
Alternatively, if you have seen the bird that flew the coop, you can contact the Bernalwood Lost Poultry Hotline at bernalwood at gmail dot com.
UPDATE: Stand down, citizens! Neighbor Mark recovered the wayward chicken.
PHOTO: Typical white chicken courtesy of Scorpions and Centaurs
On Tuesday evening I went up the hill to see if anyone brought a big telescope to observe the transit of Venus across the face of the sun.
I arrived with a pair of cheap cardboard eclipse-viewing glasses that I’d used (and shared) a few weeks earlier for the partial solar eclipse, another a well-attended astronomical event on the hill. The transit of Venus brought out a smaller crowd, but one nice genleman there had set up a telescope on a tripod and attached a camera.
He was happy to let several of us random neighbors take a look through the viewfinder, and there were apparently quite a few more throughout the day, as he writes on Flickr in the comments:
I spent yesterday afternoon freezing on a wind swept hill in San Francisco imaging the Transit of Venus. I almost packed up my gear and equipment but decided to stay until the sun dropped below the horizon, the ToV will never occur again in our lifetimes. Just before the sun set in aligned perfectly with a very large and iconic tower, The Twin Peaks antenna, which wasn’t planned, Although some high clouds blurred the image a bit, the wait and was worth it. I suppose a big part of photography is luck.
Ironically, I planned on shooting at a different location which was about 30 miles away. When I arrived I discovered that I forgot my solar filter and had to race back to San Francisco to retrieve it. I headed for a large hill top park in my neighborhood with a clear view of the Western horizon. This is a popular park where people love to walk their dogs. I estimated about 300 people got a view trough the telescope which they weren’t expecting. Apollo must of been with me yesterday, a near disaster turned out to be the best option.
Amazing story, amazing luck, and an amazing shot!
PHOTO: Clifton Reed
Speaking of how to deal with things you find on the street, The Bold Italic steers us toward this hilarious AND helpful parody video created by the San Francisco SPCA:
The SF SPCA recently recently made this funny spoof of Portlandia. Its video, Catlandia, is all about the SF SPCA’s trap-neuter-return program for feral cats. Besides teaching us how we can help prevent more feral kittehs from popping up on SF streets (and shelters), the video also pokes fun at San Franciscans’ obsessions with texting, localism, artisanal cheeses, recycling, urban beekeeping, and more. Well done, SPCA.
Bernalwood seconds the well done.
The big shrub/tree thingy on the eastern slope of Bernal Heights Park is one of the most impressive — if underrated — features on the hill. The consensus among our local plantspotters is that it’s a California Buckeye (Aesculus californica).
The Buckeye cuts a dramatic profile from almost any angle, but if you look at it closely you might notice two small grave markers tucked away under the branches on the downtown-facing side. How creepy! How gothic!
So who’s buried under there? The answer becomes clear if you dare approach for a closer look: The grave markers belong to departed subcultural pets.
One of the tombstones remembers a punk rock rabbit named Vikktor who died earlier this year:
The other is a snake named Spike that began its eternal rest in 2010:
PHOTOS: Telstar Logistics
It goes without saying that the citizenry of Bernalwood was outraged by the recent rash of dumping incidents on Bernal Hill.
But while we’re on the topic of dumping, the Bernalwood Research Department has uncovered an interesting litter-related fact: The majority of the 20 million pounds of abandoned crap our cash-strapped city cleans up every year, to the tune of four million dollars, does not come from piles of construction debris left by miscreants skulking about under cover of darkness.
Nope. “The bulk of what we pick up is innocent household items just set out on sidewalk,” says Greg Crump of the Department of Public Works.
We’ve all seen this kind of small-scale dumping: that splotchy mattress slouching against the side of a building, or that lopsided media cabinet optimistically adorned with a “Free” sign in the mini-park.
Which means that some inhabitants of our fair dominion are, apparently, doing it.
Not that you ever would, of course. But if you happen to see or know of anyone whose idea of spring cleaning is leaving their oversize clutter on the sidewalk, please spread the word: THERE IS A BETTER WAY, and it’s EASY.
Just go to RecycleMyJunk.com or call 330-1300 and tell the fine folks at Recology Sunset Scavenger what you’ve got and when you want them to haul it away. (I recommend calling, despite the annoying recording you have to listen to, because even if you fill out the online form, you’ll still have to call later.)
Why expend the very minimal effort required to do this?
Reason #1: It’ll probably be free, because—get this—if you have garbage pickup, you’re already paying for this service (more on that later).
Reason #2: Your stuff is less likely to end up in the landfill. Over 60% of what Recology collects is recycled, public relations manager (and Bernalwood resident!) Robert Reed told me. “If you illegally dump, you’re creating an environmental problem,” he says. “Let’s say you abandon a mattress. How long before a dog comes along and lifts a leg, or it rains? If it gets moldy or something, at least part of that thing is going to just get tossed.”
Properly-disposed-of mattresses, by the way, are taken to … the largest mattress recycler in North America(!), a place called DR3, which happens to be in the East Bay. Between 85 and 90 percent of each mattress DR3 gets its hands on finds a new life, including the wood, the steel springs, and the outside material. “The foam gets turned into carpet padding, and a portion of the cotton actually ends up in the oil industry, to help clean up oil spills,” says DR3 manager Robert Jaco.
Reason #3: You won’t be inviting yet more blight to our glamorous neighborhood. Nuff said.
But what if you don’t have any bulky-item pickups left? This can happen. If you live in a single-family home, you’re entitled to two collections of up to 10 big items a year at no extra charge. If you live in a multi-unit building, you only get one.
But not to worry! If you’re out of curbside collections and you can’t sweet-talk your neighbor into letting you share one of theirs, you can still schedule a pickup. It won’t be free, but it won’t break the bank either. And if you can’t or don’t want to schlep your cast-offs to the curb, Recology will handle the lugging. “We collect stuff from garages, houses, storage rooms,” Reed says. “We even carry mattresses right out of the bedroom.”
A bevy of free options exist for getting rid of non-broken furniture, appliances, etc. The Salvation Army has a conveniently close drop-off location at 26th and San Jose, but you can also have them come to you. United Cerebral Palsy of the Golden Gate will also come to you — and they send also trucks to our neighborhood every few months to pick up usable items and even e-waste; watch for their flyers in your mailbox to get a heads-up.
But whatever you do, don’t just abandon your stuff outside, or the dumping terrorists have already won!
PHOTO: Bronwyn Ximm
We are a forward-looking community, here in Bernal Heights. We may prefer our meat butchered mid-20th century style, but when it comes to the latest Intertube technologies, Bernal Heights is very much on the cutting edge. So when Neighbor Isaac, a Bernal resident, got fed up with wondering “What neighborhood am I in?” as he wandered around our City, he solved the problem by creating a simple iPhone applet to answer the question with satellite-guided precision.
To use the app, you don’t even have to visit the App Store. Just steer the browser on your iPhone to isaa.ch/sf, and follow the simple instructions on your screen. Neighbor Isaac explains:
It doesn’t show you a map, or tell you the history of the neighborhood, or link to Wikipedia, or provide droll stereotypes or give you vital stats like population or elevation or weather. It just tells you what neighborhood you’re currently in—and how far you are from the closest adjacent neighborhood. That’s it.
I say “iPhone app” and I mean that in the same sense that Steve Jobs did in 2007 when he announced that the iPhone would support third-party apps. It’s a web page.
Add it as a bookmark to the home screen, though, and it’s pretty app-like. It works like this
- determine current lat/long using the HTML5 Geolocation API;
- compare with Dave Schweisguth’s SF neighborhood boundaries (thanks Dave!); and
- determine where you are, and where’s closest.
It’s barely even a beta; more of a steel thread. But hey, have at it: visit isaa.ch/sf on your iPhone, and add a bookmark to your home screen.
Some limitations, even within the admittedly narrow feature scope:
- you pretty much have to be in San Francisco for it to be of any use;
- if you’re not in San Francisco then not only will it be no use but the distance calculation (which depends on a pretty rough and ready approximation from spherical to planar geometry) will become less accurate the further you are away; and
- error cases aren’t handled terribly gracefully.
I took the app for a test drive in my back yard, and as you see above, it worked flawlessly. But I was also curious about how it would handle the delicate geo-politics of the La Lengua Autonomous Zone.
So I went for a walk into the heart of La Lengua. Once there, I stood on a sidewalk deep in La Lengua territory, between Mission and San Jose Streets, quite literally in front of the La Lengua Rebel Command Compound (LaLeRebCoCo). Then I fired up Neighbor Isaac’s app to see how it would describe my location.
This was the politically explosive result:
The La Lenguans will not be happy about this. But that’s the way it goes: Those who make the tools also get to make the rules.
PHOTOS: Telstar Logistics
Hello, Citizens of Bernalwood!
This is a public service announcement to remind you that today is an Election Day. Get thee to your local polling place, and vote!
UPDATE: The scene was typically Rockwellesque this morning on Precita Avenue:
PHOTO: Telstar Logistics
Though it’s not the kind of thing we usually discuss publicly, this is a Golden Age for Bernal Heights ninjas.
First we got Brandan Lai’s super-convenient ninja supply boutique over on Mission Street. Now we’re getting a new karate school at 461 Cortland, in the space formerly occupied by Bernal Yoga.
Actually, we’re getting a karate school, again. The new studio will belong to Lama’s Kenpo Karate, which is returning to Bernal Heights after after a 10+ year hiatus. Founder Mo Lama — that’s Mo, smiling above — first opened his studio in Bernal Heights almost two decades ago. The studio’s website tells the creation story:
In 1986, Lama’s Kenpo Karate began as an idea to facilitate the art of Shaolin Kenpo to friends and family members in the Bernal Heights community as a way to build self-confidence, awareness, and self-defense. In the mid 80’s, the Bernal Heights neighborhood was known to have an above average crime rate, which included random assaults, robberies, and the selling of illegal drugs. It made walking the streets unsafe during any time of the day. Although, this was considered a rough neighborhood it was Professor Lama’s vision to share his knowledge in self-defense so that others may benefit.
Professor Lama first began teaching out of his own garage where he only had five students. The space was very limited, but Professor managed to teach katas and conduct sparring sessions in his 12’x18′ garage space. His motivation and combined passion for teaching encouraged him to open up his first formal karate studio in Bernal Heights. After four successful years in business, Lama’s Kenpo Karate expanded and moved into a larger location in Bernal Heights.
As enrollment increased at Lama’s Kenpo Karate, Sibok Lama moved the school to its present day location in San Bruno, Ca.
The San Bruno school will remain open, with a second branch re-opening in the space on Cortland, in a Bernal Heights that is much changed from 1986. Back then, Bernal was rough and scary. Today, celebrities and fashionistas wander the streets of Bernal Heights without hesitation or fear. The logical conclusion? We have the local ninjas from Lama’s Kenpo Karate to thank for this.
Bernalwood is told that Mo Lama himself will be teaching at the Cortland location two days a week, with a pair of blackbelts who live in the neighborhood running the school the rest of the time. Great news, and welcome back to Cortland, Professor Lama!
Finally, we hope you will enjoy this inspiring recruitment video created on behalf of the Bernalwood Self-Defense Forces:
PHOTO: Top, Neighbor Mason. Below, Telstar Logistics
The 67 Muni bus is neither fast, nor frequent. But when it comes, it often comes on schedule. Neighbor Amanda tells us:
Hey, our fabulous neighborhood bus line is one of the best-performing (on-time) citywide.
So we’ve got that going for us.
IMAGES: Photo, Telstar Logistics