Things I saw walking in #SanFrancisco this morning:
- New-ish Kal Zakzouk sidewalk chalk art on Irving St at 20th Ave: Lady blowing bubbles amongst baby-faced goldfish.
- A stalled bus by the side of Lincoln Blvd. I'm no expert mechanic, but I think it ran out of tokens.
- Setting up a crane on the very-steep Hillway Ave, tucking a lot of wooden blocks underneath the downhill bits.
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2026-05-02T17:06:56.966292
Here are some photos of flowers in my neighborhood.
Also, since my main social network Mastodon encourages me to post four pictures at a time, here is a photo of a nearby emergency water system control knob.
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2026-05-01T15:16:24.655374
I saw some more things on Sunday, but didn't post them then because Mastodon, my main social app, really wants me to post four images at a time. And I got distracted after posting the first batch. Anyhow.
- More Kal Zakzouk chalk art: A lady disguised as a mama dinosaur feeds haunches of meat to a baby dinosaur. I claim that the lady's shoes are godzilloshes.
- Chalk: Folks wrote some encouraging messages along the route of a footrace in Golden Gate Park.
- A quiet street: Arguably not interesting enough to post, but Mastodon really wants me to post four images at a time so here ya go.
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2026-04-28T15:04:32.382099
A couple of things I saw on my walk this morning in #SanFrancisco:
Some Kal Zakzouk sidewalk chalk art: A bicyclist on a bubbly bike.
An engineering marvel: The re-paving of 19th Avenue
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2026-04-26T17:33:02.584697
It's local history, in context. It's
about the development Oakland, especially west Oakland
near the port. But also about global forces at work.
When I say "local history, in context, for me "in context" was the interesting part;
I just read Hella Town,
a history of Oakland a few months ago.
When this book talks about Oakland history, I didn't
necessarily learn much.
(Maybe I should have waited a few more months to let
Hella Town fade from my memory? Anyhow)
But when it steps back and looks
at national/international trends, there was stuff that was
new to me.
New to me (but probably not to sociologists):
The Chicago School. Back when I read Hella Town, it said that city planners
back then had some wrongheaded notions about how cities worked;
they applied those theories by tearing down neighborhoods in Oakland
and it didn't go well for anyone concerned.
The Pacific Circuit goes on an interesting wander: What
were these wrongheaded notions? A lot of them came from
"The Chicago School," academics mostly at U of Chicago who had a
good idea: Instead of writing hand-wave-y opinions about
how society works, treat it as science, as an ecologist would.
Observe and measure what you can, and let that data
drive your theory. Darwin figured out a lot by going to the Galapagos
Islands and keeping his eyes open. Be like Darwin, but look at people
instead of at finches.
Sounds good, right? I bet if I were a wealthy philanthropist back
in the day, I would have given all those guys grants.
The Pacific Circuit points out a nasty side effect of trying
to be an ecologist-but-for-people: Once you observe and measure a
phenomenon, you might think you're observing some inevitable natural
force instead of people being stupid.
I reckon that was a reasonable attitude for Darwin: It's not like
he could ask those Galapagos finches, "Hey, what's with
this beakmaxxing trend? Does it help y'all break open tough seed pods,
or does it just look amazing?"
The Chicago School people carefully observed Chicago neighborhoods
and figured out that some neighborhoods were pretty miserable.
These neighborhoods, full of poor black people, were run down with
unhappy inhabitants, institutions that fell apart…
And these academics thought, "Aha! We have have figured out something
fundamental about how cities work!" Some neighborhoods were
blighted, doomed to fail. If the academics had asked around,
they might have found out that
Chicago bankers were bad at their jobs and wouldn't loan money to black
folks; and that this in turn led to poor black neighborhoods. But that
wasn't the ecologists' way so, whoopsie.
(And now I'm hazily remembering an anecdote from
some history-of-cities class I took. Some (German?) scholars
looked at a map of their country, and noticed that the placement
of towns and cities fit pretty well on a hex grid, with one
settlement in the center of each hex, like circles on a
Settlers of Catan board. They excitedly reported that they'd
figured out something fundamental about how humans settled an
area—but then their theory fell apart when anyone tried
to apply it outside Europe. Their scientific-looking hex grid
was a map of places that were each one day's travel away from
each other in mostly-flat terrain back in medieval times.
In other regions where
a day's travel might be pretty different (e.g. in deserts),
you wouldn't get that same regular grid, it was just a side effect
of conditions in Germany(?) way back when. Anyhow.)
# # #
The book talks about Margaret Gordon, the West Oakland
activist and politician who figured out some compromises that
kept her neighbors healthy. Freight trucks serving the Port
of Oakland were idling in residential neighborhoods, polluting
the air, sickening kids. Ms. Margaret and others got the port
to come up with another spot for the trucks to idle, far from
young lungs.
Other Oakland-y books mention this time; The Pacific Circuit
lays out the history that led up to this.
Oakland was one of the first containerized ports. Thanks to newfangled
shipping containers, In Oakland, loading or unloading a cargo ship took
hours vs days at a port that was still doing everything "by hand."
But But but other changes rippled out from this. At an old-fashioned
port, a few cargo trucks could come through and keep up with the cargo being
unloaded. Thanks to Oakland's new high-tech cranes and containers, they now
needed to move a lot more trucks through to keep up.
Shippers set up a sort of gig economy. They didn't hire full-time drivers.
If there was some hiccup unloading a ship and truck drivers were stuck waiting
around another hour, shipping companies weren't paying that driver's salary for that hour.
Instead, lines of trucks would form at the gates, waiting for work.
The truckers didn't want to be sitting around, idling; but they were desperate
enough to do so.
The solution wasn't to yell at individual truck drivers. The solution was
to get the city to force the port to give the drivers a better place to wait.
And to get the city to do that meant learning the the science of pollution, how
it affects kids' breathing, and on and on… It wasn't easy; it took years
of heroic effort to get capitalism to budge an inch. And it did help.
I think back to a time when I walked from the West Oakland BART stop
out to the port. I walked along one section of industrial street and the sidewalk
was littered with pee bottles. I wasn't wading through pee bottles, but
I was stepping around an awful lot of pee bottles. So trucks had obviously
been idling in that area for a long time, long enough such that many many drivers
had peed in many many bottles. Truck drivers still have a tough time. It's great
that they're no longer idling next to kids' schools; but they're not out of the woods
yet.
# # #
Anyhow, yeah: good book.
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2026-04-26T00:04:54.633912
#SFHellscape
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2026-04-20T15:20:01.822122
Today, I saw some Kal Zakzouk sidewalk chalk art at 20th and Irving in #SanFrancisco.
Alas, it was mid-day and a shadow made it hard to see the whole picture. Big silver lining for me:
Since it was mid-day, the Lucca Deli at 20th and Irving was open and I got a pretty good sandwich, unlike all those
times I snapped clear photos of sidewalk art there at 07:00 in the morning, when the deli's closed.
Anyhow, behold a swordswoman in mechanized armor with a pufferfish sidekick.
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2026-04-18T21:25:28.463652
A year and a half after a truck hit a pedestrian at Parnassus and Stanyan, we finally
got some speed humps on Parnassus Ave. They're very, uh, gradual? I suppose the city wanted
to say they'd done something but didn't want to actually slow down traffic.
Angry drivers might complain, and we mustn't have that. Hashtag Vision Zero, etc
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2026-04-16T16:11:10.092977
Out behind 400 Parnassus Ave in #SanFrancisco is a fine sheltered balcony from which to observe storm clouds blow past.
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2026-04-12T16:43:19.242494
Today, I once again participated in an Upper Haight-area trash pickup event which I found out about through Bay Resistance.
I thought of this as the "Safe & Healthy Haight" pickup, but when I got there, organizer Eric said that S&HH hasn't done much trash-pickup-wise lately.
Their name is on old flyers, but not on new flyers. Lately, he's been getting supplies from Refuse Refuse.
That said, Eric doesn't run his event much like that Refuse Refuse event I went to a couple of weeks ago. Instead of expecting all volunteers to show up ~at once and work together,
Eric had supplies available for a two-hour stretch. So: show up when you want, pick up trash for a while, then stop when you want. Since nobody else showed up at around the
time I did, I picked up trash on my own this time. (I wasn't patient enough to wait for a "buddy")
(I wonder if the everyone-at-the-same-time approach might have some advantages, community-building-wise: it meant the organizer could pair up volunteers. Remember that
I picked up trash with a guy who got into it when he moved to SF and wanted to make friends. If he makes friends through an organization, maybe he's more likely to keep
showing up.) (I wonder if the everyone-at-the-same-time approach might have some disadvantages, community-building-wise: if you wake up late on Sunday morning, instead of
thinking Ah, I'll be a little later than usual, but I can still pick trash for an hour, you might instead think I guess I'll skip it this month.)
I noticed some residents and passers-by thanking me. Maybe more than than last time?
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2026-04-05T20:06:32.146174