The good news from Apple is that my MacBook can be repaired for $260 when I get back home. Just needs a new screen. That will please the insurance people.
We’ve had a good day – exploring, shopping, eating some delicious food, visiting the Contemporary Jewish Museum, and riding on a streetcar down to Fisherman’s Wharf.
That museum was interesting. They had an exhibition of B&W photos from the great depression era to the 1950s, another on the life of the Jews in SF, and a musical ‘display’ on the links between black musicians and Jewish songwriters. We could hear the songs and read the stories.
Found a quiet retreat called Yerba Buena near there which features a Martin Luther King tribute behind a waterfall.
What’s surprising about SF is the sharp contrasts in just a few blocks from downtown. Our hotel is in Eddy Street which is six blocks from Union Square but near the hotel, in Ellis Street, there are so many damaged people – drugged, drunk, living derelict lives, and aggressive towards one another. You feel threatened as you walk by. Further along there is a little old Chinese woman sifting through the rubbish bins for empty cans and plastic bottles. Then, downtown we see the other side of the coin – the prosperous and the snappily dressed. Another long queue waiting for their turn to buy an iPhone 5. Two worlds in one city. It just keeps us mindful of how good we have it back home.
This morning, one news commentator was saying that all the factors that preceded the fall of Rome are present in America today. She was asking experts how to avoid a similar collapse. One was saying that globalization was the problem, shifting jobs offshore; another, that new technologies had caused the unemployment problem. Both agreed the deficit needs to be tackled by unpopular measures like raising taxes – but no politician would dare mention that ‘t’ word.
Archive for October, 2012
SF 2
October 13, 2012Laundromat
October 13, 2012We’re at the laundromat around the corner from our hotel. It’s been quite an experience already and we’re still at the washing stage. Just been evicted from the old church pew, where we were waiting, by a drugged-out black man who has now swathed himself in a sheet and blanket. Maybe this is his daily resting place. Keeps nodding off but then suddenly he begins to sing along with the radio playing in the background.
Earlier two black guys were here secretly carrying out what looked like a drug deal. While that was happening a little Latino woman with no English gave me a quarter because I was one short, and put in three of her dimes to get some detergent. All this time Glenys was talking with anther woman who gave her a detailed autobiography.
To thank my helper I went up the road and bought her some peanut-toffee at a Chinese pork-bun shop. She was incredulous and didn’t want to take it till Glenys gave her hug and said, “Please”.
Apparently there is a big marathon here this weekend and so we are lucky to get a hotel room. Now we’re negotiating with the Filipino owner so we can stay till Tuesday.
We both slept well and long.
My only gripe about all our accommodation this far: they only give you donnas, duvets, comforters (call them what you like) and they trap the heat and are just too hot for me. I much prefer cotton or woollen blankets.
Later we’ll go to the Apple Store to see if my MacBook is fixable and then begin exploring.
Washing finished now.
Before I could put the money in the dryer, the little Latino woman with no English was coining it up with her quarters: her way of paying me back for the toffee?
San Francisco
October 12, 2012Last Monday afternoon at 2.00pm we left Washington, today, Thursday, at 4.00pm we got to San Francisco – tired, ready for a shower, and a good sleep. We were to be met at the station by someone who had offered to drive us to the Golden Gate Bible College where we had a unit for $80/night – but that fella didn’t show up and it was going to be $70+ for a taxi. Instead I booked us into an inner City hotel for $100. We are at the Regency Inn in Little Saigon.
After long showers and a change of oohed we ate a delicious Vietnamese meal just around the corner – a fish dish with lettuce, mint, and several different basils plus a shrimp sauce, then Pad Thai with seafood. And the two young waiters kept us entertained telling us about SF and how to cook their food. It was the Bodega Bistro.
The hotel is old but renovated and the girl on the desk is very helpful. We think we are in the right place, in the city, walking distance from the city centre. This is our last stopover and many have told us that this is the best city in the U.S. We’ll see.
From Nevada
October 11, 2012Last night we had our first accident. Both of us were having trouble getting to sleep so I figured I’d move back one row to a spare seat on the other side of the aisle, where I could still see Glenys and she could stretch out on two seats. Eventually I got to sleep, but when I woke a couple of hours later I found Glenys missing. First, I went downstairs to the toilets and called out her name: no answer. I thought it best to go back to my original seat and wait for her to return. What I didn’t know was that she had moved my laptop up on to my seat with a few other things. In the dark I could see the other things, but against the dark blue seat I didn’t see my black MacBook, and I sat on it. I thought nothing of it at the time, but later when I turned it on I saw that the screen was broken – half blank, the other half a mix of OK viewing, streaks of blue and red lines, and floating pixels.
Meanwhile Glenys returned – she had headed in the wrong direction to find the bathroom and ended up in another carriage. That’s not hard to do in daylight, let alone in the dark. We often head off to the dining car in the wrong direction; and to find your seats you’ve got to be alert.
I am hoping the travel insurance will cover the repairs or replacement of the MacBook, but there may not be too many photos on the blog until that is worked out. Yesterday’s treasure trove of pictures is safe, I can see them, just can’t upload them to the blog because that part of the screen is blank.
God willing, by 4.00pm this afternoon we will be in San Francisco after 72 hours of travel. Tonight we will see to it that we sleep like well-fed babies with the help of a Melatonin tablet. It promotes sleep and wards off jet lag. Except for getting to Los Angeles next Tuesday, this could be our last train trip before we catch the plane back to Australia.
This morning we’ve been through moonlike deserts in Nevada, and now we are back in mountaintop evergreen forests after passing through beautiful Lake Tahoe. It’s all like the Oregon scenery we came across back in Week One. Soon we will cross the border into California.
In the Rockies
October 10, 2012Crystal clear creeks, steep escarpments, dramatic rock formations, barren hills, evergreen hills, and trees with leaves already fallen – the Rockies are all that and more. This is one place I’d love to explore in a car and on foot. I guess this is also just like the Grand Canyon with diagonal, rather than horizontal, layers of rocky sediment, everything from volcanic red to ashen white. Dotted along the way are log cabins and luxury houses and skiing lodges.
Right now I can see an orange-coloured cliff hovering menacingly above our train.
Since this morning we’ve been followed by a strange cloud formation. Now the cliffs are cream-colored. The leaves of just a few trees are yellow: still haven’t been blown away. These views bring back to mind scenes from cowboy movies. Now up ahead, I can see newer and higher mountains with areas gouged out by what must have been madly rushing waters. Now the mountain sides are shades of ochre towering over wide open valleys. Though I’ve never been to Uluru, this reminds me of it – but this is no monolith, but a fully blown range of mountain ranges. Sometimes words cannot describe. The foothills on the left look like the paws of some extinct creature.
I am stopping continually to photograph the evidence I’ll need to prove what I’ve written. Thankfully the train is moving slowly as we wait for a goods train to pass by. Many of my photos have been through dirty train windows but if the settings are right they turn out okay. This is certainly picture postcard country.
There are no showers for coach class passengers like us, but this morning I gave myself a sponge down and a change of fresh underwear. Feels good. We still have 26 hours to go on this the California Zephyr before we reach San Francisco. By then, we will have passed through: Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas (just), Colorado, Utah, Nevada, and California.
Tunnel coming up.
Those creeks have become the Colorado River and we are down beside it and are dwarfed by the canyon on either side of us. And now there is a super double decker highway on the other side of the river – sometimes disappearing in tunnels. Now we see a dam and locks. Every bend brings new wonders of both creation and engineering.
I’m afraid Mt Coot-tha and Mt Coolum are anything but mountains.
The Sky in the Rockies
October 10, 2012
This strange cloud formation has followed us from Denver
The leaves have already fallen in the Rockies
October 10, 2012
Colorado
October 10, 2012Had much better sleep and more of it last night. Yesterday ended with a spectacular sunset and this morning we were greeted with an even better sunrise. We now climb through the Rockies. Denver was 28F which is below zero. We had intended staying here, but didn’t have enough time on the rail pass, glad we aren’t. We don’t have clothes for those temperatures. I can see the mountains now as we settle into another day on the train. It’s Glenys’s 62nd birthday so we celebrated with bagels and coffee, with cream cheese, grape jam, and chopped bananas.
Last night we ate with a couple from here – they’ve been down the Mississippi on a steamboat – we crossed the river yesterday.
These mountains are high!!! and dry so far.
The Presidential Race
October 9, 2012The mood is swinging and Romney is getting good press even from the liberal media like TIME and The Washington Post. There’s a sticker that has instead of Hope 2008, Nope 2012. Perhaps Barack has had enough and achieved his dream of being the first black president, for he seems to lack the killer instinct right now when he needs it to win.
Chicago Again
October 9, 2012We got back here today after quite an uncomfortable night. We had been warned not to take seats near the doors, but, for the first time, we were allotted seats before we boarded, and that’s where we were placed. All through the night the restless and the double minded kept going back and forth through our doors and making a racket. Besides that, our leg rests were not fully functioning, so our legs were neither up nor down. We both got some sleep, but not nearly enough.
This morning we had a couple of spare hours before we board the California Zephyr to San Francisco – it will be our longest unbroken journey. We walked uptown to our favorite cafe – The Corner Bakery Cafe – for a coffee and one last slice of their famous Cinnamon Cream Cake. We were not disappointed. It was quite a hike that probably took the distance we’ve walked so far well over the 100 miles mark. Last time it was 80F but, today, two weeks later, it’s 50F/10C; and windy!!!!
Here at Union Station the passengers are rolling up and those with stored luggage are all struggling to unlock the lockers. We are hoping for good seats this time.