Sunday, September 14, 2008

You can drop litter in New Mexico

Here are our favorite signs-- we'll keep adding as we go

New Mexico:
  • Do not throw litter (can you drop it instead??)
  • Gusty winds may exist (there MUST be a simpler way to say this)
  • Don't drive on median (okay)
  • Keep off shoulder (why not just say "Drive on Road"?)
  • 30 Modern Stations (advertising all the fantastic things in any given city)

Texas:
  • Worlds Largest Painter of Commercial Airplanes (anyone consider spell-checking a large billboard in the middle of a major city?)

This day can't get worse, can it?


The first day of our cross-country road trip was supposed to include light cleaning of the apartment, a quick exchange of keys with our landlord and hitting in the road by 2 pm to make it to Barstow by bedtime.

Instead, it went something like this:
6:00 AM Wake up COLD on the deflating air mattress on our bedroom floor
6:30 AM Find myself with my head in the freezer, scrubbing frozen beer off the shelves and trying not to inhale too many cleaning fumes
9:30 AM Drop off last-minute prescriptions
9:50 AM Orthodontist appointment to remove my braces (yay!)
10:45 AM Rush back to apartment to scrub floors and clean toilets
1:00 PM Meet landlord and hold our breath for the walk-through; turn in keys
1:30 PM Take a deep breath because walk-through went fine
2:10 PM Return to orthodontist to have retainers fitted; find out retainers don't fit
3:00 PM Last-minute lunch at Zachary's
3:45 PM Pick up eyeglasses
4:20 PM Return to orthodontist to pick up retainers; find out again that retainers don't fit
4: 20 PM My husband runs all over Oakland for final errands
[Note (husband): Returned cable modem to Comcast near airport, picked up extra prescriptions, ran into Trader Joe's to use the restroom...]
5:45 PM Retainers finally fit! Cancel hotel reservations in Barstow; make reservations instead for Bakersfield
6:00 PM Have on-the-go conversation with my boss about consulting work; get stuck in traffic
7:30 PM Eat leftover pizza in a truck stop parking lot on I-5
11:30 PM Pull into hotel in Bakersfield; gag at the smell in the air (what WAS that??); gasp at the cost of a room at the Holiday Inn Express
Midnight SLEEP

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Heading East

After four great years in the Bay Area, TBF and I packed our bags and are moving to wonderful Ann Arbor, Michigan! We still plan on blogging - especially during our road trip. We're actually already on Day two of the trip, so stay tuned for the juicy details...we promise to fill you in and hopefully provide some pictures.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Afternoon stroll along the bay


I had to take our camera out for a spin on a short hike at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Regional Shoreline. It's a great little trail along the Bay roughly between 66th Ave. and Hegenberger Rd. Watch out for the squirrels. Click on the picture for more.

MLK Regional Shoreline Pics
[flickr]

Wednesday, July 04, 2007

A Fireworks Tradition

Since childhood, I've loved watching fireworks. In a mid-sized city, it was easy to park the car, spread the blanket and spend the evening munching on junk food and listening to live music at Ah-Nab-Awen park with my Dad until the show began. The fireworks show quickly became a father/daughter tradition.

While living in the Bay Area has brought a number of changes, one of the hardest adjustments was Fourth of July celebrations. First of all, it's supposed to be HOT on Fourth of July. Thankfully, we lucked out with a beautiful day today... but it's not always the case. Secondly, watching the fireworks in San Francisco has never been very appealing-- especially with the threat of fog (which, by the way, makes things chilly). And I'm still getting used to the fact that I can't buy sparklers at the store, but our neighbors can set off fireworks at 2 a.m. all week and nobody stops them.

But I'm happy to report that we've found a new fireworks tradition! For the past two years we've gone to the July 3rd Oakland A's game where they put on a fabulous fireworks show set to music. Have I mentioned that I'm a sucker for fireworks set to music? From our inexpensive seats we watch all the fireworks we want and can still make it home on BART in 10 minutes. And on the actual holiday, we can usually catch a glimpse of the fireworks around the bay from a hill in the neighborhood which definitely beats fighting the crowds in the city. Next year we'll just have to bring my Dad!

Happy Fourth of July!

Tuesday, July 03, 2007

Calculate cab fares

Even though I'm not taking a cab to work anytime soon, this cool website calculates estimated cab fares within San Francisco. Now if somebody could figure out a way to just find a cab, any cab, in Oakland...

San Francisco Taxi Fare Finder [via Google Maps Mania]

Monday, July 02, 2007

Commuting Fun

While we live in beautiful, sunny, cheap Oakland, both of us work a block away from each other in San Francisco. We keep similar hours at the office, so we typically commute together. Thank goodness we have each other for intelligent conversation...because our commuting choices pretty much suck. In two years living with this situation, here are the commuting alternatives we’ve come up with:

  1. Car to BART, short walk to the office.
  2. Walk to AC Transit transbay bus, long walk to the office.
  3. Drive to public garage in San Francisco, short walk to the office.

Here’s a summary of these choices:


Option 1 – Car/BART

Option 2 - Bus

Option 3 - Car

Cost (Round-trip per person)

$6.20 + a little gas

$7.00

Toll - $4
Parking - $13 ($26 divided by 2 people)

Time door-to-door

40 minutes

50 minutes

20-60 minutes depending on traffic

Environmentally Friendly?

Sort of.

Yes!

No!

Other notes

Cost will go up soon, $1 extra for parking starting next month

If we get a nice bus, we can sleep. If not, we arrive with a headache, backache, and whiplash

Driving sucks, but the office will pay for a couple days of parking per month for “emergency” purposes.

Sooo, you soak all that in? We're pretty much tree-huggers, so driving isn't really an option, nor is it anywhere near affordable. Earlier this summer we switched from Option 1 to Option 2. Option 2 is pretty awesome...we get to leave our car at home, we always get a seat, and there's a nice 2-3 mile walk built in. Option 1 works pretty well too...it's cheaper and a little faster, but lately we haven't been getting a seat and we need to drive (while still partially asleep).

Great...except that lately all of our AC Transit buses have been crap-tastic, plastic-seated, loud, and old old old. There is such a huge difference between the posh charter buses and the old local buses. Going 60 mph in one of the local buses is such a horrible way to get to work that we wish we could switch back to BART. We could do casual carpool, but that is a little creepy and tricky with two of us.

I really shouldn't complain. Having two relatively good public transportation options is better than in most areas. Both options are so close to being enjoyable! Maybe we can find some neighbors and carpool everyday...bleh!