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Japanese Tea Garden

CALIFORNIA > SAN FRANCISCO > Japanese Tea Garden

by James Irwin
[CBS5.com article republished courtesy KPIX San Francisco]

The Japanese Tea Garden in Golden Gate Park is one of San Francisco's best-loved outdoor attractions and certainly among its quietest.

It is said to be the oldest public Japanese garden in the country.

Despite its status as a favorite tourist destination, it is mostly undefiled by its popularity.

There is a modest entrance fee and a gift shop. 

You might also spend a few dollars at the tea house to get a cup of tea and the fortune cookies -- which are originally a Japanese confection, not Chinese. They were introduced to America on this very spot over a century ago.

Photographers will find no bad angles in this five-acre oasis of tranquility. The textures and colors of the abundant flora (and the occasional fauna) delight the eye and can quickly fill up your camera's flash memory card.

Originally planned to be a temporary attraction at the 1894 California Midwinter International Exposition, the tea garden was expanded and cared for by its creator, a landscape gardener named Makoto Hagiwara, who died in 1925.

His family tended to the garden and lived on the premises under a 99-year lease which went up in smoke in World War II, when they were evicted and sent to an internment camp.

The 17-room house where the Hagiwara family lived is long gone, as are many of the ornaments and statues they collected during the almost half-century they stayed here.

But the garden they nurtured for so long, though sometimes a bit the worse for wear, still endures as a monument to peace, a place of delicate beauty and a bridge between continents and cultures.

LINKS:

S.F. Parks Trust: Japanese Tea Garden

SFGate.com: Tea Garden's Radiant Foliage

Filed under  //   architecture   botany   California   Golden Gate Park   Japanese Tea Garden   landscape   San Francisco   tourism  

Cable Car Routes Compared

CALIFORNIA > SAN FRANCISCO > Cable Cars 

 

by James Irwin special to CBS5.com
[CBS5.com article republished courtesy KPIX San Francisco]

Other than the Golden Gate Bridge, it's hard to think of anything that says "San Francisco" better than the sight and sound of a cable car clawing its way up a ridiculously steep hill, 'halfway to the stars.'

For tourists and locals alike, the urge to hop aboard, grab a pole and ride to the end of the line is irresistible -- but that brings up the question: "Which line?"

Before the Great Quake of 1906, cable car tracks ran all over the city. Now, only three routes -- all of them downtown -- remain active.

The most utilitarian of the three is the California line. It features a challenging climb and descent but it's just a straight run along California Street.

You'll have a lot more fun on either of the two Powell Street routes, with the more spectacular being the Powell-Hyde Street line.

Starting at Market Street, both routes feature a climb past the hotels and shops of Union Square, up and over Nob Hill, and a nice squeal-inducing turn onto Jackson Street at the edge of Chinatown.

At the next intersection (Mason St.) the Powell/Mason line makes a hard right turn and heads downhill through North Beach to Fisherman's Wharf.

Powell-Hyde riders keep on climbing. Their big payoff comes soon enough, with an exhilarating descent toward the bay and the tall ship Balclutha on the Hyde Street Pier.

At Maritime Park, the Powell-Hyde cars are shunted onto a turntable, where they're spun around and reloaded with passengers.

This is the most scenic cable car turnaround in the city. Pull out your camera and you can get San Francisco's two most famous icons -- the Golden Gate Bridge and a cable car -- in the same picture.

LINKS:
Cable Car Museum
S.F. Muni Route Maps
Cable Car Lore



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Filed under  //   Cable Car   California   California Street   Hyde Street   Mason Street   Muni   postcard   Powell Street   Powell-Hyde   Powell-Mason   San Francisco   transportation   travel   trolley  

Conservatory of Flowers

CALIFORNIA > SAN FRANCISCO > GOLDEN GATE PARK > Conservatory of Flowers

by James Irwin special to CBS5.com
[CBS5.com article republished courtesy KPIX San Francisco]

For gardeners and admirers of Victorian architecture, the Conservatory of Flowers in Golden Gate Park is San Francisco's Taj Mahal.

First open to the public in 1879, this  wood-and-glass greenhouse -- a monument to botanical art and science -- has endured thanks to several major renovations, the most recent being a $25 million bottom-to-top reconstruction completed in 2003 after the structure was closed to the public for eight years as a result of storm damage suffered in 1995.

Once inside, visitors leave San Francisco's often chill weather behind as they explore exhibits featuring plants native to tropical lowland, highland and aquatic environments.

As soon as you enter you'll see a true survivor directly beneath the dome -- a giant philodendron alive and well since 1883.

This is a paradise for flowers and the photographers who love them but be warned: the near-constant spritzing from mist machines that pump up the humidity in this hothouse means you'll be wiping off your lens frequently.

More than 16,000 glass panes cover the Conservatory and they're painted white to soften the sun on the plants inside.

The Conservatory was purchased in the mid 1870s as a prefabricated kit by the California land baron James Lick, who died before he could do anything with it.

A group of wealthy San Franciscans bought it from Lick's estate and had it assembled in Golden Gate Park where it remains one of the City's beloved landmarks, the subject of countless postcards, and a great location for a picturesque picnic or sedate stroll, a place where time passes slowly and the thrum of the surrounding city is faint, distant and easy to ignore.

LINKS:

Official Site of the Conservatory of Flowers


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Filed under  //   architecture   botanical   botany   Conservatory   flowers   garden   Golden Gate Park   greenhouse   hothouse   museum   San Francisco   tourist