Bernal Comm Zoom

August 25, 2010

Top of the Bernal for you.

A flight taking off from Bernal Airport (moonlit 60 second exposure at 11 pm)

Totally blind shot holding my iPhone in front of a telescope.

If I didn’t know any better, I think I caught someone and their dog – two extremely zoomed and grainy shots. See the arms?

(Or maybe it’s a centaur. Or a 25 to 30 foot snake. I can’t quite tell.)

Anyway, other gratuitous Bernal shots from my backyard:

Moon rising through Bernal trees:

Previous Bernal-Moon shots here.


Bernal King

July 5, 2010


Alternate Angles

June 17, 2010

Sutro, I see you…

Quick, can anyone guess where I took this?

And Bernal, so tiny.  But from where?

And what could this be? Bertro? Surnal?

Also note Bernal’s new tower-identity-branding:

Cute, but you’re no Sutro.

The Bernal Heights microwave switch was once a major junction for San Francisco’s telecommunication network — read more on the AT&T “long lines” microwave network at your leisure. (Sadly it does not cover how microwaves were responsible for the GIANT DOG in the picture above.)

Hey, look, a link between Bernal and Mt. Diablo!

(Hope your house wasn’t in Glen Park or on Diamond Heights in the 60s…)

The cold war-hardened network was rather impressive and ran from the 50s to the 90s, but was done in by the massive bandwidth advantage of fiber optics developed in the 70s.

Some of the stations were crazy remote though –  the relay station on Mt. Rose (on the Nevada side of the Sierras) was at 10,000 feet and had a gondola for access in winter.

Now if only AT&T SBC would put forth the same effort to get me a reliable signal on my iPhone. The “cold war” AT&T would not be amused.


Sodium Glow

May 1, 2010

Nick.Fisher gives us this unadulterated view of SESF:

Crop of da Noe, Bernal, La Lengua and Bayview.


Full Moon Fever, Bernal Rising

April 30, 2010

I love my little Lumix. Taken from La Lengua.


Peapod Represents Haiti, Bernal in the House

April 28, 2010

Peapod is a worldwide youth music program started by will.i.am of the Black Eyed Peas.  Last year they worked with the Adobe Foundation to open branches in Oakland and Redwood City that give kids access to video and music production equipment.

In addition to mentoring in the performing arts, youth participants will receive structured multi-media training in video, audio, photography, design and art, enabling them to creatively express their points of view on vital issues and contribute to social change in their communities.

The aim of the campaign is to nurture self-expression, creativity, community involvement, and digital literacy among young people — the kind of education these organizations feel is critical for today’s youth.

The Redwood City kids wisely chose the top of Bernal as a location for their rather awesome “Stand Up For Haiti” video to support earthquake relief efforts.

Click to get to the Vimeo HD version (and choose the HTML5 player button to save your CPU).

Click for more on Peapod, and Adobe Youth Voices.

Note that Partners in Health (PIH) is the Burrito Justice approved vector for Haiti donations. The rainy season is about to start and they need all the help they can get.


There Goes The Sun

February 23, 2010

For all of you bummed out about the rainy grey, it’s much nicer 10,000 feet up.

And loyal reader Bernal Jim reminds us of the view of Mission/Noe/Twin Peaks/Sutro looks like at sunrise. (This apparently is an orange-tinged moment in time when the sun rises above the horizon, a mystery to me regardless of weather as I am not particularly conscious at that time of day).

Bernal Jim also provides us with an epic blue-sky-over-former-farmland to hold us over for better weather – click to zoom:


poRtrero

January 25, 2010

Not exactly a new problem

But can you guess exactly where this is? (Hint: 1857.)

Answer below in white text after the break (drag and highlight to see it.)

Read the rest of this entry »


The Sun Strikes Back

January 23, 2010

The battleground:

The front lines, with Bernalites and La Lenguans scurrying to take cover:

An ominous counterattack:

The sun rallies with massive discharges of energy:

This flight barely made it off of Bernal Field.


Bernal Gold Rush; Bernal Airport

January 11, 2010

This nicely designed SF Rec & Parks brochure alerts us to the fact that May of 1876 almost saw a gold rush on Bernal Heights of all places.  But it was not to be — some silly Frenchman named Victor Resayre couldn’t tell the difference between gold and quartz.

The good news?  Via the California Digital Newspaper Collection, we discovered this lovely 133 year-old article from the Daily Alta California. We learn that:

  • Some guy (smarter than Victor Resayre and the suckers breaking “worthless red rock” with small hammers) set up a “beer store” on a table on top of two kegs. Someone please do the same in Dolores Park when it warms up. (Note this one of many Bernal-beer incidents on record.)
  • Bernal is steep, but you get a nice view from the top
  • Folsom crossed Precita Creek via a “romantic” bridge

The SFR&P PDF also makes reference to quarries on top of Bernal. One was that flat spot past the parking area on the south side of the hill that you can get to by driving up Anderson and turning left (as we can see by cropping one of Bats‘ pictures):

Ahh, yes, the never-ending demand for chert in America.

A little judicious googlation leads us to the SF Natural Areas Program website with this 1942 image of the quarry:

One popular use of chert was to make circular rock mazes. Oh, sorry, that’s where the quarry was. (picture via We Build This City)

Here is a rather cool photo from 1925 showing the west slope of Bernal (with an car ad where the telco antenna complex now lies):

Zoom on the west slope of Bernal looking NE with street names, along with a Microsoft Bing birdeye view looking east. (Click the image for a much wider swath):

Not sure if the area above Elsie and Esmerelda is a landslide or another quarry, but today it’s that nice wooded area with the steps on the way up to dogwalkertown.

However, there was a landslide in February 1936 (photos via SFPL). Bonus points to whoever can figure out where that white arrow is pointing to (i.e. I’m too tired to look it up).

“With thousands of tons of earth loosened and apparently on the verge of going places in a big way residents of the Bernal Heights house, indicated by arrow, fled today.”

Regular readers are familiar with my constant and utter amazement that the city considered extending Esmerelda over the top of Bernal.  This, however, pales in comparison to THE AIRPLANE LANDING STRIP they were thinking about building. On top of Bernal. WTF.

“The City of San Francisco at one point unsuccessfully planned to level the Bernal Hill summit to construct an airplane field. In 1973, Bernal residents lobbied the Department of Public Works to give Bernal Hill to the Recreation and Park Department, thus preserving it as a permanent open space.”

Hey Eric Fischer, please scan those plans. Makes my dirigible mooring station seem completely reasonable, no?

ALL THESE HILLS ARE YOURS, EXCEPT BERNAL. ATTEMPT NO LANDING THERE.