Tide Log
Labels: Canon 30D, Crissy Field, Photography, San Francisco
John McDermott's blog
Labels: Canon 30D, Crissy Field, Photography, San Francisco
Labels: Alcatraz, Canon 30D, Photography, San Francisco
Labels: Alcatraz, Canon 30D, Photography, San Francisco
Labels: Alcatraz, Canon 30D, Photography, San Francisco
The sun has finally shown itself in San Francisco. In my 14 years here, this has been the coldest, windiest summer I have experienced. On Friday night, I went out for a few drinks with some friends, and it was so cold that I had to bundle up like it was the middle of December. However yesterday things changed, and although not quite hot, it was warm enough for the entire family to spend all afternoon in the back garden.
Labels: Canon 30D, Photography, San Francisco, Weather
Labels: Canon 30D, Haight Street, Photography, San Francisco
Labels: Canon 30D, Irving Street, Photography, San Francisco, The Sunset, Walking the dog
The hour jumped forward last weekend, in these here
However...it's a nightmare for software companies, and I work for a software company. Every teeny piece of software has to be patched to change time properly. I run technical support, which means I ended up on a few more conference calls on Sunday that I normally like to (zero being my favorite number of work related calls on Sundays, so this wasn't good). This was more than your regular working-on-a-Sunday-pain-in-the-ass. I am playing at a musicians' showcase next Saturday, which by coincidence, is Paddy's day. So while taking conference calls, I was simultaneously rehearsing for the show. Not an ideal situation, but all is well now.
Spring is well and truly sprung around here. In the
The above picture was taken during that walk.
Labels: Canon 30D, Golden Gate Park, Photography, San Francisco, Spring, Stowe Lake
My maternal grandmother was a whip smart, highly-strung woman, who in retrospect, was probably completely unsuited to raising eight children. She was a prisoner of her times and her children took all of her time, of course. And sadly, once they had grown, she was left stuck in a small town with no outlet for her intelligence. Even in her latter days, when her body had become feeble and her mind troubled, her brain was still razor sharp. She was up to date on current events and the details of my life in
I barely knew my grandfather, he was a ghostly presence around the house, and barely spoke from one end of the day to the other - or as far as I could tell, from one end of the year to the other. In his latter years, though, it was like the fog had lifted, and when I went to visit him, he would happily chatter away, while chewing happily on the Roses chocolates I would bring. He had been a master plasterer his entire life, and by all accounts, was a total perfectionist. During the very last conversation I ever had with him, he told me he had played the saxophone in a marching band when he was younger. I was then struck, and saddened, by how little I knew about him. I could hardly imagine music coming from this quiet old man. My mother's family is a stark contrast to my father's who are a gregarious bunch who revel in detailing highly exaggerated family histories (my paternal grandfather apparently attempted and failed to escape from Limerick jail,while being held by the British).** Every single one of them are charming romantics, and the McDermott family lineage is apparently full of lost loves, thrill-seekers, mysterious lost relatives, and revolutionaries - if you believe all the stories. For years I considered myself more like my dad's side of the family, but as I get older, I see more and more of my mother in me. I am a perfectionist to a fault, I am completely pragmatic in every part of my life, and while I listen to other peoples opinions, I more often than not follow my own instincts.
** My dad still swears this is true.
Labels: Canon 30D, Photography, San Francisco
Labels: Canon 30D, Photography, San Francisco, Tigers, Zoo
Labels: Canon 30D, De Young Museum, Golden Gate Park, Photography, San Francisco
One great distinctions between inner Irving and outer Irving is price. In inner Irving, a bag of shiny, waxed veggies , artfully displayed at the upscale supermarket, Andronico's, will set you back about $40. The same bag in one of the scrappy, bustling Chinese shops, less than 10 short blocks away, will cost you only $15 - if that, (it should be pointed out that Andronico's has an amazing selection and everything is very high quality).
All of the Chinese produce stores and supermarkets have live fish tanks teeming with lobsters, crab, bass, carp, eels, and a few varieties of marine life that are very, very unfamiliar to me. They are also crammed full of all sorts of meats, various mushrooms, and a huge assortment of fruit and vegetables. It leads to the kind of pungent aroma that western supermarkets do their best to hide.
Many Sunday afternoons find us strolling to the playground, stopping for a coffee near Downtown Beijing, and the most common refrain from both Shane and Maya is, "Can we puh-leeze see the fishies and lobsters?” We, of course, consent.
Labels: Canon 30D, Photography, San Francisco, The Sunset
On a lot of days at
A
"Ocean Beach is the most hazardous and dangerous piece of shoreline associated with an urban environment in the whole United States."
Apparently over 10 people a year had drowed at
Labels: Canon 30D, Cole Valley, N Judah, Photography, San Francisco, surfing
Labels: Moblog, Photography, San Francisco