Wednesday, August 31, 2005

New Look

I changed my blog template around, so it may look different, so don't think that someone else has taken over my blog or anything - lol. I got bored with the old look and decided to jazz it up a bit. Enjoy!

Sunday, August 28, 2005

Alcatraz Island

My mom, my brother and I all went up to San Francisco on Saturday to tour Alcatraz Island. It was a nice day. It was a tad foggy in the morning when we got up there, but as the afternoon came in, the fog rolled out, making way for a nice, sunny day in San Francisco.

We went out on a boat run by the Blue & Gold Fleet. The tickets were $16 a person (adult), which included an audio tour (regular price is $11 per person without the audio tour). If you want the full experience, pay the extra $5 to get the audio tour. Make sure you get tickets ahead of time, as they sell out quick! My brother bought them online (www.blueandgoldfleet.com). They have standby tickets, but the chances of getting on one of those is slim to none. The audio tour is a self-guided tour. They give you a headset with an audio tape that tells you all about the prison, prisoners, guards, etc. It is really cool! You can walk around freely, and you can even go into some of the cells. They also have ranger-guided tours if you don't want the audio tour. Or you can walk around without a guide if you want. You can walk around for a little while, or you can walk around for hours. There is no time limit, just as long as you get back to the last boat off the island. I think the last boat left at 6:30 pm.

Before Alcatraz was a prison, it was a little island off of San Francisco, which was occasionally visited, perhaps, by Miwok and Ohoe Indians. In 1850, a proposal was made to put a military fort on Alcatraz Island. Between 1859 and 1906, Alcatraz was the site of a military fort and prison. By 1907, Alcatraz Island's defenses became obsolete, and the army decommissioned Alcatraz as a military fort.

In 1915, Alcatraz was renamed, "United States Disciplinary Barracks, Pacific Branch," and in 1934, Alcatraz was reopened as a federal penitentiary.. Over the years, some 1,545 men did time on "The Rock." Among them were Al Capone, George "Machine Dun" Kelley, Floyd Hamilton, and Robert Stroud, the "Birdman of Alcatraz." Most of the men imprisoned on Alcatraz were considered troublemakers in other prison populations.

Over the years, a total of 14 escape attempts were made, the most famous being attempt #13 , in June 1962, when Frank Morris and brothers Clarence and John Anglin made their way out of Alcatraz's walls and into the Pacific Ocean. They had dug their way out of their cell walls and escaped into the ocean with flotation devices made of raincoats. They had put dummy "heads" into their beds to fool the guards into thinking that they were asleep in their beds. Although they were never found, they were presumed to have drowned in the ocean.

Increased maintenance and operating costs led to the closure of Alcatraz as a federal penitentiary in 1963, and the prisoners were then transferred to other prisons. After the prison closed, Native Americans occupied it between June 1969 to June 1971, and in October of 1972, Alcatraz Island became a National Park.

You can really get a good feel of what it was like to be on Alcatraz when it was a prison by taking the tour, and especially with the aid of the audio tour. The audio tour gives you interviews with past inmates and guards, and even has sound effects. It is really interesting.

There are a lot of other things to do and see in San Francisco if you can't make the Alcatraz Tour. There is the San Francisco Zoo, Fisherman's Wharf, Angel Island, the Golden Gate Bridge and the Bay Bridge, the Exploratorium, The San Francisco Mint, China Town, and of course, Lombard Street and trolley cars. There is also a wax museum and the Ripley's Believe It or Not Museum.

Next time you are in San Francisco, check out one or more of these places. It is a great tourist city!


Links:


  • Alcatraz Island

  • History of Alcatraz

  • Golden Gate Bridge

  • Golden Gate National Recreation Area

  • Blue and Gold Fleet


  • Destinations:


    Alcatraz Island
    Fisherman's Wharf

    Alcatraz tour boat

    San Francisco as viewed from the boat

    on Lombard Street

    visitation window

    view of Alcatraz from the boat

    Alcatraz Prison

    Solitary Confinement cells

    Recreation Yard

    Recreation Yard

    This was one of the cell's used in escape attempt # 13 by Frank Morris, Clarence Anglin and John Anglin - they escaped through holes they dug in the cell walls. They left dummy "heads" in their beds to cover up their escape. They had gathered hair in the barbershop to use on the heads.

    The Dining Hall

    That cell was the "Birdman of Alcatraz's" cell

    Alcatraz


    That building next to those big cylinder things is the morgue

    you can actually walk into some of the cells

    jail cell on Alcatraz - these were sure small!

    view of Alcatraz - you have to walk up a hill to get to the prison itself


    that old building you see there is the Warden's House

    A closer view of Alcatraz

    Alcatraz Island, as viewd from Fisherman's Wharf

    Fisherman's Wharf in San Francisco, CA

    Fisherman's Wharf

    The USS Pampanito - an actual submarine used in WWII - it was named, as all US submarines in the war were, after a fish

    You can take a tour of this submarine - it was actually used in WWII - it is over 300 feet long and had a crew of about 80 men - it could stay submerged for 48 hours and its operating depth was 400 feet below the ocean surface

    The Bay Bridge connects San Francisco to Oaklnad

    view of the Golden Gate Bridge from Alcatraz Island

    Postcard of Alcatraz Island

    postcard of the Golden Gate Bridge looking like it usually looks ... covered in fog - lol. On the day we went, however, it was nice and sunny

    A postcard of Lombard Street - this street is paved with red brick and has 8 turns in a one block area. It is a one-way street and you have to go very slow.

    looking down on San Francisco from the top of Lombard Street, the "world's crookedest street"

    seals resting off of Fisherman's Wharf in San Francisco, CA

    postcard of Morro Bay, showing Morro Rock - Morro Rock is actually an extinct volcano...one of a series of ancient volcanoes that line the coast near Morro Bay - nowadays, Morro Rock is a wildlife preserve to protect endangered Peregrine Falcons who nest on the rock.

    F Mc Clintocks in Shell Beach, CA - they have awesome food there

    Momma deer - she had two fawns nearby

    These deer were just a few feet off of the road and they didn't even run away when we stopped the car to take their picture (although, momma deer kept a close eye on my brother - lol)

    Deer spotted in Morro Bay, CA

    Morro Rock

    Morro Rock in Morro Bay, CA

    Sunday, August 21, 2005

    San Franciso Zoo Trip

    This weekend, my mom, my brother and I went to the San Francisco Zoo. I hadn't been to this zoo since I was a kid. We used to go nearly every summer when I was growing up in King City. It was a nice day, though overcast. The temperature was in the 60's, which was a nice change from the 90-100 degree temperatures of Bakersfield.

    The zoo is surprisingly pretty inexpensive to get in. It was only $11 per adult to get in plus $5 for parking per vehicle. According to the website, San Francisco residents get in at a discounted rate.

    There were a large variety of animals at the zoo. Some of the exhibits were empty at the time, as they were being rennovated. I think my favorites were the gorillas, the river otters and the big cats. The penguins were sure putting on a show, squawking loudly at each other. They sure are cute. I loved the bears too! The grizzly bears were young bears, but already showing signs of maturity. They were already developing the "hump" that grizzlies are so well-known for, and their claws sure weren't small! The polar bears were taking it easy. One of them was stretched out and laying down and the other was sitting around looking at everyone. I love bears.

    They have an area called the Children's Zoo, which has small animal exhibits such as rabbits, guinea pigs, meerkats, prairie dogs and birds of prey. A lot of the birds are rehabilitated and cannot live in the wild. One of the falcons was hit by a car, and subsequently cannot fly. But she has a home at the zoo now. There are also 2 pelicans that were injured from fishing line, and an owl that was stolen from its nest as a baby and now lives at the zoo. It is nice to know that these animals, who would have certainly died in the wild, have been given a second chance.

    I took a lot of pictures, and posted them below. Someday , I would like to go to the San Diego Zoo and maybe the LA Zoo again, too. I love animals, and seeing them up close is just amazing.

    Address:

    1 Zoo Road
    San Francisco, CA 94132

    Phone (415) 753-7080

    Zoo Hours - 10 am to 5 pm daily

    Links



  • San Francisco Zoo



  • Hippos

    Meerkat

    Meerkat

    Prairie Dog

    Prairie Dog

    North American River Otters

    North American River Otters

    North American River Otter