Novel Times, Novel Measures

The virtual home of Lawrence S. Grodeska

My Latest Pet Project: DO THE WIGGLE!

The Wiggle as it looked at the beginning of time--1866. Photo courtesy of Joel Pomerantz.

I love The Wiggle. If you ride your bike regularly in San Francisco, chances are you also love The Wiggle. Because to know The Wiggle is to love The Wiggle. If you don’t ride your bike regularly in San Francisco, or if you don’t do anything regularly in San Francisco, you probably want to know what the heck The Wiggle is.

The answer is simple: The Wiggle is San Francisco’s BEST bicycle route. It gets you from East to West with the least amount of elevation. Bicyclists in SF are fanatical about The Wiggle. As am I. So I decided to write a song about it. A jingle, really. I’m pretty proud of it, and people seem to like it. The next logical step, of course, was to film a PSA for The Wiggle, so I’ve assembled a group of friends to do just that.

We’re shooting the video next Sunday, May 22 @ 2pm. We’d love for you to join us. More information can be found here: DoTheWiggle.com. And don’t worry….if you can’t make it, we’ll be posting The Wiggle PSA soon enough.

Filed under: Bikes, San Francisco

A Tap Water Pilgrimage to Hetch Hetchy

(This post originally appeared in the SF Environment blog on SFgate.com/green just last week and is based on a true story.)

We’ve got great tap water here in San Francisco, but do you know where it comes from? What’s more, have you ever been there? After five years in the Bay Area, I finally had the chance to visit my tap water at its source in the Hetch Hetchy valley of the Sierra Nevada. My name is Lawrence Grodeska, and I’m the Internet Communications Coordinator at SF Environment, and this is the story of one man and his quest for connection with his water supply.

Early one Friday morning about a month ago, I left San Francisco with two friends for a weekend of backpacking. We drove due east for 4 hours and finally hit the trailhead at O’Shaughnessy Dam, the gateway to the Hetch Hetchy reservoir. At 312 feet, the dam itself does not have the impact of the Hoover Dam (726 feet!), but O’Shaughnessy’s story is the stuff of legend.

In 1913, from a proposal by then San Francisco Mayor James Phelan, and aided by lobbying efforts of national proponents of the development of natural resources, Congress passed the Raker Act. The Act granted SF “certain rights of way in, over and through certain public lands, the Yosemite National Park, and Stanislaus National Forest…and the public lands in the State of California, and for other purposes.”

Those “other purposes” boiled down to the rights to flood the Hetch Hetchy valley to create a water-and-power system for the City & County of San Francisco. Situated in a pristine canyon in the northwest of Yosemite, the steep canyon walls were ideal conditions for a reservoir. The Army Corps of Engineers built the O’Shaughnessy Dam over the span of 7 years, battling rugged terrain and harsh elements, as well as the strong protests of fabled conservationist John Muir, to complete the dam in 1923.

I had long been curious to see Hetch Hetchy, the source of the water that comes out of our San Francisco faucets so consistently and deliciously. Perhaps it was the curiously alluring name – apparently the Central Miwok word for a common edible grass in the valley. Or maybe the contentious issue of who should profit from the water system, or even the engineering feats necessary to deliver such a municipal gift across 190 miles. More than anything, however, being an urban dweller removed from the source of his sustenance, I considered a visit to my water supply a pilgrimage of sorts.

Finally stepping onto the O’Shaughnessy Dam that day, backpack and all, I could feel the collective effort that was harnessed to create this enduring tribute to humanity’s ingenuity and brash survival instincts. My three short days of exploring the upper reaches of my watershed paled in comparison to that herculean effort, but I felt proud to be getting in touch with my water, and very eager to trace that water upstream.

After our initial admiration subsided, we trekked through the dry, hot heat of late summer in the Sierra. Thanks to the Raker Act, we had to trek an extra mile! The Act established some strict criteria for the protection of San Francisco’s water supply which are followed to this day. “No person shall bathe, wash clothes or cooking utensils [in, or] any way pollute, the water within the limits of the Hetch Hetchy Reservoir…or in the streams leading thereto, within one mile of said reservoir.” Despite the impassioned pleas of park Rangers upon entering Yosemite, we met a few folks on the trail who were still incredulous about the strict nature of these provisions. Maybe they’ve never drank unfiltered San Francisco tap water, because I think that is all the justification necessary.

Camping at Las Rancheria Falls that night was quite a treat. The small meadow situated at 5000 feet elevation was a perfect spot for taking in the late summer stars so resplendent during the new moon. It may sound like a tall tale, but that weekend I saw the most spectacular shooting star I have ever seen. I even learned a few new constellations with my trusty star chart, including the king, Cepheus.

The biggest delight of all, however, was bearing witness to the hydrological cycle that brings San Franciscans their water every day. There is a foot bridge which crosses Rancheria Falls, above which swimming is finally permitted in a spectacular swimming hole, chiseled by eons of sediment flow. I lingered long at this spot, but being the intrepid explorer, I needed to push further. Bushwhacking over a ridge and dropping back into the river bed, I found a long string of smaller, serene pools and plenty of smooth, wide rocks for sun bathing.

I spent most of my Saturday lounging about the upper reaches of this tributary to the Hetch Hetchy reservoir, a welcome opportunity to divest myself from the cares and concerns of life in the city. Relaxing on the rocks, dipping in and out of the stream, letting the ripples of sound wash over me, I was gently reminded of why water has been called the “molecule of life”. The very biochemistry of life on planet Earth depends upon the unique features of the water molecule.

I’ve always felt drawn to bodies of water, from swimming holes and streams to lakes and oceans. Whatever the reasons for water’s magnetism – basic chemistry or simple soothing pull – I did have a different perspective of Hetch Hetchy as I descended back into the valley on Sunday. Taking in the whole of the reservoir, in all its splendor and conundrum, I was grateful to know a bit more about the water I depend on everyday. For all the controversy over whether the dam and reservoir should be there and who profits from it, San Franciscans could do a lot worse.

Filed under: Real Writing, San Francisco, Sustainability

It Must Be Official…

Well, my new band has a myspace page, so it looks like we are finally legit.  Funny how that works.  The proof is in the pudding, as they say:

http://www.myspace.com/therealrealnumbers

This project started over a year ago when my good friend (and bassist) Evan asked if I wanted to maybe sing in a band with him and another guitar player.  While that lineup didn’t quite work out, it did kick start the creative juices and get me writing some tunes for the first time in many years.  After a draining search to fill out the lineup, we found one Dave Ambrose, a guitar slingin’, road-hardened music geek if there ever was one.  I don’t know what Dave heard in the crappy Garage Band demos that Evan and I posted, but he kept showing up every week and helping us craft my musical seeds into a semblance of proper songs.  In due time, and many drummers, Andy Freeman descended upon our practice space and ripped the sh*t out of those fledgling tunes.  It was pretty clear that Andy’s innate musicality and producer’s ear were too good to be true.  And so, by November of last year the lineup was complete, The Real Numbers were born, and work began on filling out the set.

All told, this band has already exceeded any expectations I had when Evan and I set out to make music in early 2008.  I’m delighted and humbled that such talented musicians are interested playing my tunes and have been so supportive.  It has been a truly collaborative effort, with each member brining their own contributions to the table, be it songs, lyrics, arrangement ideas, etc.  As a songwriter, this has been immensely rewarding.  As a novice guitar player, it has been an amazing opportunity to build some chops and venture forth into electric arena.

And so, The Real Numbers are officially out and about in the world.  Enjoy what we’ve got posted, and come out to hear us sometime, because the best is yet to come.  Your next chance is May 14th at the Connecticut Yankee here in San Francisco.  Until then, rock on.

Filed under: Music, San Francisco

This Is What Democracy Looks Like

Phonebanking in the Mission. Awwww, yeah.

Filed under: Politics, San Francisco,

PARK(ing) the Urban Environment

Open space is at a premium in cities across the globe. A few recent trends identified by the United Nations point to a dire need for prioritizing open space in the built environment. For the first time in the history of the world, more people live in cities than not. Of that number, over one third live in what the UN chooses to call “slums”. If there were ever a time to re-evaluate our culture’s woefully inadequate urban planning, this is that time. The continuing dire situation in New Orleans — what the New York Times called the “Death of an American City” — stands as a terrible reminder.

For my own part, I can attest to the need for more open space, and green space in particular. The past 14 months in an urban environment — albeit a very affluent one by global standards — have heartily emphasized the need for green spaces for my own mental health, as well as that of the community. We need to embrace the simple fact that people are happier when they are in close proximity to green, public space. It is a necessary respite from an urban architecture that has all but denied the organic matrix from which it sprang.

In addition, nearly four months without a car have confirmed how little consideration is given to the full human experience in urban planning. My pedestrian day is wholly dictated by the route mechanical and geometrical consideration of cars. Where I walk, what I look at, even the air that I breath are all directly impacted by the unfortunate preponderance of cars. If one assumes that the human experience can be fulfilled by clever geometry, then maybe we should congratulate our architects and land-use planners. I choose to believe, however, that the clever geometery of asphalt planes and cubes of concrete and steel — no matter how well-designed — cannot reflect the deepest emotions and inspirations of the soul.

So what do we do with our urban environment? Do we leave it up to greedy developers, greedier politicians and superman designers to determine land-use patterns? Do we forfeit our inherent right to have a say in the planning our our built environment? Hell no! We envision what we want and then go out and make it. I am continually pleased and inspired by the works of all shape and scale transpiring here in the Bay Area. Natural gardening is taking back our lobotomized lawns and deadened driveways. Urban agriculture and permaculture projects are sprouting like spring seedlings, especially in East Bay neighborhoods like south Berkeley and North and West Oakland.

The creative creative chaps at Rebar are combining art, ecology and design to tackle the problem of urban blight from a different direction. They’ve taken on the concept of “parking” and turned it upside down and colored it green with a recent installation called PARK(ing). Take a look:

PARK(ing) day

People, families and communities are recognizing the need to be an active participant in designing and cultivating our built environment. It may take the political and economic establishment decades to catch up to the cultural pioneers doing this important work in their own backyards today. It can be as simple as planting a seed and as and impactful as voting for a presidential candidate. I’ll be making my impact felt in the 10′ x 20′ plot of land next to my cottage and will be sure to share the process. Go green!

Read the rest of this entry »

Filed under: San Francisco, The Urban Environment

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