Showing posts with label presidio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label presidio. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

NOPA VELO Takes on the Chilly Tall Trees


Trees and bikes and fog: perfect Sunday morning

A typical summer day in San Francisco didn't keep NOPA VELO riders from their sixth monthly outing Sunday, July 25th. James, a first-timer with NOPA VELO, said he came out on the chilly morning because he was curious about the tree talks scheduled for the ride. One of the regulars was Smokey, a "rescue dog" or "little black dog" according to Dawn who pedals him around in his basket. She explained why she was joining the ride again. "Smokey brought me because he hasn't been on a ride for awhile and dogs and trees just go together. He wants the biggest tree possible. I think he wants to brag to his friends."

A total of twenty North Panhandle neighbors and friends met at Central Coffee, Tea and Spice, powered up on caffeine and carbs and spun off for their Tall Trees tour. First stop, the west end of the Panhandle where Dale Danley detailed the early planting of trees in the park from the 50-year-old redwoods to the 100-year-old Eucalyptus. Then off to the Andy Goldsworthy installation, Spire, just inside the Presidio after passing through the Arguello Gate for the second tree talk. Still no sun breaking through, but the troupe pedaled along the Presidio rim to the new Point Lobos overlook for a view of the habitat restoration underway. At the end of the tour, the riders took their planned park picnic to a nearby deck and dahlia garden instead. One more great NOPA VELO ride.

Coming up the last Sunday of August: think pastries.

Thanks to JP Collins for several of the photos in this album

Thursday, July 22, 2010

NOPA VELO Spins Green: Tall Trees Ride Sunday July 25th, View Route Map




NOPA VELO is all green Sunday, July 25th with a tall trees bike tour and a picnic in the park. If you missed the ride in June, be sure to add this green spin to your weekend. Find out what the bike buzz is all about for NOPA's only bike group for neighbors and friends. Organizers are adding an art + tree spire stop in the Presidio and a view from a new panoramic overlook.

NOPA VELO Tall Trees Ride
Sunday, July 25
Meet: 9:30 at Central Coffee, Tea & Spice (Central & Hayes)
Start: 10 am sharp
(If you're running late, join the group in the Panhandle near Shrader)
End: about 12:00 pm with a picnic lunch in the Panhandle (bring bike-friendly treats)

Mild to moderate 7 mile ride through the Panhandle and along the Presidio Rim
All level riders welcome; kids on own bike OK if with guardian
Pets OK too if on leash or on bike
Tree hugger attire encouraged
More info: Lenore @415-300-6744, lmcjunker@gmail.com

Join the NOPA VELO Google Group here



Thursday, July 15, 2010

Tree Geeks Spin Their Wheels: NOPA VELO's Tall Trees Ride


Image by Rick Helf, www.helf.com

What next for NOPA VELO? After the Patty Hearst, a Duel to the Death, Maria von Trapp, Dead Presidents, and Pink with Pride rides, what else might inspire a Sunday morning spin for the North Panhandle's favorite bicycling group? How about the Towering Trees of NOPA (and beyond)? Bikes and Trees. What better match and how green is that?

The Panhandle and the Presidio are heaven for tree geeks. They are home to several of the same tree species, and they both have trees planted a hundred years ago. But the tall trees planted in the Presidio by the U.S. Army - and more recently by the National Park Service - have lived a different life from their relatives in the Panhandle. So what's your favorite type - the Army Brats or the offspring of William Hammond Hall, first superintendent of Golden Gate Park?

Riders get started at Central Coffee, Tea and Spice, the neighborhood's nearly historic must-have-caffeine stop. Then the band will buzz down the block to the Panhandle, roll along the path -- allowing room for the strollers -- and stop at the Sue Bierman Memorial Grove near Shrader Street for the first tree talk. Then bikers take off for the Presidio, pass through the Arguello Gate and stop at Spire, the Andy Goldsworthy art installation. The tour continues along the Presidio's ridge line and visits a new overlook before leaving at 15th Avenue and returning to the Panhandle for a picnic lunch.

Andy Goldsworthy's Spire

NOPA VELO Tall Trees Ride
Sunday, July 25
Meet: 9:30 at Central Coffee, Tea & Spice (Central & Hayes)
Start: 10 am sharp
(If you're running late, join the group in the Panhandle near Shrader)
End: about 12:00 pm with a picnic lunch in the Panhandle (bring bike-friendly treats)

Mild to moderate 7 mile ride through the Panhandle and along the Presidio Rim
All level riders welcome; kids on own bike OK if with guardian
Pets OK too if on leash or on bike
Tree hugger attire encouraged
More info: Lenore @415-300-6744, lmcjunker@gmail.com

Join the NOPA VELO Google Group here

Sunday, April 25, 2010

NOPA VELO Rides With the Presidents


Start of the Dead Presidents Ride

Mojo meet-up for breakfast and coffee

Teddy R stand-in at McKinley Monument

Liam's presidential pose; Garfield in the distance

Perfect addition to Golden Gate view

A bicycling day doesn't get better than this. Clear skies, perfect temperature, good company, new and old cycling friends, three parks, one bridge, eight presidents along the way.

This post is all about the photos. See recent posts for the back story, the route, the NOPA lore, and the good times in store for NOPA's newest bicycling group.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

One Ride, Seven Presidents: NOPA VELO's Park and Bridge Tour This Sunday


Image: Rick Helf , www.helf.com

The President William McKinley Monument in Panhandle Park

Another Slain Ohio President, James A. Garfield, in Golden Gate Park

President Theodore Roosevelt might never have visited NOPA if the original plan to place a monument to his predecessor, William McKinley, at the intersection of Van Ness Avenue and Market Street had held. Instead, Teddy R stopped by the site of the future monument at the eastern end of the Panhandle in May of 1903, ceremoniously shoveled sod, and eulogized McKinley.

San Franciscans kicked in $30,000 for the memorial of their beloved President, and local sculptor Robert Aitken won the commission for the statue. As authors Chris Pollock and Erica Katz note in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park: A Thousand and Seventeen Acres of Stories notes, "The McKinley Monument features an inset marble bas-relief plaque of McKinley set into a 15- foot-high pedestal on a stepped granite podium 45 feet in diameter."

This upcoming Sunday NOPA VELO riders will stop by the McKinley Monument, the site of the only visit to the neighborhood by a sitting U.S. President. Then it's on through the Panhandle and into Golden Gate Park with a second stop at the President James A. Garfield Memorial along John F. Kennedy Drive. (That's four past presidents, if you're not counting). Of the three monuments erected to U.S. Presidents in Golden Gate Park, all three hailed from Ohio. As former NOPNA President Tys Sniffen, also an Ohioan, once asked, "What's up with that?"

In short order, NOPA VELO spinners will leave the park and head for the Presidio where they will encounter remembrances to Presidents Washington, Harrison, and Lincoln before crossing the Golden Gate Bridge in groups. After taking in the view from Marin, riders will retrace their tracks to return to the neighborhood with enough Presidential Lore to last a good long time.

NOPA VELO Dead Presidents' Park & Bridge Ride
Sunday, April 25
Meet: 9 am for breakfast/drinks at Mojo Bicycle Cafe, 639 Divisadero
Start: 10 am sharp
(If you're running late, join the group at McKinley's Monument; even later, catch them at Garfield's)
End: about 12:30 pm, lunch at Herbivore Restaurant, 531 Divisadero

Mild to moderate climbs in the Presidio
All level riders welcome; kids on own bike OK if with guardian
Heavy rain cancels (but sun predicted!)
More info: Lenore @415-300-6744, lmcjunker@gmail.com

Join the NOPA VELO Google Group here

Friday, April 16, 2010

NOPA VELO's Ride with the Presidents, April 25


Image: Rick Helf, www.helf.com

Teddy R returns to NOPA, and you won't want to miss it. On May 13, 1903 President Theodore Roosevelt first visited the neighborhood for a stop at the east end of Panhandle Park. There the country's youngest president tossed some sod at the site of the future monument to his slain predecessor, William McKinley. Teddy recalled the grief he and the American people felt when McKinley died of bullet wounds fired by an anarchist at the Pan American Exhibition in Buffalo, New York in September of 1901.
"It is not too much to say that no man since Lincoln was as widely and universally beloved in this country as was President McKinley."

That's quite a tribute for the nation's leader who helped
launch the country into full-blown imperialism with the Spanish-
American War of 1898 and the Philippine Insurrection that followed.

For its fourth monthly ride, NOPA VELO spinners will first
fuel-up with breakfast at Mojo Bicycle Cafe and then kick-off for
a tour of presidential memorials in Golden Gate Park and the
Presidio before crossing Golden Gate Bridge. Here's your chance
if you've yet to cross on your bike. Riders will take in the views from
the Marin side and then leisurely bike back for a lunch stop at
Herbivore Restaurant on Divisadero.

Join us for a nod to seven Presidents and a great ride.
Neighbors and friends of all skill levels are welcome. Kids too
on their own bikes if with a guardian. Mild to moderate climbs
in the Presidio. Presidential attire encouraged.

9:00 am Breakfast or coffee at Mojo Bicycle Cafe
639 Divisadero, between Hayes & Grove
10:00 am Ride begins
Noon Lunch at Herbivore Restaurant
531 Divisadero, between Hayes & Fell

For more information: Lenore @ 415-300-6744;
lmcjunker@gmail.com
To get all the NOPA VELO news, join our Google group
Heavy rain cancels.

Friday, February 12, 2010

This Saturday: Panhandle Park Stewards Ready for Plants and Trees, Turf and Soil


Dale Danley Ready for Park Stewards Next Work Day Feb. 13th

NOPA neighbors might know Dale Danley better, and more recently, as "Ranger Dale," the native habitat expert who spoke with cyclists during NOPA VELO's spin through the Presidio last month. Long-time bicyclists are familiar with Dale's volunteer work with the San Francisco Bicycle Coalition where he served as president of the board of directors (2002-2004). Now Dale has taken on another pursuit: getting the Panhandle Park in the best shape ever. BIKE NOPA caught up with Dale on a rainy day away from gardens, native plants, and invasive weeds to chat over coffee in our kitchen.

What are the Panhandle Park Stewards?
We're volunteers from the community working together to improve the Panhandle Park, to make it more accessible and enjoyable for everybody in the community. We're continuing the tradition of a Panhandle Clean-up, or work day, that happens the second Saturday of each month. On that day, we work with the park's gardener,
Guillermo, on projects that probably couldn't get done without the extra hands of community volunteers.

Why are you getting involved?
When I learned that
Mary Helen Briscoe, the longtime neighborhood organizer, needed to hand-off the project, I offered to lead the group into 2010. I've been living in the North Panhandle neighborhood for 10 years, and hope I have the gardening skills and the neighborhood connections to keep the Park Steward project growing.

Are you changing the name from Panhandle Clean-up?
I'm trying out calling us "Park Stewards" and see what the reaction is. I think a lot of people are eager to do work with the plants and trees, the turf and the soil. I'm really interested in lending a hand to tend the living inhabitants of the park, or planting flowers that my neighbors will enjoy.

How does this compare with your volunteering for habitat restoration at the Presidio?
The Presidio runs a large, successful program for community-based habitat restoration, and I volunteer once or twice a week – pulling the non-native weeds, and growing native plants, in the natural areas scattered across the park. I'll try to replicate some of their successful elements: provide the right tools for the job, cultivate dedicated volunteers, explain the natural processes and how the human activities affect the ecosystem. Also, offer a tasty snack and create a friendly, social atmosphere. San Francisco Rec and Park also runs dozens of volunteer programs, many highly successful, but the Presidio's program is the one I know best!

Will you try to add more native plants to the Panhandle?
I love native plants, but there are several reasons the Panhandle's not a great place for them, starting with all those tall trees that create so much shade. Perhaps the most substantial obstacle is that it's a historical landscape that should be preserved. Secondly, its spaces are already spoken for by different users like picnickers, bicyclists, basketball players, and dog walkers. But there's growing interest in native plants, and people are keen to make our green spaces as beneficial to the environment as possible, so I wouldn't be surprised to see that idea put forth by neighbors and volunteers. Maybe we'll plant natives in containers, for educational purposes or perhaps designate one of the small decorative beds for natives. Then there are those underused islands near Stanyan created by the traffic loops...hmmm! Seriously, though, I have a lot to learn about the park before I can pursue any specific plans.

Any worries about taking on this new project?
The panhandle has some long-standing problems: muddy fields in winter, vehicles damaging the turf, homeless campers. The multi-use path is getting more and more popular with walkers, runners, and cyclists, and with more users,
there's some friction and some calls for new designs. I hope the park's problems don't diminish the fun and satisfaction volunteers get from a good work day. In my ideal vision of how these projects work, as volunteers become increasingly invested in their neighborhood park, they also become more knowledgeable and capable of figuring out solutions that might solve some of these problems.

Next workday: Saturday, February 13, 9 am to 11 am
Meet at the Bulletin Board (in the Panhandle, 1 block west of Masonic Ave)
Wear sturdy shoes (boots the best) to keep your feet dry.

This month, it would be great to have neighborhood volunteers sign up through the Onebrick site to ensure we have enough supplies.

Everyone, including volunteers, can follow the progress of the Panhandle Park Stewards with their new blog here.



Thursday, January 28, 2010

NOPA VELO to Roll Sunday Jan. 31


Image by Rick Helf

Seen while walking NOPA: Patty Hearst returns

The Patty Hearst / Presidio Ride spins through NOPA this upcoming Sunday, Jan. 31st. Meet up at Central Coffee, Tea and Spice for Ali's finest brews and a brief account of the travails of Tania/Patty Hearst by NOPA's own Lenore McDonald. Kick off from there for a stop at the
Golden Gate Avenue apartment building where the heiress-turned-radical was held captive in 1974 by the Symbionese Liberation Army.

With thoughts of life in a small closet, NOPA VELO cyclists and friends will then glide through Panhandle Park and onto JFK Drive for one of the first group rides on the repaved section of the park boulevard.

Ranger Dale will accompany the cyclists and present an update on recent changes in the Presidio including the national park's ambitious habitat restoration program. A stop at the Warming Hut for a quick break and then everyone returns to NOPA for a hearty welcome at Jannah, NOPA's new restaurant offering exotic Middle Eastern/Californian specialties at good prices, on Fulton Street for drinks and/or lunch.

Can't pedal the whole route? Check out the route map in this previous post and meet us at the start, along the way, or join us for celebration at the end. Patty/Tania and Park Ranger attire encouraged.

Ride stats:
Meet 9:30 am at Central Coffee, Tea & Spice, corner of Central & Hayes
Begin ride at 10:00 am
Return to NOPA and stop for drinks & lunch at Jannah, 1775 Fulton, between Central and Masonic at 2 pm
About 15 miles, two moderate climbs
All biking abilities welcome, walking the climbs is more than fine
Kids with own bikes and an adult guardian welcome to join us
Questions? contact Lenore at lmcjunker@gmail.com


Wednesday, January 20, 2010

NOPA VELO Spins Out with Inaugural Ride


Design by Rick Helf


NOPA VELO, the North Panhandle’s new bicycling group for neighbors and friends, will launch its inaugural monthly outing on Sunday morning, January 31. Ride organizers announced that each ride will accommodate bikers of all levels with an emphasis on exercise and fine times with neighbors and friends. In addition, the outings will begin and end at NOPA's cool cafes and restaurants, making it one of the few neighborhood-focused, regular rides.

NOPA VELO also creates its own niche among the dozens of specialty bike rides in San Francisco by including NOPA LORE with each outing. What might that mean? Consider the inaugural excursion: “NOPA VELO’S Patty Hearst Presidio Ride” that starts with a brief recounting of NOPA's most famous captive-turned-revolutionary followed by a stop at the Golden Gate Avenue building where Patty/Tania Hearst was held hostage in 1974. Later in the ride NOPA’s own Ranger Dale will give an insider’s view of habitat restoration and new developments at the Presidio. Patty/Tania or Park Ranger attire encouraged for the ride.

Ranger Dale restores Presidio habitats

Future NOPA LORE will feature the neighborhood’s three historical landmark buildings with a story of how NOPNA helped keep one of them from becoming a Burger King outlet; a bicycle re-creation of President Teddy Roosevelt’s 1903 visit to NOPA, and the residence of the woman companion of Portland’s "Queen of the Bolsheviks."

NOPA VELO organizersLenore McDonald, Rick Boardman, and Michael Helquist – were inspired by the enthusiastic turnout for the Bike, Meet, and Mingle events sponsored by NOPNA, the San Francisco Bicycle Coalition (SFBC), and BIKE NOPA last September and December. On both occasions, bicycle networking spun off toward NOPA-focused biking.

Lenore and Rick are veteran cyclists with experience organizing rides. Before finding her current home on Golden Gate, Lenore organized century rides in Marin. BIKE NOPA profiled Lenore in this previous post. Rick is originally from the UK but has been living, cycling and working in the Bay Area for five years. In London, he led the Hammersmith and Fulham group of the London Cycling Campaign for several years. He especially enjoyed leading sometimes muddy, but always fun rides along the Thames.

For ongoing info about the rides and more, join the NOPA VELO Google group here. News and photos will also appear regularly at BIKE NOPA.


View Larger Map

The first ride announcement follows:

NOPA VELO's Patty Hearst Presidio Ride ~ Sun., Jan 31 10am - 2 pm

Meet: 9:30 @ Central Coffee, Tea & Spice @ corner, Central & Hayes for NOPA lore on the Patty Hearst kidnapping and captivity in NOPA.

Depart: 10:00 am for swing by Patty Hearst building and then into the Panhandle

  • Stops along the way: the newly repaved JFK Drive west of Transverse Drive
  • new viewpoint above Sutro Baths
  • quick break at the Warming Hut near Crissy Field and brief update on Presidio habitat restoration from Ranger Dale
  • Yoda Fountain at Lucasfilm
  • Return to NOPA via 15th Avenue
2pm: Drinks and lunch at Jannah Restaurant, across from Lucky's on Fulton Street

All level riders are welcome and no rider will be left behind. Kids who can ride this distance on their own bike are welcome, if accompanied by a guardian.

The ride is approximately 15 miles with one medium climb to Sutro baths and another medium climb heading home on 15th Avenue. Heavy rain cancels ride, otherwise we're on! Next ride: Feb. 27 or 28.

Questions? Contact Lenore at 415-300-6744, lmcjunker@gmail.com or Rick at 650 714 7425, rickschmoo@gmail.com


Thursday, October 8, 2009

San Francisco Through the Gates: a self-guided bike tour for visitors and locals alike


NOPA bicyclist Dale Danley offers BIKE NOPA's first post from a Guest Contributor with an ambitious loop ride with great viewing stops and visits to great neighborhoods. Dale is a long-time member and former Board President of the San Francisco Bicycle Coalition. In July he led a back-roads Presidio bike tour for SFBC that took even well-traveled cyclists to new sights.

Through the Gates highlights: Fisherman's Wharf, Golden Gate Bridge, Golden Gate Park, NOPA of course, and the Civic Center.
Total time: 2-4 hours
Total distance: 20 Km (12 miles) - not including riding across Golden Gate Bridge


Bicycling is having an incredible year in San Francisco. One sign of changes underway here, like across the US, is the increasing numbers of tourists taking off all across the city on rental bikes. More folks are braving the hills and traffic to experience the beauty and diversity of our city on two wheels. Bike tourism here isn't just about riding over the Golden Gate Bridge to Sausalito!

This summer I've seen many riders heading south out of the Presidio to Golden Gate Park. For anyone interested in trying that route, I've created this self-guided bike tour. It traverses my own North of the Panhandle (NOPA) neighborhood, and offers the safest and easiest route back to Fisherman's Wharf. If you try this ride, please tell me about your experience by leaving comments, suggestions, and corrections here at Bike NOPA.


Stage 1: Fisherman's Wharf to the Presidio
Every day, hundreds of tourists start their bike rides heading west along the waterfront. It's a great way to begin, though you might encounter a headwind. You can easily find a bike rental outfitter, such as Bike and Roll, in North Beach or Fisherman's Wharf. During this stage, you'll follow along with the crowds through Aquatic Park, Fort Mason, the Marina Green, and on to Crissy Field. You'll also notice posted signs to help you follow bike routes here in San Francisco. You're on Rte 2, the northernmost east-west bike route.

Stage 2: To the Golden Gate Bridge in the Presidio
After biking along the big lawn at Crissy Field, Route 2 signs should point left off of Mason St and then immediately to the right up Crissy Field Avenue, a short but steep climb up the bluff. This street is car-free in October 2009, and could remain that way if the park's bikeway plans fall into place (if you like the biking conditions in the Presidio, thank the National Park Service and the Presidio Trust, not the city government). At the top of the bluff, watch for a bike path, which leads you on a gentle climb to the bridge. If you want to ride across the bridge, follow the signs (the path for bikes depends on the day of the week). Then come on back - you've got a long ways to go! The good news is that once you're up at the bridge level, you've done most of the climbing for this part of the ride.

Stage 3: Golden Gate Bridge to the Arguello Gate
Exit the parking lot that serves the touristy area at the Golden Gate Bridge, turning right onto Lincoln. Pass under a roadway (that's the main road leading to the bridge) and after a short climb, watch for a sign for Bike Route 65. That's the north-south route that takes you to Golden Gate Park. Be careful taking the left turn off of Lincoln and onto Ralston. You're now in Fort Winfield Scott, a "Fort within a Fort" that was the command post for the Batteries that pointed their big guns over the Bay. Unlike other parts of the Presidio, a lot of these buildings are still empty. As you ride inland, you'll probably see fewer and fewer people. On many days, bikes seem to outnumber cars on these Presidio backroads. Take your time to enjoy the sights!

After turning right on Greenough, right on Kobbe, and then left on Harrison, you'll merge onto Washington Blvd. The Immigrant Point Overlook offers the best ocean view of this tour. Continue on Washington as it veers back to the east. After a fairly long ride along the Presidio's ridgetop, veer right as Washington merges with Arguello (still on Bike Rte 65). Another overlook, Inspiration Point, in on the left, with views of the Bay and of the Presidio's historic forests, originally planted over a hundred years ago. Inspiration Point also has a bike rack and trails if you want to take a quick walk into some of the Presidio's natural areas (bikes are discouraged, and the sandy paths aren't fun to ride on). Community-based habitat restoration teams have been working here and other areas throughout the park.

Ride on towards the Arguello Gate. Just before the restaurant that serves the Golf Course clientèle, a dirt path on the right leads a short distance to a final recommended Presidio stop: Spire by Andy Goldsworthy, an environmental artist known around the world for his site-specific work. The Spire is situated among a grove of recently planted Monterey Cypress and is built from the trunks of mature trees that were cut as part of Presidio's efforts to maintain and renew the historic forests.

Stage 4: Arguello Gate to Golden Gate Park
Leave the Presidio and head straight south along Arguello Blvd, using the bike lane. You can see Golden Gate Park straight ahead. On your right, the Richmond neighborhood stretches for 40 blocks all the way to Ocean Beach. Close to the park, at McAllister, a cafe on the left side of the road sports a red bike hanging above the door. It's Velo Rouge Cafe, part of the local bike scene for years and offering a good selection of coffee, beer, wine and food, and if you're lucky, a sidewalk table in the sun.

Just past the cafe is the portal to Golden Gate Park. Climb up a steep but short hill to the end of Arguello, and check over your shoulder for the tour's last view of the Presidio and the Golden Gate Bridge.

Stage 5: Golden Gate Park to North of Panhandle Neighborhood
You're now in Golden Gate Park, and you have many options. Arguello ended at Conservatory Drive, so named because it rings the hillside above the Conservatory of Flowers, a large wood and glass greenhouse that is more than 130 years old. If you're going to visit the Conservatory or other park attractions (the de Young Museum, California Academy of Sciences, National AIDS Memorial Grove, Japanese Tea Garden, etc.), you would turn right. But since this is the simple and easy route, it turns left, so that you return to the east, descending a gentle hill. When you arrive at the Park's main boulevard, John F. Kennedy Ave., turn left and travel a short distance to a large intersection.

INTERSECTION TIP: The best way to cross this intersection and connect to the bike path on the Panhandle is to get on the left side of the cars exiting the park. It might feel strange, but after yielding to car traffic approaching from the left, cross over to a space for bikes next to the median, staying on the right side of the median and left of the car traffic. You'll travel along the median for about 100 meters to the traffic light at Stanyan Blvd. When the light turns green, aim straight ahead for the pathway across the intersection.

You've now made it to the Panhandle, an eight-block long park with one of San Francisco's best bike paths! Heading east on Bike Route 30, you'll have a gentle downhill, and since the path is often busy with all kinds of people, just cruise along. If you ride too close and scare people pushing strollers, they are sure to give you a piece of their mind!

At the end of the Panhandle is Baker St. You should go left here, getting onto a northbound bike lane (bike route 51). You're now in the North of Panhandle Neighborhood! Go three blocks north to find a couple of the best local restaurants, including Green Chile Kitchen (moving soon from Baker @ Fulton to Baker @ McAllister). Just two blocks east of Baker, there are even more local spots on Divisadero St, like Mojo Bicycle Cafe (on Divisadero just south of Grove St), which combines cafe fare, a bike shop, and a backyard garden in one shop! Riding a bike on Divisadero is kind of dicey because of heavy traffic, Muni buses, and poor pavement, but the city is sprucing up the street, so the situation might feel more bike friendly within a couple of months.

Stage 6: NOPA to San Francisco City Hall (Polk St)
Use McAllister St to travel all the way to Civic Center. There are no bike lanes, but traffic is light, and you'll be going downhill all the way at about the same speed as cars. Cross Van Ness and go one block further to Polk St. The big building with the dome on the right is City Hall - site of San Francisco's biggest events in San Francisco history - and you can visit it for free. Turn right on Polk St, and you'll see some bike racks mid-block, near the main doors. Pass through some metal detectors to visit the building.

Stage 7: City Hall to Fisherman's Wharf
Polk St is Bike Rte 25, and will take you all the way back to Fisherman's Wharf. It's sometimes called "Polk Gulch" because it's got the smallest hills of any of the north-south streets in that part of the city. And it has a bike lane for most of its length. There are also cool stores, bars, cafes and restaurants along the way. In the 70s and early 80s, Polk St was the center of San Francisco gay life. The southern part (near Turk) is generally seedier than the northern part (near California).

Now you've completed a spin along some of the city's best biking routes with terrific views!