During the March break we were able to check out San Francisco for 5 days with my son and his family. It was almost 30 years ago, in 1997, when we had toured the American southwest for 7 weeks with our kids, a Suburban pulling a tent trailer, and camping at all the National Parks. We had started in Rocky Mountain National Park and Mesa Verde in Colorado, then Zion, Bryce and Arches in Utah, Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona, across Death Valley to the Sierra Nevada, Yosemite and San Francisco, then all along the coast through the Redwoods to Olympic, and back through Glacier and Yellowstone. (18,000kms)
This trip for 5 days staying at a RIU Fisherman’s Wharf and airfare including all our tours and activities was probably pretty close in price but alas was filled with lots of great times and memories.
We made a day trip with a guide to Yosemite to show the grandkids El Cap and Half Dome and to see the giant sequoias.
Bird wise it was neat to see a family of Acorn Woodpeckers hard at work, some Brewer’s Blackbirds, Mountain Chickadees, lots of Stellar’s Jays, my first ever White-throated Swift, and Black Phoebe and Bushtit, also new lifers.
Another day was spent out to Alcatraz and a boat tour of the bay. Since I had previously toured the old prison, I spent my time birding the island and came away with some great birds.
Probably my favourite day was renting ebikes and pedaling over the Golden Gate Bridge to Sausalito and back. What a great time hanging out in the middle of the bridge as freighters passed underneath. This is an absolutely must do if you are ever in San Francisco.
On the way back I stopped to bird at Chrissy Field Lagoon. And although not a new lifer, as we had previously seen them in the Great Salt Lake Utah, finding a Long-billed Curlew was pretty cool. When I met up with a couple of local birders and exclaimed that there was a LBC in the lagoon, they were just like oh ya they hang out here.
And since The Big Lebowski is one of my absolute favourite movies, a stop at In-N-Out Burger was mandatory on my pedal back into San Francisco.
A whale watching tour produced 12 Gray Whales. These were a lifer for us and our 10th species of whale. We also seen Harbour Porpoise, California Sea Lions and Harbour Seals. As well as an abundance of sea birds. Our tour company was San Francisco Whale Tours and our naturalist was Mandy and I would highly recommend them.
Gray whales and humpbacks may both be baleen whales, but they come from different families and genera. Humpback whales weigh more than gray whales and are generally longer. Gray whales are bottom feeders, while humpbacks are not. Furthermore, humpbacks have a wider range than gray whales.
Just like their name indicates, gray whales are gray. They are large and measure up to 49 feet in length and 90,000 pounds in weight. Although gray whales don’t have dorsal fins, they have wide and short pad-like pectoral flippers. In place of their dorsal fins are humps and right below them are tiny bumps that travel all the way down to their fluke. They are easily differentiated from humpbacks because they have flatter throat grooves than humpbacks. They have 130 to 180 baleen plates that help them filter food while feeding.
I still can’t get over the driverless Waymo Jaguars driving passengers all over the place. Seems pretty futuristic to me.
Fisherman’s Wharf, and Pier 39 with all the California Sea lions were also a major attraction. In fact, we had a rare special treat as a Steller Sea Lion from Alaska showed up the day before we arrived and hung around for a couple of days. It was big news.



















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