I move back from the pastoral of Point Reyes to the mean streets of San Francisco. Actually, couldn’t be further from the truth – mean streets – I mean.
The Sunday Farmers’ Market on Clement is not mean. The sun shines, the people are slim, happy, Californian friendly and good looking. The fruit and vegetables and stuff are so fresh and homegrown. It is very different from the America I hear about from Europeans.
Good to eatIt is that time of year.Lots of lettuceAmazingly they not only look good but taste fabulous!
I stumble to the Plough and Stars where, 15, 20 years ago, I used to play a lot of traditional Irish music.
People are playing, they are old friends!
Quality
I am swept away by the wonderfulness of everything and what is more, am given a free pint of Guinness.
First alcoholic drink for about 6 months! I even manage to blunder through a couple of tunes!
Thank you everyone in the Plough for warm welcome.
Drunk on one pint of Guinness, I hirple down Clement to buy more octopus from one of the excellent Chinese supermarkets. I then get fresh Dim Sum and a Waymo home, wallowing in happiness and joy.
Things take a turn for the worse as I get out of the car at the house to realise that I no longer have my flute. I have left it somewhere.
James and I rush back to the Dim Sum store. No one speaks English but they do have my flute! My incredible luck abides!
So good living in San Francisco! Two days ago I was ranging around the Mission, trying hard not to buy too much amazing exotic food by eating as much I could while I was there.
Yesterday, I was here.
Pont ReyesDrake’s BayTrees
I am feeling very athletic, probably due to the vast quantities of steroids that I use to supplement my diet.
I drive the short hop to https://www.parks.ca.gov/?page_id=469. My eyesight is not perfect and I improve my view by attaching new wing mirrors that give me much better rear visibility.
They work very well.
I set up camp in the huge Redwoods. So beautiful, so quiet, so much wildlife.
I love my camper.Fresh air!Friendly Chipmunk.Steller’s Jay
I love to cook outside.
I lift the cover from the Cobb to check on Chicken and Squash roasting inside. Buy a Cobb.Delicious
I sleep so well and am up at dawn to drive the 10 miles to Point Reyes.
There are wildflowers everywhere, the sun is shining, the sky is blue and Elk.
Not wildflowers.A long way away.Some sort of California PoppyFields of these.Lupins, the bush is about 6 feet high.Very bedraggled Coyote decides not to attack Elephant seals.Cinammon TealSome sort of Angelica? Very big.White Throated Sparrow, I think. Rare
I drive back over the Golden Gate Bridge. Lucky me!
I have mentioned several times the excellence of Japanese healthcare whilst generally poo-pooing healthcare in San Francisco. Well, I take a lot of this back.
I am now locked into the MediCal system here and it works very well. I get free health care and medication and above all I get the app MyChart. Blood test results, appointments, prescriptions are all done on paper in Okinawa but here there is a fantastic app.
So goodHemoglobin is the important one. It has gone up to 10.7, which is very encouraging.Notice very low value 10 days ago. Yay for steroids!
Thank you MediCal!
I am much more energised and head off to the Mission to buy exotic food. There are fantastic Mexican/Chinese fish and meat stores around Mission /24th.
Nice weather.Fabulous fish! I get a slab of Atlantic Cod.Chinese ladies squabble over Fish HeadsIf you see an Octopus – buy it1I buy lots of Goat.Beef Tongue
I head off for lunch.
Great place! Asada, Fritas. Delicious.The Mission is such a vibrant part of the city.
I have a new doctor, or provider, as the terminology here will have it.
Health and happiness
The clinic is the other side of town from Fell so lots of opportunities to zoom around in Waymos.
Downtown from Potrero Hill
I am now well looked after. I have 2 blood tests. I get a call at 10:00pm. It is a doctor saying that my red cell level is dangerously low and I should go to ER. This I cannot do as I am watching Gregory Peck in ‘Captain Hornblower.’ My new doctor is very attentive and prescribes steroids. I have to have blood tests every 3 days. I am much reassured as the MediCal system now has the bit between its teeth and they appear determined to effect a cure.
These are steroids, I think.
I do not feel unwell, just weak. I have lost lots and lots of weight and my skin hangs off my body like curtains. Thank you State of California. All treatment and medication is free!
My forearm!
There was a beautiful Ceanothus tree in the back yard that fought valiantly against all the disturbances and poison of the restoration. No good – she died.
Dead
I determine to cut it down and so buy a tiny chain saw thing.
Deadly!
It is a great tool and I slice away gleefully.
Cutting up dead trees is a joy, clearing away all the debris is a pain.
I am suddenly 73 years old! Jonathan and Renee take me out for a very good French lunch. Thank you.
Rillettes de Lapin.Bavette/frites. Does not look much but the meat is about a foot thick.. Very tender and actually tasted of something.Good looking people.James gives me lots of presents.
Thanks all who sent birthday wishes! First time I have not had an alcoholic drink on my birthday for 70 years!
Dear diary, sorry for the lack of entries over the last few weeks. The reason, apart from the background drone of idleness, is that not much has happened really.
My vision is blurred by cataracts, which I think I will only get fixed once I get back to Okinawa in August. Waiting lists here on MediCal are long and I would anticipate at least a 6 month delay before surgery. Unfortunately this makes driving a bit “hit and miss.” Especially in the city where cars fly out at you from all directions. I use Waymo, which is fantastic.
I love Waymo
I take a Waymo down to the Apple Store on Chesnut to get a new phone.
What fun! Thanks to all the people in the Apple Store for their friendliness and efficiency. California.Happy in a Waymo.
Brother Alan notices that the Imari plates used at recent meal are of similar design to a bowl that kicked around the house when we were young. I send the photos to Tomomi who replies that it is a remarkable piece of early porcelain, either Imari or Kakiemon . Whichever, it dates from the late 1600s.
I used to use it for digging in the garden.
Important job is to get my Green Card renewal procedure underway. This is done on the web of course but I also have to send documentation, including a money order for $600, to the Department of Homeland Security. It all seems to be going smoothly but the ETA for the new card is September. I will have to plan travel carefully.
Always a bit scary getting mail from these people.
James takes Eileen and I for a tour of the Botanical Gardens in The Golden Gate Park. Beautiful place!
James comforts me as I weep over a dead baby bird.James’ shed. I am envious.
Friend from SLAC days, Greg Loew, contacts me. He wants help publicising his book, “Memories from Paris to Stanford” I have been lucky to rub shoulders with exceptional people; Greg is one of them. Buy his book.
I stumble towards the U.S. Immigration Officer. Will they send me to jail in Nicaragua?
“Hey Sir, your Green Card is going to expire soon”
” I don’t think so, it’s good until May 2026.”
“Nope, sorry but it’s May 2025. You better get to work on that. “
Wow! Thanks for letting me know.”
No problem Sir, welcome home.”
All that anxiety for nothing. The Immigration people were as friendly and helpful as can be. I blame the tabloid media.
The house, all restored and pretty.
I wake very early and hike up to the Pork Store on Haight. I make it in one go without sitting down for a rest.
Not Japan
I cross the road to Gus’ wonderful local grocery store.
Huge choice of vegetables.Huge choice of meatOn the way home I stagger through Panhandle park. This is just outside my front door.
I immediately fill the bird feeder and my friends flock to welcome me back.
Oregon JuncoPygmy Nuthatch
I am just back from the Pork Store on my second morning.
Hilarious cowgirl waitressesMyrtle’s Egg Benedict. There is a layer of thick Mexican ground beef between the eggs and the muffins. You don’t hear the name Myrtle much.
I will have to stop going to The Pork Store for breakfast. Too much food. I feel like going straight back to bed.
I head the mighty Tanto North towards the breeding grounds of the elusive Yanbaru Kuina.
I stop on the way to visit Miwako san. She is a wonderful and talented person. She helped a lot with graphics work in the early days of OIST.
Miwako with father, Yamada Shinman, generally recognized as the greatest of Okinawan ceramicists. The photo dates to 2011!A couple of days ago. Go to her studio. Buy her pottery. https://onagaya.square.siteShe gives me a whimsical cup. Thank you!
Once I have tied up Tanto to the hitching rail in Yanbaru, Ichiro san and Tomomi put on an incredible meal!
Raw fish. Notice ancient Imari plates.Squid soup
We go out after the meal to find roosting rails. No luck. Next morning at dawn we are after them again. Not much luck, a few scampering across the road but nothing photographable. We see other stuff and it is always good to be out in the very early morning.
Grey Faced BuzzardThe sun rises over Yanbaru. It is freezing! Well not really freezing but very cold to we softy island dwellers.
I must go back to California. Trump’s crackdown on immigration worries me. They do not like it if you stay out of the States for extended periods on a Green Card.
Battened down. I will be away until August so she will probably have to withstand the wrath of typhoons. Fingers crossed.
We go out to get acclimatized to American food.
Hawaiian shrimpCow pie and chips
Not a great stay really. I came to have cataract surgery, which was cancelled owing to worse medical problems. I spent nearly all my time in bed. I lost 15 kilos. I lost mind-boggling sums of money from my pension fund.
However, the friendship and kindness of many people in my time of need was uplifting.
My lower legs, ankles and feet are grotesquely swollen and red. I have difficulty getting into any of my shoes
Nagasaki sensei sends me to hospital to see a blood circulation specialist. I explain that I have Elephantiasis but he seems skeptical. I have a big full body blood pressure test and an ultrasound lower leg vein check.
I am so well looked after in the hospital. Thanks all.
This morning I return to the hospital to learn the outcome of testing. The specialist tells me that there is nothing wrong with me and I should stop whining. This is the kind of doctoring I like. It reminds me of school.
Yesterday, upon the stair, I met Elephantiasis that wasn’t there! It wasn’t there again today, I wish, I wish it’d go away!
Very bad news! My friend Nagasaki sensei is leaving Okinawa. He has been an excellent doctor who is always available, gently humorous and very knowledgeable. He has underpinned my happiness as I move into dotage. He is moving to Miyako Jima for his dotage. Thank you Nagasaki sensei.
This blog has become dull as it is all about ailments. It is however difficult to write about other subjects, boating, birding, clubbing, life in Okinawa for example, because of ailments.
I have been in Okinawa since the end of January and have not left Ginowan. When I am not unconscious, I go from my apartment to the doctor, to the hospital, to the shops and more recently to the gym. That’s about it.
Older chaps will know the importance of having lots of places available to go for a pee. The bladder and prostate are not what they used to be. In this respect Okinawa shines. There are toilets everywhere! Not what used to be called “Public Conveniences” in the UK but in every supermarket, konbini, gas station, most shops, any municipal office, etc etc. There does not seem to be a taboo about just stepping in to use the toire https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gdMhQm12FZI
Of course all of the toilets are gleaming and users also appear to be super diligent in keeping them clean.
The gym – sparkling.In a Lawson.SanA supermarketWhat you get. Notice atomic bottom cleaner with choice of sprays, intensity and temperatureSmall pharmacy with great toilets.
Help is not far away!
I went for the final wind up after hospital stay. I have Cold Type Auto Immune Hemolytic Anemia. I will be OK but have to be very careful not to catch flu or covid. The level of red blood cells, the root of the problem, should slowly reestablish. I am nonetheless excessively feeble but again this should improve.
I go to the city gym, free for oldies, that is only 3 minutes drive away. I do exercises to strengthen the so called muscles in my legs. These seem to have gone AWOL.