Tag Archives: San Francisco

He will live at our house…

Gilroy the dog by Katy Dickinson Gilroy and Tino by Katy Dickinson

Growing up in San Francisco, my brothers and I had far more pets than you might think. From time to time, we had a rescued baby crow in the breakfast room, toads and frogs in the tub, iguanas and bunnies in the basement, a boa constrictor in the bathroom, and cats wherever they pleased to go. My mother’s motto about all of this was from the Dr. Seuss book One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish:

Look what we found in the park in the dark.
We will take him home, we will call him Clark.
He will live at our house, he will grow and grow.
Will our mother like this? We don’t know.

At my home in San Jose, we have a more modest menagerie (2 dogs, 2 birds, and a cat) but since we live on the Guadalupe River, we are often invaded by hoards of squirrels, flocks of finches and other songbirds, geese, ducks, and hawks, weird horsehair worms, opossums, raccoons, lizards, and Jerusalem crickets, among others. Our new puppy Gilroy is delighting in all of it during his first week with us. His adopted-big-sister Redda is bored with squirrels but Gilroy still barks at them joyously.

alligator lizard by Katy Dickinson horsehair worm by Katy Dickinson John, Redda, Gilroy

cockatiels by Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2011 by Katy Dickinson

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Happy Year of the Rabbit

1980 Walter Hopps rabbit 2008 studio Iguana-2

Working for Huawei means that I am much more aware of Chinese holidays and traditions. Happy New Year! This is the first day of the Year of the Rabbit in the traditional Chinese zodiac. Yesterday, Huawei had a big party for staff and their families, complete with dumplings, seeds, sweets, balloons, plus a dance and variety show from China TV on the big screen in the cafeteria.  Today, many people wore their dressy clothes to work.

In honor of the new year, here is my favorite rabbit story:

My mother used to have two large pets in her San Francisco art studio: a rabbit and a six foot long iguana lizard. Both were vegetarians and they loved carrots for their leafy green tops. One day, my mother put a large carrot on the floor and both animals started for it. They stopped on either side of the vegetable and eyed each other.

You need to know that rabbits show aggression by growling and thumping their back legs. A combative iguana jerks its head up and down and turns its skin from green to orange. So, the grey rabbit was on one side of the carrot growling and thumping, and the lizard was on the other, bobbing and changing color. Fortunately for the peace of the studio, both animals were very stupid. Eventually one wandered off and the other sat on the carrot.

Here are pictures of the food at the Huawei New Year’s Party:

New Years Sweets New Years Seeds Chinese Dumplings

Images Copyright 1980-2011 by Eleanor Dickinson and Katy Dickinson

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Homework Club Party

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Communications got messed up, so John and Rev. Stephenie Cooper and Rev. Lawrence Robles and I held the Halloween party for the SMUM Studio after school program a week late. The kids wore their costumes on 28 October but we did not have the pizza celebration until 4 November. Twenty kids and two moms came – everyone had a good time and enjoyed their special treat.

I took the shells and sea glass all of the kids gathered during our Lover’s Cove field trip last summer and glued them to a frame. On the day of the party, I gave the Studio kids the frame with a picture of themselves standing in front of the ocean. It is now on the wall of the SMUM computer room.

We had planned to take the kids on three field trips last summer but the final trip had to be canceled.  When I had to go to China on a business trip, there weren’t enough adults to supervise a swim trip to Raging Waters. After much discussion and voting by kids and teachers, we decided either to go ice skating in San Jose or on a trip to Alcatraz Island in San Francisco Bay. We held the final vote on Thursday and we are going to Alcatraz! We are still working details but we want to go before the new year.

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Images Copyright 2010 by Katy Dickinson

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Birthday at Eliza’s, San Francisco

On Sunday, John and Paul and I took my parents to Eliza’s Chinese Restaurant to celebrate my father’s 84th birthday. (Eliza’s is his favorite.) I am not sure if he likes the modern art glass displays or the food better. Eliza’s food is very good and fresh (but not traditional-Chinese style). Be sure to check out the glass fish swimming up the walls of the bathroom when you visit.

Eliza’s
2877 California Street
(between Broderick St & Divisadero Streets)
San Francisco, CA

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Images Copyright 2010 by Katy Dickinson and John Plocher

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We Bought a Fire Hydrant

Saturdays are a good time to see what our Willow Glen neighbors have for sale. Garage and yard and estate sales are advertised with brightly colored hand-made signs on street corners, with arrows pointing the way. I often buy flower pots, small antiques, baskets, kitchen stuff, plants, tools, and holiday decorations.

Today, we bought a fire hydrant from a neighbor on Willow Street. It looks old, is very heavy, and says “Greenberg San Francisco” on the top. (I just learned that Morris Greenberg was the inventor of the “California” wet barrel fire hydrant. Learn more at Greenberg fire hydrants.) I plan to put the hydrant in my cactus garden. Here is a picture:

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The neighbor had a pigeon feeder in his orange tree. Every time we came too near, there was a great whoosh as the flock flew onto his roof to safety. The birds would wander around on the roof for a minute, then line up on the edge to see when we would move away from their seed.

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Images by Katy Dickinson, Copyright 2010

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10th Wedding Anniversary

My husband John and I celebrated our 10th wedding anniversary last weekend. Since our kids are together in Washington D.C., we had more time to enjoy the special celebration. We went out to dinner twice: first, to La Fondue (in Saratoga, California), and then to Teatro ZinZanni (in San Francisco). Teatro ZinZanni circus, cabaret, and dinner theater is also celebrating its 10th anniversary this year. It was great fun!

Here some pictures from last weekend…

La Fondue, Saratoga California

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Teatro ZinZanni, San Francisco

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Images Copyright Katy Dickinson and John Plocher 2010

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1007 Circle Park, Knoxville, Tennessee

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1007 Circle Park Drive Knoxville Tennessee 1007circle.knoxville.1964 . DSCN6989

My mother, Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson, grew up at 1007 Circle Park Drive, Knoxville, Tennessee. This address does not exist any more. In the mid-1960’s, the whole neighborhood was torn down to make room for the University of Tennessee. You can check out Circle Park on Google Maps: the satellite view shows that Circle Park itself is still there but the round street around it is now called Circle Park Drive SW or Circle Park Drive. Originally, Circle Park was a private open space owned by the houses around it.

It is surprising how much of a presence a house that does not exist still has. 1007 Circle Park stood on its own acre of land. It had towers, secret passages (an air gap between inner and outer walls), and a teardrop-shaped carriage drive in the side yard with a porte-cochere to keep the rain off. There were stables and three servant quarters in the back. My great grandfather, Walter Van Gilder, bought the house around 1910. It was ornate Victorian in style, built around the time of the American Civil War.

After 1965, when Evelyn Van Gilder Creekmore and Robert Elmond Creekmore (my grandparents) knew that their home would be torn down, they took as much of the house with them as they could when they moved. This included doors, architectural trim, windows, banisters, and ironwork as well as furniture. Over the years those pieces have been installed in a variety of our family’s houses in California and Tennessee.

My husband, John Plocher just finished bolting the extremely heavy black iron fireback (featuring Poseidon and seahorses) into the exterior wall of his new workshop. In our house, we also have furniture carved by Ellen Bolli Van Gilder (my great grandma), a parlor screen with six paintings by my ancestress Mary Esperandieu, the newel post from the 1007 Circle Park staircase, a heater grate, a metal fire screen, several panels of stained glass and clear leaded glass, and a variety of mirrors that Walter Van Gilder made himself for 1007 Circle Park.

A photo below shows the front door of 1007 Circle Park on the day my mother married my father in 1952. In the picture, she is being escorted to the wedding by her father, R.E. Creekmore, flanked by my other grandparents (B.W.O. Dickinson and Gladys Grace Oakes Dickinson) and Ellen Bolli Van Gilder. The doors and stained glass panel in the back of that 1952 photo are the same doors and stained glass panel in my parents’ house in San Francisco in 2006, shown below with my mother at the door. Walter Van Gilder made the glass panel.

26 December 2012 blog – The Walter Van Gilder stained glass panel was installed in our home in Willow Glen, California, after being re-leaded and restored.

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Images Copyright 1938-2009 by Katy Dickinson and Eleanor Dickinson

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