Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Twilight Walks

The rains continue to drench Castro Valley, but on two successive late afternoons Your Boulevardier has been able to get out and walk the town. On Monday night he ventured onto Castro Valley Boulevard, first passing through residential neighborhoods as area residents rolled their trash carts to the curb. This evening he braved the post-work grocery store rush at the Lucky supermarket. It's a wonderful time to walk, as the town transitions from the workday world to the home and hearth. Lights glow in windows, but shades are not yet drawn; neighbors are chatting as they haul groceries or check mail; yes, people are eager to get home, but the pace seems gentler, more restful, than at mid-day.

A walker sees that a certain amount of post-storm detritus litters the sidewalks and clogs the gutters. But from what little he saw, Your Boulevardier believes that the town has come through the weeklong-plus deluge in good shape.

There are exceptions, of course. The interchange construction at Redwood Road and I-580 is shut down -- and flooded, on the east side. (A FOB who works for the firm doing the project says that, currently, just 1% of the company’s heavy equipment is in active use statewide.) Just up the road, the demolition of the Center Street offramp from I-580 has paused as well, due perhaps to the creation of a sizeable temporary lakelet next to the freeway.

Your Boulevardier has not checked on how the rains are affecting the other big construction project in town, the building of a new Eden Hospital. However, he was impressed by the seven-phase construction plan recently posted on the hospital’s website by civil engineer Jeff Moore of the Castro Valley-based firm Greenwood & Moore. Reading it is recommended.

And frankly, Your Boulevardier was surprised -- and very pleased -- to read that a local firm is so intimately involved in the hospital project. And he is surprised that Sutter Health has not made a bigger deal out of the fact. Your Boulevardier has walked past the Greenwood & Moore offices on Castro Valley Boulevard hundreds of times and never knew what went on up there. Now the veil is lifted, however slightly. (Not that the firm is mysterious; rather, Your Boulevardier does not have need of civil engineering in his daily life, and has precious little knowledge of what a civil engineer does.)

Continuing our survey of storm effects, Your Boulevardier has not traveled to Lake Chabot to see the precipitation’s impact on the town’s main waterway. If readers have reports, please consider adding them to the comments. (One can do so anonymously.)

But back to the rain’s effects on local business establishments. The enterprises Your Boulevardier visited did not have telltale buckets catching roof leaks. Restaurants seemed fairly busy; bowlers and barflies were practicing their arts; hot coffee was being dispensed with caffeinated vigor; young people danced and kicked and chopped while their parents waited, sometimes impatiently, for after-school classes to finish. Pete’s Hardware seemed to do a brisk business in tarps, galoshes, and other rain-related retail items. Perhaps the hair-and-nail salons were a bit slow, but they always seem to have empty chairs when Your Boulevardier peeks through their windows.

Skies are forecast to be cloudy but dry for a couple of days, with a chance of rain returning on Friday. (Your Boulevardier will again be hosting the Subcompact Loaner this coming weekend, so walking weather is hoped for.) One should not put away the slicker just yet, but we should all attempt to enjoy the respite from the damp while we can. Perhaps another evening walk is called for.

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3 Comments:

At 8:28 AM , Blogger Greenridge said...

I thought I'd send you this email since you have a good eye for what is going on in the neighborhood. Love your blog!
My wallet was taken at the CV Safeway late yesterday afternoon. I was carrying it in a
deep pocket in my jacket (to avoid carrying a heavy purse). Not a
good idea. as it turned out. All those cards to notify! Several
charges had been made very quickly although Barbara notified Visa and
my bank while I was still at the store (I won't be liable for any of
the charges). Fortunately I had my cell phone with me so I called her
right away. She knew exactly what to do since she had dealt with
similar problems many times when she was a police dispatcher.

One charge was a gas charge on Visa and, according to the time it was
made, it occurred AFTER Barbara had notified VISA. Two small charges
were made at Champs (?) in San Leandro on my bank card. One was for
$11 something, the other for about $13. They bore contiguous numbers
and I suggested that the thieves or thief was trying to keep the total
of a single charge under $25, since some stores don't check if the
total is under $25. The gas charge (Visa) was at a station in San
Lorenzo. Thieves know you're going to report the theft right away so
they hurry up to get what they can before a hold goes in on the card.

Fortunately, there was only $40 (in 2 $20 bills) in the wallet, but,
of course, one hates to lose any amount of money. And the cards! What
a nuisance! The driver's license is the worst because you have to go
down to the DMV, which means having someone drive you down there.

From now on, I am locking the barn door by carrying a lighter weight
purse, placing it in the front cart compartment and threading the
shaft of my cane through the loop of the handle. That way
the purse can't be lifted without disturbing the cane and alerting me.
As I said, "locking the barn door!"

The sheriff's office said that there had been SIX purse snatchings at
the CV Safeway so far this month alone.

(signed) a poorer but wiser (I hope) Marty Kennelly

 
At 9:22 AM , Blogger Wudas said...

SUNSHINE! I woke up to sunshine today! We were supposed to have some fog in the morning but it didn't happen. I think I need to spend a little time outside this afternoon and get a nice dose of vitamin D from it's best source, the sun. I hope CV gets some of this sunshine too.

 
At 10:18 AM , Anonymous bob_s said...

The creeks running into Lake Chabot were flowing beautifully last week, particularly the cascade near the end of the East Shore Trail.

On the West Shore Trail two weeks ago, you could stand opposite the spillway and look down on exposed rocks on the bottom; but those rocks are now covered by water. The lake is still far below the level, however, where water would flow down the spillway.

 

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