Nighttime at the Wharf
This is one of my old routes from before my motorcycle accident in 2007. This was before I had a GPS so I measured out distances using my bicycle and then stuck to routes I’d measured. I measured enough segments to give myself a reasonable amount of variety when running, but it still felt very modular: if I want to add a half mile, go to the end of the Municipal Pier and back. If I want to add 1.4 miles, add a trip down the Embarcadero and turn around at Teatro Zinzanni. And so on.
I like the Municipal Pier quite a lot and it’s sad to see it falling into disrepair. The area around the railing on the outer (North and West) side is fenced off, either for repairs or because they’re just writing it off as unsafe. While there used to be lights all along the pier, Now there is just one near the entrance to the pier. There is an iron gate restricting the flow of foot traffic at the entrance, and a sign saying that it is closed from dusk until dawn.
I decided to run it even though it was past dusk. It makes me a little angry that the Municipal Pier is closed at a time when the paths around it are still busy with foot traffic. Nowadays dusk is five pm. People ought to be able to go out there in the early evening.
Because it was closed, the pier felt unsafe. There was no one else out there and the lights were all broken or turned off. It’s filled with concrete benches someone could hide in and the whole thing is curved so it would be pretty easy for someone to lie in wait. I did encounter a fisherman at the end of the pier, but other than that it was deserted. I’ve run and walked on the pier at night so many times I can’t count them, and it never seemed unsafe until they closed it, presumably because «park areas» at night are unsafe. That’s government thinking for you; never miss an opportunity to turn a small problem into a large problem.
It’s a darn shame, too. The Municipal Pier is a short walk from many of San Francisco’s nicer (if somewhat tourist-oriented) restaurants. With the view of the Golden Gate Bridge lit up at night visible to the West, Alcatraz so close you can almost touch it to the North, and Aquatic Park and the SF skyline framed by the Ghirardelli sign and Coit Tower to the South, and the historic ships at the Hyde Street Pier on the East, it’s a lovely place for a romantic after-dinner stroll. Or it was when the lights were on at night and the Pier was populated by tourists, runners, and fishers. The end of the pier was the first place I told my ex I loved her. Yeah, she’s my ex but it’s still a sweet memory. Until the pier was closed it was a perfect place to make new memories like that, for locals and tourists alike.
Anyhow, though I added the trip out to the end of the pier for old time’s sake and generally followed a path I measured out probably in 2004, at the far end of the Marina Green by the entrance to Chrissy Field instead of turning around, I took a couple of short detours: first out to the North entrance to Chrissy Field where the parking lot is, and then back to the spiral walkway down to the beach. I came back up the spiral the same way I had descended it and it didn’t add much to the run but it was a fun detour.
Overall the run averaged to a 12:10/mile pace. Still slow, but improving. Five miles is a good distance; it gives me time to warm up and enjoy the run, and even at my pace it only takes an hour, so it fits in nicely at the end of a workday. It’s hard to beat the scenery, too.