Glen Canyon Park: Difference between revisions

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''Photo: Chris Carlsson''
''Photo: Chris Carlsson''
[[Image:OShaughnessy-and-Glen-Canyon-at-right-c-1930s.jpg|720px]]
'''O'Shaughnessy Blvd. with Glen Canyon at right, 1930s.'''
''Photo: Charles Ruiz collection''


[[Image:Glen-canyon-wooded-overview7156.jpg]]
[[Image:Glen-canyon-wooded-overview7156.jpg]]

Revision as of 16:58, 6 June 2014

Unfinished History

Glenpark$glen-canyon-park.jpg

Glen Canyon Park

Photo: Chris Carlsson

OShaughnessy-and-Glen-Canyon-at-right-c-1930s.jpg

O'Shaughnessy Blvd. with Glen Canyon at right, 1930s.

Photo: Charles Ruiz collection

Glen-canyon-wooded-overview7156.jpg

Photo: Chris Carlsson

Across the street from 38 Sussex Street in Glen Park is the beginning of Ohlone Way. Named after the Indian tribe that lived in the Bay Area before the Europeans arrived, it looks more like an Indian trail than a city street. The rutted dirt tracks are completely surrounded by trees and underbrush, leading the imaginative walker to imagine him or herself transported back in time ... to an Ohlone settlement?

Just a few blocks west, Sussex Street dead-ends at Glen Canyon Park. You can walk down into the park, which is one of San Francisco's least known and most secluded urban wildernesses. Glen Canyon Park is gorgeously unspoiled.

--Dr. Weirde

Glen canyon north view.jpg

Glen Canyon looking northward. O'Shaughnessy Blvd. at left, Sutro Tower and Twin Peaks at top of photo. At the top of the canyon, Islais Creek begins its journey to the bay, one of two remaining open creeks in San Francisco.

Photo: Chris Carlsson

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