
Tucked between the chaotic hipness of the Upper Haight and the sleepy
affluence of Sutro Forest and Buena Vista Heights, Cole Valley is a tiny,
quiet neighborhood that feels more like a village than the big city.
Populated partly by settles yuppies that seem to put a lot of time into
gardening, flowers seem to be everywhere. For a bird’s eye view
of the neighborhood, and one of the most spectacular views in the city,
climb Tank Hill via the rickety, wooden staircase at the end of Belgrave
Street of 17th. Locals frequent the spot for watching fireworks. What
locals will not find in Cole Valley are banks, huge grocery stores, and
that ever-present landmark, Walgreen’s. This is a neighborhood
largely unpopulated by chains and franchises, and shoppers are likely
to find the stores owner working behind the counter.
Wild Parrots: For more than a decade Cole Valley has been a destination
of choice for a flock of birds known as the "wild parrots of Telegraph
Hill." Anywhere from late June to late August, usually just between
7 am and 8 am, a cluster of up to 20 birds makes its way from their
nighttime nesting place around Jackson and Davis streets to one section
of Cole Valley, around Willard, Belmont, Woodland and Edgewood streets.
These parrots, most of which are cherry-headed conures native to South
America, sport green bodies and red heads and tend to make a lot of
noise, so they're hard to miss. First, they head for the pine trees,
and then the hawthorne, apple and plum trees.
Though most visitors never make it past the commercial block in Cole
Valley, there is one site worth visiting farther afield. In front of
1591 Shrader St. stands a carving in the trunk of an old Monterey cypress
titled Angel of Hope. The tree had to be taken down after another tree
on the other side of the driveway toppled during a windstorm in the
mid-'90s, damaging nearby houses. The former owner of the house,
philanthropist
Pat Montandon, commissioned the carving of an angel.
At the corner of Shrader and Rivoli streets -- at 1401 Shrader St.,
to be exact -- sits a house designed by renowned architect Ira Kurlander.
The first floor of the house was built in 1908 and was the home of
Bernice
Lane Brown, mother of former California Gov. and current Oakland Mayor
Jerry Brown and Kathleen Brown.
On Halloween, the strip of Belvedere Street between Parnassus and 17th
streets is blocked off as packs of kids gather to show off their
costumes and celebrate the holiday. Another event takes place Easter
Sunday
in the park along Carl Street between Clayton and Cole streets, when
many
people from the neighborhood turn out in full Easter bonnets and
other costumes.