monik7 wrote:Looks like you had a great day for a wonderful tour of a beautiful city. I get a kick out of the term "trolley." Is that a Midwest term? We've always called them cable cars because their power system uses cables to haul them up the hills and then keep them from racing down on the other side. Glad you had such a good time. Sorry about the Chinese food.
Sandi
monik7 wrote:Maybe I'm wrong (I do that) but in your pic where you say it's a view out the front of the "trolley," that appears to be a cable car. The streetcars are electric and have a connection on the roof that goes up to a wire going down the street providing power. The turnaround sequence you showed of the guys pushing it on the turntable is a cable car. It's all semantics anyway and I'm so glad you got to see so much in one day.
Sandi
monik7 wrote:Sorry Beth, I'm really not trying to drag this out. The cable cars do have a cable but it's in a groove in the street between the tracks and you really can't see it. But I agree, the names are confusing. Look at it this way - you and Carol got to ride the most famous icon of San Francisco, the cable car. That's why all those other people were standing in line for a ride. It's what all tourists do in San Francisco. Mark that off your bucket list.
Sandi
Redwahine wrote:What a fun day in the Bay Area. I love riding those whatchamacallits that go up and down the hills of SF!! Love the food and smell of the bay!! Glad you had a great day!!
Redwahine wrote:What a fun day in the Bay Area. I love riding those whatchamacallits that go up and down the hills of SF!! Love the food and smell of the bay!! Glad you had a great day!!
monik7 wrote:Redwahine wrote:What a fun day in the Bay Area. I love riding those whatchamacallits that go up and down the hills of SF!! Love the food and smell of the bay!! Glad you had a great day!!
I don't know, to me "whatchamacallits" sounds harder to say than "cable car," but to each his own. I get a kick out of how locals establish traditions about names. When Beth put "San Fran" in her post, I realized I hadn't heard that term since I was a flight attendant in the airline industry. I don't think many in northern California outside the airlines use that term. It's usually "San Francisco" or "The City." And don't ever call it "Frisco." You could get in a heap of trouble for that (just kidding). But if you're trying to blend in with the natives, that term will brand you as an outsider/tourist faster than anything.
Sandi
Redwahine wrote:Hey Sandi, I was poking fun at the cable car, street car, trolley discussion. As a kama'aina (local) in Hawaii it was so easy to tell locals from tourists by the way they pronounced words and called everyday things. And now I'm the tourist and enjoying it so much!! You should hear the snickers when I ask questions here in Texas after living on a rock in the middle off the pacific for more than half my life! I am naive in so many ways
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests