Raising a glass to the end of the road

As both a news editor and a columnist, I haven’t always lived up to my admittedly lofty aspirations.

By Greg ZemanThe Guardsman

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As both a news editor and a  columnist, I haven’t always lived up to my admittedly lofty aspirations.

In  the words of Benjamin Franklin, “I didn’t fail the test, I just found  100 ways to do it wrong.”

In defense of my column and section:  You can pull images and text from both of them quite easily, using silly  putty. And with a little effort and patience, they can also be folded  into a hat or a sailboat.

Oh, by the way...

Maybe  it’s because I always write this column in the wee hours of the morning —  after drinking hard liquor all night — but I almost forgot to mention  that you’ll never see me again, at least not round these parts.

Don’t  get me wrong, you’ll still see me at City College. In fact, thanks to  all the time I dedicated to The Guardsman, instead of transferable  credit class work, I’ll probably get to stay here even longer than I had  planned.

Vesuvio

North Beach gets a bad rap, and  it totally deserves it.

The “best” bar there is Vesuvio, a  crumbling, tourist-infested monument to its own bygone social relevance.

This  place shamelessly exploits the reputation of its long-departed  “regulars” and its incidental proximity to City Lights bookstore in a  desperate attempt to up the “cool” factor by making it look less like  what it is  — a watering hole for Midwestern families lost on their way  to Joe’s Crabshack.

The fact that Ken Kesey dropped acid there  on occasion is pretty unremarkable — is there anywhere in the Bay Area  that he didn’t?

And yes, Jack Kerouac and other beat generation  luminaries drank here once upon a time, but I’m pretty certain they’d  promptly vomit if they saw who drinks there now.

I considered  channeling William Burroughs, typing a bunch of hyphenated obscenities  on a typewriter, cutting them out individually by hand with a straight  razor and using rubber cement to reorganize the pieces into a monolithic  vulgarity to describe this place.

But then I ran out of  Benzedrine and bug powder, so I decided to just say Vesuvio sucks.
So  now we’re going back to the Lower Haight to drink beer!

Toronado

The  Toronado is named after a car you are definitely not cool enough to  even imagine yourself driving, so don’t feel bad if this bar intimidates  you when you first walk in.

First things first, there is no  liquor there. That isn’t a typo or a drunken hallucination on my part,  they seriously do not have any hooch.

That said, whereas most  bars have 10 or 15 beers and get away with boasting a “wide variety,”  this place does like I did when I turned 21, and buys gallons of every  kind of beer imaginable.

On an average day, they have about 200  kinds of beer available, with roughly 20 on tap.

Don’t go there  and ask for PBR; they will seriously yell at you. In fact, don’t go  there for anything you’ve already had. Just think of this as the Ocean  Avenue Books of beer and get lost in the pursuit of unexplored brews.

As  my final farewell to you, let me leave you with these words from  Winston Churchill, a famous drunkard and British person who looked like a  silly little bulldog.

“I have taken more out of alcohol than  alcohol has taken out of me.”

At least that’s what I tell myself.

By  the way...

If for some reason you don’t drink alcohol  (and I highly recommend you start soon, because things are only getting  worse) there’s something special and free for you on the corner of Scott  and Waller, not far from the Toronado:  a labyrinth.

Now I know  what you’re thinking, and I’m sorry for putting the image of David Bowie  wearing impossibly tight, shiny pants in your head, but this isn’t a  gigantic maze with an inappropriately attired Muppet fairy king or an  axe-wielding novelist with cabin fever in it — it isn’t a maze at all.

You  can get lost in a maze, and I wouldn’t do that to you. A labyrinth is  an open “path” on the floor that has lots of twists and turns. But there  are no wrong turns — it all leads to the same place in the center. I  guess that’s a little fatalistic if you take it too seriously, but it’s a  fun way to meditate and kill a few hours.

And if you have been  drinking, you can still walk it, provided you can still walk.

Speaking  of which, there’s another one a block up California from the Tonga Room  at Grace Cathedral — actually, there’s two; one inside the church and  one out front. So if you’ve been enjoying the tropical scenery down the  block and decide that it’s sacrilege to stagger into a cathedral to get  your kicks, there’s option B.

Then again, if you decide that  option A is more your speed, you have my unequivocal, non-denominational  blessing.

In the words of Father Sinatra, “Alcohol may be man’s  worst enemy, but the bible says love your enemy.”

Amen Frank,  Amen.

Brass Tacks:

Vesuvio  2/5

I mean, you can purchase liquor here, and there’s a  place to anonymously yell at people, so two points, but just barely.

Toronado  4.5/5

Half a point off for lack of booze, which incidentally  can be procured a stone’s throw away ... but I don’t want to give away  the precise location of my 12/5 star, top secret hideout in the Lower  Haight, so I aint’ naming no names.