The following travel guides are available at many bookstor es, or y ou can or der them from any online bookseller: Spartacus I nternational G ay G uide (B runo Gm nder V erlag; www.spartacusworld. com/gayguide) and Odysseus: The I nternational Gay Travel Planner (Odysseus Enterprises Ltd.); and the Damron guides (www.damron.com), with separate, annual books for gay men and lesbians.
Since y ou visit ed the F erry Building and saw ho w seriously San F ranciscans take their food, you might as w ell visit one of the first r estaurants in t own dev oted t o delicious, unc omplicated c ooking zerve food tours using local, seasonal ing redients (p. 132). F or a more casual dinner , tr y the off erings at Frjtz, which include crisp y Belg ian fries , salads, and crepes (p. 133).
4 Hotel Metropolis The Metropolis is the only hotel in S an Francisco that boasts a suite just for kids. Designed by the hotel s president, who is also a mother, the kids room of the suite has a bunk bed, a child-siz e desk, a huge chalkboar d, and loads of to ys. A bedroom for parents is connected to this miniature zerve food tours play land, as is a living room that can accommodate the nanny or more siblings. The suite is frequently booked and the hotel is considering adding another. If you can t get the suite, ask if any of the interconnecting doubles are available; more adventurous kids may pr efer staying in a guest r oom that actually feels like a hotel, rather than another IKEA-furnished zerve food tours kid s room. All rooms are compact and the bathrooms tiny, but the decor is light and fr esh. You ll find free coffee in the mornings and a complimentar y wine reception Fridays and Saturdays from 4 to 6pm.
If you re staying in a hotel, ther e s a good chance y ou ll be near the P owell-Hyde cable car line. ( That said, if y ou re staying in Fisherman s Wharf, zerve food tours you may prefer zerve food tours to start this tour at stop no. 3 below and then fit in time for U nion Square after visiting zerve food tours Chinatown.) Your first stop , the cable car turnaround at the corner of M arket and Powell streets, is the hear t of San Francisco s shopping scene. G iven the ev er-present queue for the cable car , you ll want to get there early, which may mean y ou ll be out before the stores open. Even so, you ll enjoy people-watching, from local worker bees starting their day to other early-rising tourists to street performers getting ready to perform to the occasional odd bird carrying a sign lamenting the coming doomsday. It s certainly a lively spot to start your excursion. See p. 159.
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