The Joys of Parks During a Pandemic

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California Today

Public parks are a lifeline, particularly now. Plus, San Francisco volition necessitate vaccination for indoor dining, gyms and theaters.

Soumya Karlamangla

Aug. 13, 2021, 8:42 a.m. ET

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People enjoying an evening successful  Dolores Park successful  San Francisco connected  Thursday.
Credit...Shelby Knowles for The New York Times

On a caller Saturday afternoon, the usually quiescent tract astatine Barnsdall Art Park successful Los Angeles resembled a bustling municipality square.

Couples reclined connected the grass. Dogs wove done crowds. A radical of friends had pizza delivered straight to the East Hollywood park. Another brought a folding table, acceptable retired appetizers and hosted a cocktail party.

Over the past twelvemonth and a half, parks person go a lifeline, places to support immoderate normalcy adjacent when, similar now, cases of the coronavirus are surging. More than ever, parks are wherever we spell connected dates, jog laps, watch stand-up and instrumentality our kids to conscionable up with their classmates.

This isn’t the archetypal clip parks person shone successful a nationalist wellness crisis, Sara Jensen Carr, an architecture prof astatine Northeastern University, told me: The archetypal popularization of nationalist parks successful the United States was a effect to devastating epidemics.

With the maturation of cities during the Industrial Revolution came outbreaks of yellowish fever and cholera, mostly owed to mosquitoes and contaminated h2o sources. Yet galore believed that these diseases dispersed done soiled air, Carr said.

That prompted a propulsion for dedicated greenish abstraction that would supply a refuge from overcrowded cities and connection cleanable aerial to breathe, she said.

“The planners and the designers were precise overmuch benignant of utilizing the connection of nationalist wellness to physique parks,” said Carr, who precocious wrote a book connected however illness outbreaks influenced the plan of American cities. “The truly important happening excessively were the information that the parks would bring intelligence respite to radical who were precise engaged and moving successful the city.”

One of the biggest proponents of parks arsenic a signifier of medicine was Frederick Law Olmsted, a scenery designer and nationalist wellness officer. Olmsted, whose archetypal kid died of cholera, designed Central Park successful New York arsenic good arsenic astir 100 different nationalist parks crossed the U.S.

Though Olmsted and others didn’t person data, they knew intuitively that parks were bully for people, Carr said.

My caller sojourn to Barnsdall was for a friend’s day enactment that had been relocated to the parkland astatine the past minute. She had planned to big radical successful her apartment, but decided against it fixed the rising coronavirus numbers.

As the sunlight waned, we watched arsenic much radical arrived astatine the parkland to conscionable up with loved ones. The parkland that evening offered america not conscionable information from corruption but besides a consciousness of community, a uncommon operation these days.


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Credit...Haven Daley/Associated Press

Starting Aug. 20, San Francisco volition barroom unvaccinated radical from indoor dining, bars, nightclubs, gyms, ample concerts, theaters and different events held inside, my colleagues report.

The rules are akin to those precocious announced for New York, but that San Francisco volition necessitate patrons to beryllium afloat vaccinated portion New York requires lone a minimum of 1 dose.


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  • A puerility shooting: At 15, Tashante McCoy-Ham was changeable successful the genu successful a drive-by shooting successful Stockton. Years later, she recovered retired that her adjacent person had been progressive successful that shooting. The Trace reports their story.

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Credit...David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews

The garlicky, almond dressing makes this little gem salad sing.


Bright and bouncy, “On One” by Los Angeles-based vocalist Joyce Wrice is my opus of the summer.


Today’s California question extremity comes from Paula Martin, a scholar who lives successful Ukiah. Paula writes:

Montgomery Woods is simply a majestic redwood grove betwixt inland Ukiah and the Mendocino coast. The grove is astir a 2-mile hike of quality and splendor. Getting determination connected a mountainous roadworthy could beryllium a situation for “city drivers.” Less than a mile distant is Orr Hot Springs, genuinely a gem and 1 of my apical 10 places successful the world!

Tell america astir your favourite places to sojourn successful California. Please see your sanction and wherever you live, truthful we tin stock your extremity successful the newsletter. Email your suggestions to CAtoday@nytimes.com.


The Smokehouse, a beloved edifice successful Berkeley, is celebrating 70 years successful business.

It’s the benignant of spot that die-hard fans emotion truthful overmuch that they telephone from different states to spot if ingredients tin beryllium shipped to them, Berkeleyside reports. Yet, implicit the past 15 years, the terms of a burger astatine Smokehouse has risen by conscionable $1.

“Is it imaginable to marque astir everyone happy, but ne'er truly change? The Smokehouse plans to find out.”


Thanks for reading. Enjoy your play (and your section park). I’ll beryllium backmost Monday. — Soumya

P.S. Here’s today’s Mini Crossword, and a clue: Tennis champ Naomi (5 letters).

Steven Moity and Miles McKinley contributed to California Today. You tin scope the squad astatine CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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