This week, conditions lined up for another round of spectacular tower fog shots — the kind where the bridge's iconic orange towers pierce through a rolling blanket of white like something out of a sci-fi film. If your social media feed wasn't flooded with moody bridge content, you weren't following the right people.
Here's the thing about the fog: it's one of the few amenities in this city that the Board of Supervisors can't regulate, tax, or somehow make worse. Karl (yes, the fog has a name, and yes, it has a bigger Instagram following than most local politicians) is blissfully free from bureaucratic interference. No environmental impact review needed. No community input sessions. It just shows up, does something magnificent, and leaves.
If only city governance worked that efficiently.
For those of you who haven't yet made the trek to catch the fog in person, you're missing out. The Marin Headlands, Lands End, and even spots along Crissy Field all offer world-class vantage points. And if the fog isn't cooperating on a given day, one local recommends heading to Golden Gate Park instead — "Tea Garden and Botanical Garden are amazing," as one SF resident put it. Hard to argue.
In a city where so much feels like it's in decline — rising costs, struggling small businesses, questionable budget priorities — the natural beauty remains stubbornly, defiantly magnificent. The fog doesn't care about your politics. It doesn't care about the deficit. It just rolls in, makes the bridge look like a painting, and reminds you why people fell in love with this place to begin with.
Grab a jacket. Go outside. Some things in San Francisco are still absolutely worth it.


