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Although a single day might not seem like much elsewhere, it's enough time to make a scene and make a difference in . This boomtown knows how to get things done, from gay rights to social media startups, and in just one perfect day by the San Francisco bay, you can wax poetic in North Beach, start a food revolution at the Ferry Building, go wild in Golden Gate Park, let your freak flag fly in the Haight, and sing out loud in the Castro. Come as you are, leave your inhibitions behind, and you might find you won't be needing that return ticket home.

Perfect weather for a perfect day in San Francisco. Image by Kristine T Pham Photography / Moment / Getty
<span class="caption">Perfect weather for a perfect day in San Francisco <i>©</i> Kristine T Pham Photography / Moment / Getty</span>

Dreamers' playground

Kickstart a San Francisco day in North Beach at , with the powerful espresso and jukebox arias that inspired a young Francis Ford Coppola, who drafted The Godfather here. Trawl neighborhood boutiques for Godfather-worthy fedoras at , rockabilly jackets and lindy-hopping skirts at , and original pressings of perennial local favorites Tom Waits, Dave Brubeck and Dead Kennedys at .

Wild parrots cheer on walkers who climb the Greenwich Steps to Coit Tower, lined with government-sponsored 1930s murals that subversively celebrate the city's radical politics, and capped with giddy 360-degree views of the Bay. Next, pause for a free-form reverie in the designated Poet's Chair upstairs at City Lights, the bookstore owned by Beat poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti, who won a landmark 1957 free-speech case over the publication of Allen Ginsberg's incendiary epic poem Howl.

Caffe Trieste is great for a caffeinated start to exploring the city. Image by Izzet Keribar / ϲʼʱ Image / Getty
<span class="caption">Caffe Trieste is great for a caffeinated start to exploring the city <i>©</i> Izzet Keribar / ϲʼʱ Images / Getty</span>

Food and revolution

Mural-lined Jack Kerouac Alley leads to the pagoda-roofed storefronts of Chinatown, where Sun Yat-sen plotted the overthrow of China's last empire at 36 Spofford Alley and fortunes are still made fresh daily at Golden Gate Fortune Cookie Company. Once lined with Gold Rush bordellos, Commercial Street now does a bustling trade in ha gow dim sum (Chinese shrimp dumplings) at .

Wandering toward the Embarcadero, there's no mistaking the clock tower of the Ferry Building and the enticing aromas of a food revolution in progress. The former transit hub is now a gourmet destination, offering local alternatives to drive-through fast food with its bountiful year-round farmers market and indoor stalls featuring artisan-made foods.

Treat yourself at the Ferry Building farmers market. Image by Izzet Keribar / ϲʼʱ Images / Getty
<span class="caption">Treat yourself to some gourmet delights at the Ferry Building farmers market <i>©</i> Izzet Keribar / ϲʼʱ Images / Getty</span>

Where imaginations run wild

At Embarcadero station, hop the N Judah line to Irving and 9th, one block from the 1017-acre stretch of the imagination that is Golden Gate Park. The Summer of Love kicked off here in Sharon Meadow, where free opera shows and drum circles take place. But San Francisco really shows its wild side at the California Academy of Sciences, where 38,000 animals are housed under Renzo Piano's ingenious, wildflower-capped living roof. The puts California's artistic achievements into global perspective, with blockbuster Egyptian shows and a standout Oceanic art exhibit. Moments of zen are found next door between sips of genmaicha (Japanese toasted-rice tea) at the Japanese Tea Garden, while bison safely stampede in their paddock near Ocean Beach.

Claude the albino alligator is a favorite with visitors to the California Academy of Sciences. Image by Tom Hilton / CC by 2.0
<span class="caption">Claude the albino alligator is a favorite with visitors to the California Academy of Sciences <i>©</i><a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/tomhilton/8587793196/in/photolist-e5SFHW-7bdLTM-7bhzzu-666j1k-pK8Qcz-5KzCcg-7uTsW4-7vP4Xz-5M3f8S-6tRrLx-5KDSbN-pgtw7p-5LY1M6-5M39sq-7uhi57-ngLppC-6vUY4F-7zaBCf-7zaBEL-cLsecQ-6vV1rg-6vZab5-6vZcjy-6vZbGs-6vUYa6-6vZ9mY-6vZas3-6vUW9Z-6vZ8Pm-6vUXsp-6vUYDR-6vZcRu-6vV1Va-6vUXNn-6vZ99w-6vZbPb-6vZbkS-6vZbVo-6vUXfe-6vV1Np-5M38uQ-95zYX1-5LY3Fz-88Fp9j-88Fq17-6vV14M-6vZdcW-6vZ9yL-6vZ9Fy-6vV1zv"> Tom Hilton </a>/ <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/">CC BY 2.0</a></span>

Over the rainbow

Flashbacks punctuate the stroll from Golden Gate Park down Haight Street, lined with vintage boutiques and candy-colored Victorians where the Grateful Dead, Janis Joplin, and Jimi Hendrix once crashed. The clock at the corner of Haight and Ashbury Streets is permanently set to 4:20, better known in local parlance as 'bong hit time', and there's a tell-tale aroma escaping medical marijuana clubs east of Divisidero – but a prescription and 30-day waiting period is required. Munchies are satisfied at Organic Ice Cream, where Earl Grey is a standout amid a rainbow of flavors.

Save room and reserve ahead for , the Castro neighborhood bistro that exemplifies Bay Area cuisine at its best: outstanding wines from small-scale local vineyards, dishes that highlight sustainable and organic ingredients, and casual yet well-informed service at chatty communal tables. But don't linger too long and miss showtime at the when the crowd sings along to the Wurlitzer anthem that starts every show, and cancels many a return ticket: 'San Francisco, Open Your Golden Gate/You let no stranger wait outside your door…'

Take in a show at the Castro Theater. Image by Mitchell Funk / Photographer's Choice / Getty
<span class="caption">Take in a show at the Castro Theatre <i>©</i> Mitchell Funk / Photographer's Choice / Getty</span>

This article was originally published in July 2010 and thoroughly updated in January 2015.

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