Tuesday, April 28, 2015

The Northern California Coastline



written April 25, 2015


We left the city life of Roseville, California, and headed towards San Francisco but before we got there we veered off the highway and headed north towards Napa Valley. There is just so much we want to see and do in San Francisco that we have decided we will have to come back another trip to see it. Terry has offered to be our personal tour guide since she knows “The City” as she calls it. That way, we can just run around and be “tourons”!
Beautiful roadside flowers along the highway

Napa Valley is simply gorgeous. Gently rolling hills of crops (mostly grapes) planted in rows forming perfectly straight lines regardless of the direction you view the fields. The exquisite chalets dotting the countryside are beyond description. Instead of old falling down campers the furnished “farm hand” quarters match the theme of the Winery. Good golly even their processing plants are works of art.
Rolling Napa Hillsides


Such beautiful symmetry



A beautiful Vineyard

Julie has really been enjoying the many many spring flowers that have sprung while we have been driving the highways and byways. Color has been just exploding in our windwhield.
The Charming little town of Willits, California

The most stunning display of Wisteria I have ever seen!

I didn't realize that Calla Lilly's grow wild in parts of the country.  These were near a beach.


Leaving Napa Valley we travelled the Redwood Highway passing around, through, and by dense stands of trees taller than the mind can imagine. After parking our Monty in a campground at the bottom of a steep hill (1.3 miles straight down), we were off to see the area. This campground originally was the Ridgewood Ranch, where Seabiscuit, (the horse of movie fame) was retired, put to stud, and is buried. We couldn't see the grave since they only have tours in the summer.
An interesting RV Park and in the summer months, a Horse Farm, with tours, deep down in the Valley

Tom the Turkey, showing off for the ladies

a Dense Dark Fog rolling in from the Ocean


Wow, twisting and turning up and down over the narrow mountain road on the way to the ocean was not only a thrilling and exhilarating driving experience, but happily very challenging. Leggett, CA is the home of the “Chandler Tree”, the famous drive thru redwood hollowed out in 1936, one of he true tourist trap venues this area is “known” for. We decided to take it in, however, trucks are bigger now than they were back then because the lady at the gate just looked at us and said “You won't fit”. We plopped down our tourist fee anyway, and went in. Since no drive-thru, we walked around the tree! Cute little tourist trap. Lots of things no one really has any use for made out of redwood!
Redwoods

A fallen Redwood - fun to climb on and in

The Chandler Tree - it is still alive and healthy!

Yes, it's really a live tree!


  Following CA-1 for twenty more miles of up and down, over, thru, and around we finally made a left turn and right there in front of us was the Pacific ocean. Julie sucked all the air out of the truck and almost cried. I am a mountain people, but she is a water girl. She got out the trusty camera and started shooting pics until the batteries died. So she put in new batteries and went right back to shooting more pics. I am getting pretty good at “Oh My God, isn't that beautiful, could you pull over Honey”!!!
My first views of the Pacific on this trip!



Highway 1 along the Northern California Coastline

California Poppies





We have encountered lots of different animals along this journey. While here we were serenaded by a tom turkey and his four hens each morning, and down by the ocean we saw our first “sunning” seals. While we were excitedly watching the grown-ups work their way onto the rocks we happened to look down at the bottom of the cliff we were on and there were a couple of juveniles who had swam over to see just what in the heck we were looking at. Darn Kids!! 
Sunning Seals

Oh, those kids, they watched us and played about!
 
California has been exciting and exhilarating, but since we have nowhere in particular to go, and all the time in the world to get there, we must press on. 

Sunday, April 12, 2015

On to California



Written April 11, 2015

Mojave Desert with more salt flats and then a whole lot of nothing.

Leaving Pahrump, Nevada, we headed towards Death Valley and hung a left through the Mojave Desert. Beautiful desolation, however, for your reading pleasure we did experience a minor gut wrenching, butt puckler. After 26 miles of down mountain driving to a crossroads named Shoshone, we turned left onto California 127 towards Baker, CA. A large road sign, just onto 127, told us there was no service for the next 55 miles. Not thinking anything about that since those kind of signs are located all over the west, we headed on. About five miles or so down the road the truck started to buck and jump, the engine started to slow down, the turbo needle dropped to nothing, and we looked at each other wide eyed and Julie reached for her phone, but as should be expected in the desert NO BARS. Whoops! The engine was (sorta) still running so we pressed on. About ten hours (maybe five minutes) later after revving, missing, huffing and sputtering the engine sounded like it coughed up a fur ball (probably a desert sand ball in the turbo) and everything started to work and sound proper again. Up and down a couple more long grades and we finally made it to Baker (a crossroads with a truck stop and nothing more). With everything still working and sounding alright we pulled onto I-15 west and trudged on, heading towards Bakersfield. Whew! Isn't it amazing how quiet and unnoticeable an engine is until you are in the middle of a quiet, foreboding desert, with no traffic around and no cell service, so no means to contact anyone else! Then every sound, or every bump in the road, or just a change in the wind is magnified about a 100 billion percent!

Entering Bakersfield, California from the east is a route you will want to experience if you ever venture out here. After traveling through the Mojave Desert, a flat, pretty uninspiring landscape, you are suddenly surrounded by beautiful grass carpeted rolling hills with long vistas back to flatlands. These hills are dotted with oil well pump jacks, the first we have seen since New Mexico.
     
Sorry about windshield reflections - wind turbines just into California   


Save the tree, build around it!
 Just south of Fresno, California, Bravo Farms Roadside BBQ, and Ice Cream Parlor

Next to an orchard, a very unique bus used by the pickers.  I see the 60's!

Our next place to park our home was in Coarsegold, California, a little mining town located at the southern end of the 1849 gold rush area.The town got it's name for the big coarse gold nuggets found there by the 49'ers (no not the football guys), instead of the cute little flakes found elsewhere in this area. In fact the campground where we stayed (Park of the Sierra) has Coarsegold Creek passing through and some of the residents have actually found small amounts of the shiny stuff. Not us though! Bummer
A carving of a Coarsegold Miner in town

Beautiful "Little Church on the Hill" in Coarsegold.  Historical with very old grave sites.
Our first day-trip was to Kings Canyon National Park and Sequoia National Park to visit the HUGE trees. OMG – had heard they were big, but just like the Grand Canyon – seeing them in person is totally incredible and seemingly unbelievable. We were timing wise, very lucky to be at the right place and right time to take a tour through Grant Grove, led by a passionate and very knowledgeable young Park Ranger, Dominic. The twisting and turning park road was built into the side of the mountains with incredible vistas looking out over the tops of the trees down, way down, in the valleys. Then you round a corner and head down to the valley floor to look back up. Then you head back up again. Exciting!
Sequoia National Park.  Note the height of these Sequoia by the Parking lot - wow.

Jim walking past one of the giants

Sequoia are naturally fire resistant, but note the fire scars at the base of this tree.


This fallen tree was hollowed out and used as a living space in the 1800's.  It is still sturdy and in good shape.

It is so hard to capture the Sequoia's size!

Ranger Dominic teaching us about the Sequoia pine cones.  They seem tiny for such a giant tree!

King's Canyon Lodge with snowy peaks in the background

In the Lodge - always prepared for weather changes

After a day of rest it was off to explore Yosemite National Park. Seeing these parks during the off season is really the only way to go. 3.5 million people visit there each year and there are only two, two lane roads into and out of the parks. With very few other visitors in the parks it sure was nice to be able to stop, look around, and then move on between view points, without fighting bunches and bunches of traffic. In rereading some of this it seems to the writer that his interpretation of the massive beauty of the parks does not do the actual scenes justice. But, in my defense there are only so many Ooohs and Aaaahs and Wows and OMGs a person can explain properly. We are not going to quit going though, we will just keep adding to our memory banks and hope our travels inspire you to do the same. It is a great big beautiful country out here and even the little things keep us in total amazement.
Yosemite's Bridal Veil Falls

It was another beautiful day for us to enjoy yet another National Park, Yosemite.

Half Dome

El Capitan

The dogwoods are opening everywhere

The Sierra Chickaree is the Rangers favorite.  They are a very playful species of Red Squirrel

From Bakersfield to Coarsegold we followed California route 99 north for 161 miles through flatlands, passing through massive farms producing, oranges, lemons, pecans, walnuts, almonds and grapes, plus many more crops just in the planting stage so as of yet unidentifiable. Julie said there should be some kind of rule making the farmers put up signs along the highway telling us what is in the fields. Right after she said this there started to be signs at the edges of the groves saying, Walnuts or Pecans or Oranges etc. Just goes to prove what a powerful woman this guy is living with!!

After the parks we took a few days rest and then it was back down the hill from Coarsegold to route 99 again for 173 more miles of various crops lining both sides of the highway to Roseville. Roseville is home for Julie's great friend Terry Z, who opened her heart and her home for some great meals, and lots and lots of cookies!! Julie and Terry spent many hours of “girl talk” between themselves and with other friends. Luckily Terry has three sons, Matt, Jared, and Jay, who graciously spent those “hours” entertaining those of us who's forte' is certainly not “girl talk”!! Terry chauffeured us around to see “the area” with many interesting sights like Folsom Prison, Coloma (where gold was first discovered in California), Sutter's Mill, and the Marshall Gold Discovery State Park. It was interesting to get a “local” persons view of the traffic out here in California. She lives in the suburbs of Sacramento. Every road/street is at least four lanes wide in each direction and filled with vehicles. When we mentioned the traffic, she said “Oh, we don't have traffic, this is nothing compared to the city”!!! Guess it is just what you get used to.
Terry and Julie in front of the sign for the location of the original Sutter's Mill

Sutter's Creek is where the gold was found that started the Gold Rush in  1849.

School children on a Field Trip are panning for gold along Sutter's Creek, now a State Park.

Terry and her handsome sons, Jared, Matthew, and Jay

Terry's gorgeous Pergola that shades a large portion of her patio

Terry's stunning backyard, private and peaceful
Speaking of getting used to. While hanging out in traffic one afternoon Julie and I were cruising east on I-80 when we saw a police helicopter circling up ahead over the highway. We were approaching an on ramp when a car came racing off the ramp right beside us, traveling at a high rate of speed. He cut in front of us, then passed the car on our left and then cut back towards the right side, passing a car using the berm. Next in the rear view mirror we saw coming up behind us, a CHiPs car (yep CHiPs – you remember Ponch and John) with lights flashing and siren blaring in “Hot Pursuit”! They both got off at the next exit. I think Julie and I were the only ones paying attention to the scene, everyone else just kept driving like nothing had happened! Wow, our very first California style police chase and there wasn't even a white Bronco in sight!!!

And speaking of traffic, I guess we have seen some. It is 933 miles from Benson, AZ to Roseville, CA. The manual says the truck needs serviced every 7500 miles. We had the truck serviced two months ago while in Benson. Upon arrival in Roseville it was time to have the truck serviced again. Guess we must have done a “little” sightseeing along the way!! P.S. When the truck was serviced the mechanic checked the computer and everything was OK, so he figured the problem in the desert was most probably water in the diesel instead of a fur ball! So it's off for more adventure down the road.

.