Thursday, September 19, 2013

Sacramento and Famous Nevada City

Time for another day trip on the Motorcycle.  Off to Nevada City, 21 miles away to check out the town where my favorite Christmas movie was filmed.  The Christmas Card with Ed Asner (Hallmark Movie).  On the way, Hwy 20, it was like a pine tree canopy and a wonderful ride.  Took a stop at a View Point stop, walked their 1/4 mile trail out to a steel lookout deck.  Map showed the points where they had cleared trees (looked like an oops with the clippers on a really bad haircut) and 2 areas with yellow dirt piled up (those were the Alpha and Omega gold mining camps of history.  We could also see Nevada City in the distance.  We walked around town and stopped into the Nevada City Cafe where parts of the film were shot.  Even had the Christmas Card Club that is famous in the movie. http://www.nevadacitychamber.com/nevada-city-photos-and-videos/the-christmas-card/
Saw other areas of town that are in the movie and shot our own pictures.  I watch this movie at least a few times every year and still love it.  Nov 1st Hallmark starts their Christmas movies, check it out!  Oh yah, Nevada City is also a historic Gold Mining town from the 1849ers. 
The next day we headed out for Sacramento in the truck and Buddy in tow.  Stopped at Camping World to get a few parts, and a new chair for me.  Comfy!!!  Then onto downtown Sacramento with the day spent in Old Sacramento and the California Railroad Museum.  The museum is awesome.  The had numerous real train engines, cars, cabooses, cargo, and sleeper cars.  It is just a huge museum with the real thing inside.  Engine #12 refurbished from the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad completion and the train that came from the West to meet at Promontory point in Utah.  Even the Golden Spike to commemorate the last spike to tie the two coasts together.  So the Donner Party that took months to get to the West, should have just waited 22 years and the trip by rail would have only taken 7 days.  What a huge accomplishment.  Learned all about the Chinese Americans that build the railway and all the trials they went through.  It was so neat to tie history together from our travels.  The Tie Hacks of Wyoming that cut the railroad ties, the Chinese whose ancestors live in Chinatown, San Francisco, the railroad museum, and camping in the area of all this history with the trains whistle blowing in the area numerous times a day.  The museum has tons of memorabilia and a photo gallery with pictures from the 1800's and the history of that event.  Upstairs was a miniture display.  We didn't realize how many scale railroads there were.  Randy had HO scale trains growing up. 
Off to walk the streets of Old Sacramento and the riverwalk.  Wooden sidewalks and historic buildings of the 1800's era.  I am so loving history and being able to see it before me.  Many restaurants, clothing, and some weird psychic or other areas we didn't go in.  We are in California and not the MidWest so it is different.  On the ride home we did some grocery shopping at Sam's Club.  Since we've been staying in areas without grocery stores, we've got to stock up.  Oh yah, and 3 gallons of milk for my hubby (that'll last 3-4 days, if we're luck)


Reno and Lake Tahoe Areas

Jumped on the motorcycle and headed for Lake Tahoe.  Just 10 miles down I-80 we got off for gas and found the Donner Pass Museum.  It is amazing how many little facts stick in your head from High School History but never made sense or understood the big picture.  Toured the museum and their historic film explaining what happened the winter of 1846-47.
In the spring of 1846, a group of nearly 90 emigrants left Springfield, Illinois, and headed west. Led by brothers Jacob and George Donner, the group attempted to take a new and supposedly shorter route to California. It was to cut of 400 miles from the traditional trail, it was actually 100 miles more. Their guide left earlier and refused to come back for them. (Unscruppulous characters in those days too) They encountered rough terrain and numerous delays, and they eventually became trapped by heavy snowfall high in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. 5 feet of snow with 60 foot drifts came down.  Reduced to cannibalism to survive through the winter, only half of the original group reached California the following year. Our campground is along the original trail. Randy and I don't plan on hanging out here for the winter, so I think our wastelines are safe.
Heading down the trek to the second deepest lake in the U.S. (1645ft) it is 22 miles long and 12mi wide.  A whopping 72 miles around the lake. Going south down the east side was a beautiful winding road through hilly areas and overlooks of the lake.  In southern Lake Tahoe we stopped at Zephyr Cove, Nevada.  Our campground membership has coupon links to discounts in the U.S.  I found a 2 for 1 coupon on the Woodwind II Catamaran 3 hour sailing on Lake Tahoe.  The boat holds 50 passengers, there were 8 of us, plus 3 crew members.  No tourist packed trips for us!  Randy found that the pulleys and other parts were from Harken.  When he worked in Milwaukee he designed and made the program to make many of these parts for Harken.  He was estatic to see his work in action. It was really neat. 
Continuing around the lake we went through the most southern city on the lake of South Tahoe.  Reminded me of Door County with all the neat buildings and shopping areas.  The carved ski hill runs all along in the back mountain.  I could totally see why people come here in the winter to ski and vacation.  The northern trip up the west side was a much less populated area.  It was Randy's drive from hell.  10mph curves with hills on the hills.  Overlook on the edge of the road with 100 foot drops and traffic.  A definite nail biter on a motorcycle or any vehicle.  Stopped in the city of Tahoe to get Randy's supply of milk, so he could have a drink when we got home.  Make that a double Nestle chocolate drink!!  An awesome, beautiful day.  Even saw a lobster formation in the clouds, mmm.
Took the day to Kayak and fish on the lake in our campground.  Quiet, gorgeous lake but no fish were caught that day.  It was a day to relax and catch some sun.
2 days later, after Randy recooperated, we decided to make a long days trip to Reno (57miles).  Took the truck and Buddy so we weren't feeling rushed to return for potty breaks.  For the first time in his 10 years, Buddy went to Doggy Day Care.  It was too hot to leave him in the car and for $18 he could spend the day and have some doggy interaction.  He misses his nephews, Jack the Rat (Chihuahua) and Duke (German Shepard).  It was like the kids first day of school.  I was so nervous and we hung out at the daycare for awhile to see how he did.  I was checking Randy's phone during the day to make sure they hadn't called.  Crazy woman.  He had a great day, made lots of friends and enjoyed himself. 
Meanwhile, our day was fun too.  We had some "chores" to do in town.  We have applied for SOWERS (Servants on Wheels Ever Ready) it is a group of people who RV that volunteer to help repair, paint, clean, you name it, for Christian organizations in 48 states.  Churches, schoold, camps all need above and beyond maintenance or extra hands for their organization.  It would be a great opportunity to help and meet other Christians on the road.  Anyway, we had to get fingerprinted because we maybe working with kids in the schools or camps.  My fingerprints were not usable for the FBI so we stopped at Reno P.D. to get them done again.  Super nice lady that fingerprinted me.  Then onto US Bank to do some official banking and lastly the Post Office to mail off those fingerprints.  Time to play! 
Downtown Reno is definitely an older city.  Circus Circus is downtown and there is a really neat indoor walkway to see the other casinos, shops, and entertainment.  Our goal was to see the acts at Circus Circus.  We got there at 11am when the acts were to start.  Wrong information from calling their desk.  Acts don't start until 5pm.  So walked the walkway and outside but alot of people panhandling and sleeping on the streets.  We jumped in the car and headed south on Virginia St to the newer section of town and a ton of strip malls and 2 huge newer casinos.  We stopped at JoAnn Fabrics, Harbor Freight, Home Depot, and Grocery Outlet.  Love that store.  Kinda like the Dollar Store of groceries.  I bought box mix, canned, and bagged stuff so it would survive the 90 degree heat and a long ride in the car.  As our Anniversary is coming up (#10) we went into the Atlantis casino and ate at their wonderful Toucan Charlie's Buffet.  Special today is Prime Rib and Crab Legs.  It was a wonderful buffet and I ate my share of Crab Legs, mmmmm.  Didn't even have room for dessert.  Made it back to Circus Circus for the entertainment, which ended up being 5 minute shows with 40 minutes break inbetween, disappointing.   We hung out for 2 shows: The Chinese Acrobat and JR Johns trained dogs.  We saw him on the show America's Got Talent a few years ago.  We did end up playing the slot machines inbetween shows.  Just so you know we are BIG spenders.  Randy played with $2.00 for a very long time, I don't think he ended up with any of it, in the end.  I went big and spent $10.00 and came home with $7.00 - I think of it as The Big Kids Arcade, except I know I spend a whole lot more than that on the kids in the game room.  Chuck E Cheese is still the funnest.
To end our day we went back to get Buddy from his first play date and drove the 57 miles home.  He was one pooped pup - that's in the good way, as he slept on the way home and all night. 


Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Monterey Bay and Aquarium

 
After John & Kim Kempf came to visit in August.  Monterey has been on Randy's mind (John & Kim had visited Monterey before coming by us).  So we decided to make a really long day trip, take the truck, and Buddy too.  The planned 1.5hr trip took us 3 hours with all the traffic.  So we were so thankful we planned it with the truck & Buddy.  First stop the Monterey Bay Aquarium. 
 It was one of the best aquariums we have ever seen.  Lots of really
neat interactive areas and not just fish tanks.  Loved the Jelly Fish exhibit.  Best is the fact that it is right on the Bay and they have a deck all around with ocean water coming in for their tanks.  It is along Cannery Row (Del Monte and non-existant cannery buildings) but today it is shop haven and a great walk.
 
This was my favorite video we captured while at the Monterey Bay Aquarium.
How did I know that these dizzy sardines would let Moses through.
 
This tank reminded me of the movie "Finding Nemo" so of course we had to watch it the next night.  I can see Dora swimming around and Nemo was hiding.  Just beautifully clean and well done aquarium.
 Just up the road is the 17 mile drive that takes you all around the Bay's coastal lines.  Many pull offs and great views of multiple things in the area.  So we finally made it too the ocean again and
spent alot of time driving the loop and catching the natural sites.
 Even saw 2 mule deer hanging out at the 9th hole of a golf course.  Not sure how you would play that, but hopefully they would move on versus eating your golf ball.  We were told a few strageling whales were still in the area but way out to sea.  On their way to Mexico. 
One stop we could hear the sea lions barking but looking over the edge of the lookout area, couldn't see a thing.  Looking out into the water was this rock formation and it was covered with sea lions.  It looked like moving rocks.  It seems to be the most popular hangout in the area.  As we went around the corner we could see the backside of the rock and not a single sea lion there.  They like the shade.
 
Just a wonderful day and the start of a beautiful sunset.  It is a really pretty place to visit and just hang out at.  I wonder if the sea lions look back at us and see us as just hanging out on the land???
 
Driving back up the coast and then inland home we hit another traffic jam.  I don't think there is a time of day on the coast that people aren't traveling somewhere.  I just wish they would leave a lane open for us.  Found out it is legal for motorcycles to ride the line inbetween the cars.  Scared me if someone veered a bit or changed lanes and hit one.  Boom.....

San Francisco and Delta Region

     So after a confusing and hectic few weeks of moving around, after leaving Yosemite early, without a real plan we landed in the Delta Region.  It is in the center of the state, east of San Francisco.  Miles and miles of rivers and flatter ground.  So we stayed for a week in Manteca California and got caught up on laundry, mail, groceries, and got my JoAnn Fabrics fix. 
                                                           We took a day trip to San Jose and the Mystery House.  Build  
by the heiress Mrs Winchester of the gun family. 160 rooms with mysterious stairways to no where, doors with brick walls behind and rooms within rooms.  She was told that she had to continue to build until she died, to avoid the spirits of all the people killed by her families guns.  Beautiful architecture but weird.  I think it is a great house to play hide & seek and get lost for days. At least it would keep the kids busy?

     We took the motorcycle and had an awesome trip back to the campground via one of the Bay bridges.  The land gap between the ocean and San Francisco Bay looks so small on the map but driving we still didn't see the ocean yet.  The traffic was crazy on the freeways and not in love with big cities.  Never really have been.

In this lovely stopped traffic.  Which by the way on a motorcycle stinks.  Randy's hand was falling asleep from holding the clutch and moving forward foot by foot.  The brown grassy hill sides reminded me of the hills in a landscaped railroad miniature setup.  Like someone threw brown burlap over the area.  The mowed sign says, "Jesus Saves".  Great thing to read as traffic is stopped and people are cutting in front of you!

In Manteca they had a Bass Pro Shop.  One of the neatest buildings ever.  A replica Redwood tree in the entry that you had to walk through to get into store.  Mounts of every animal imaginable, especially those from the area.  I loved looking at all the Duck Dynasty items.   Even found out they have a board game.  Great Christmas ideas!!

Just outside our campground in the Delta region of Isleton is this beautiful meandering river that goes from Sacramento out to the ocean.  So this meant lots and lots of bridges and occasionally lots and lots of waiting to get across those bridges that were raised for boats.  Went to town for milk one day (5mile trip) and it took us 35 minutes.  Hwy 12 in this area is the worst road in all California (per another camper) but we agree.  Like a rollercoaster with ruts, and it's on flat land.  Someone said it's caused by the earthquakes but we think it's just really bad grating.  
Another day trip to San Francisco.  Took the motorcycle to the BART train station and road the train into the city.  Empty car and a 45 minute ride.  On the way back was another story.  Hit rush    hour at 4pm and we were standing up like sardines the entire 45 minutes.  Did I ever tell you about how I really don't like big cities?  Decided to walk to all the historical and tourist areas of San Fran. 

We didn't realize it was a 5 1/2 mile walk by the time we got back to the train. Exercise is good, feet aches are bad. This is how we felt on the train ride home but unfortunately couldn't lay down like the sea lions.  It was great eating Clam Chowder in a bread bowl with them "barking" in the background.  Very romantic, NOT.
I love lighthouses and couldn't resist taking a picture.  In the background is Alcatraz Island.  It looks so close to Pier 39 area but with the waves and distance, I can't imagine the escapees swimming that far.  You can get jailbird clothing in the area.  We also saw a few of the America's Cup sailboats practicing in the bay.  There was a big race Labor Day weekend.

Walking down the docks abit is Fisherman's Wharf.  They had a great free museum with historical items from the area for 100 years.  Great roadside food stands and shops.  WWII submarine and ship are docked in the Wharf and open for tours, not free, but awesome history.  There is an entire block of Ghardinelli chocolate factory and shops.  They give out free samples, mmmmm.

Right next to Ghardinelli we walked up the hill 6-7 blocks to Lombard Street.  Huffin and Puffin. Lombard Street was created in 1850 and is the Crookedest Street in the World.  It was a great view down to downtown San Francisco.  The street had beautiful flowers and alot of people took on the challenge.  We chose to walk down the steps to the bottom.  I can't imagine living on this street. 
Busy all the time and their driveways cut sharply off the curves with them being only 8-9 feet long.  Then to think they would have to try to back out of their driveway against the tourist traffic everyday.  But on the positive side is the beautiful views and great looking buildings with great history.

OK so we made it too the bottom.  Huff, Huff and we aren't the only ones taking pictures and checking this street out.  We heard so many languages (all good) that it must be known the world wide as a great tourist stop.  Luckily, it was all downhill from here.  And what's San Francisco without the Golden Gate Bridge.  Love the mystic of the fog every day.  There are those America's Cup sailboats out in the bay.
Continuing our walk through Little Italy and then through Chinatown. I loved the items hanging from the ceiling and all the items for sale that you don't usually see in Wal Mart.  Found out that all the 1000's of Chinese Americans that built the Transcontinental Railway, many of them came to live in San Francisco after the railway was finished.  That's how Chinatown began as many were not treated fairly and so they stuck together.
 
 I loved the hanging lanterns and the music playing on the corners.  Many items for sale that said Made In China, so it was Soooo fitting.  Lots and lots of restaurants but the menus were all in Chinese to way to scared to check any of them out.  Besides we were on our walk to try to make it to the train station in time to get 
back to Buddy.  Lastly, what trip to San Francisco would be
complete without the trolley.  They were always so packed so we kept walking.  It brought me back to the days of Mr Rogers and the Trolley.  If I had a sweater on I would have removed it.  We made it safely home on the sardine train and Buddy was happy to see us.