Wednesday, November 23, 2005

Last entry - for now...

I found one holdout memory card that had photos from early parts of our trip, including Montreal and others.

EDIT: Some pics of us with our friend Francesco in Montréal have been posted under 10/25.
EDIT: Some pics of our neighborhood, and brief commentary, have been posted under 10/11 for comparison.
EDIT: The pic below is the path we took across North America.

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

Out of order pics being posted

Usually during this trip, I've composed and organized my posts and drafted a loose itinerary for the next destination while on the train or bus to get there. But once we began the west coast leg of our trip, starting in Vancouver, we began renting cars and much of my time has been dedicated to driving. As a result, I've fallen a few days behind in my posts. I'm in the process of going back and posting them on the correct dates in the order they were taken, rather than mixing them up. As a result, over the next couple of days or so you'll see new posts appearing under dates as old as 11/3 (Vancouver, B.C.), but at least they'll be in order. Sorry! Such is the nature of breakneck travel, a lost camera, intermittent cellular reception, and a bad memory. :)

Also, the system was set to archive posts each month. But given the sheer number of pictures we've been posting, that made for a pitifully long load time for each page of posts. To help make things more manageable, I've set it to archive every day. That way, the pages load faster and the index of dates on the right hand column becomes more useful.

Monday, November 14, 2005

Heading home

Heading toward home, I think fondly of the places we’ve been. We’ve seen glaciers, sand dunes, waterfalls, jagged peaks, prairies, rivers, beaches, rainforests, and rolling hills. We’ve walked in the snow, kissed on the sidewalks in San Francisco, ridden in a skypod, watched the foliage turn, enjoyed romantic meals together, crossed a suspension footbridge, hugged a redwood tree, and gazed through a glass floor at the city below.

We’ve seen elk, deer, mountain sheep, coyotes, bald eagles, Canadian geese, hawks, ravens, magpies, a white peacock, pelicans, dolphins, rabbits, chipmunks, and black squirrels, all in the wild. We also saw farms with llamas and ostriches. At the aquarium we watched sharks, bat rays, sea otters, and a number of sea birds, including puffins and others that dive for food.

We’ve watched the foliage change across the continent, and back again. The east coast's brilliant crimsons and fiery oranges gradually give way to shocking yellow... this fades to be replaced by green pines striped with dramatic white cedars. The tan and brown skeletons of other trees take over from there. Finally, even the hardiest trees surrender and the landscape is dominated by grasses and plains. Then as you approach the mountains, the process begins in reverse. Of all of these, first prize goes to the maples, found especially in Canada, who have apparently decided to specialize in scarlet. Every stunning shade of red imaginable is represented on their boughs, and they sparkle like rubies in every forest and town. Second place goes to a type of tree we saw only in and around Santa Rosa, California. Rather than sticking with one color, they’ve chosen to represent the entire continent in each tree. Topped with a vivid red, the shades gradually change through the brightest oranges, yellows, and greens before their full branches yield to the brown trunk. This makes for an opalescent rainbow effect that is, like the maples, a sight to behold.

It’s been a spectacular journey! Thank you so much for sharing it with us!

I'll load our pictures to an online photo album for easy viewing, and post the web address here.

Nickie has some thoughts she would like to share about our trip. Keep an eye out for this, coming soon. Her writing is exquisite, regardless of what she may tell you!

Too much development

While traveling south through northern and central California, in areas where we haven’t been for many (16-30) years, we noticed that huge amounts of development had taken place. What was once beautiful open hillside or stretches of sandy beach or a serene lookout point has been obliterated by a jumble of tightly packed houses and condos.

One day, when every place of beauty has been covered over with houses to such an extent that the original reasons for moving there are long gone, and the only such places we can turn to are in crowded, heavily trampled national parks dotted with litter, we will regret reproducing like wildfire without regard for the limitations of the planet and then selling every conceivable inch of its most beautiful places to the highest bidder.

Solvang, California

Just passing through but I couldn't resist commenting. Solvang is "the Danish capital of America." Danish architecture, complete with windmills, is adorned with decorative lights year round. Doubly so near Christmastime. They have Danish cuisine, crafts, and cultural events. It's such a lovely quaint little town, it's worth coming back again and again.

Random observation

...So that Nickie never has to wonder again why, for nearly 10 years, I've compared her eyes to the deep, rich color of the redwoods.


San Francisco, California - the Bay Bridge

Sunrise at the Bay Bridge





The Bay Bridge has two levels. Traffic goes one way on the top level, and the other way on the bottom level.

Solvang, California

Passing through Solvang on our way home.

Sunday, November 13, 2005

San Francisco, California

Lombard, America's crookedest street. This section consists of around half a dozen sharp hairpin turns zigzagging down a steep hillside. After deciding that there is a fine line between bravery and stupidity, I was unwilling to attempt this in our rental car.



Pier 39

Pier 39 is the home of Bubba Gump Shrimp. That's right, like the movie Forrest Gump. (Far be it from me to burst your bubble by informing you that Bubba Gump Shrimp came after the movie, not the other way around.)



San Franciscans have some interesting and unique ways of getting your attention. :)



Street performers are ever-present at Pier 39 on the weekends. Everybody wanted to see this one do his fire-eating routine. But for some reason, lots of people left when he started pounding a 4-inch nail up his nose. Hehe.



The Bay Bridge

San Francisco, California - the Golden Gate Bridge

Plaque reads:
To span the Gate, Chief Engineer Joseph Strauss had to contend with wind, fox, ocean waves and tidal currents, and a 19th century fort located where the south end of the bridge should be.

Construction began January 5, 1933. Strauss spared Fort Point by placing the South Pier 1,125 feet from shore in 65 feet of water.

Golden Gate Bridge opened to traffic on May 28, 1937, but the work is never finished. To prevent corrosion, the steel has been painted continuously since opening day with the reddish hue known as International Orange.

Length of main span: 4,200 ft.
Length of suspension bridge (including anchorages): 6,450 ft.
Total length of bridge and approaches: 8,981 ft.
Height of towers above water: 746 ft.
Depth of tower piers below water: 110 ft.
Number of main cables: 2
Diameter of main cables: 36 3/8 inches
Number of wires in each cable: 27,572
Total length of cable wire: 80,000 miles
Weight of cable, wire and fittings: 24,500 tons
Total estimated weight of superstructure: 83,000 tons
Maximum height (under bridge to water): 220 ft.
Roadway width: 60 ft.
Traffic lanes: 6
--------------------------------------
On its broad decks in rightful pride,
The world in swift parade shall ride,
Throughout all time to be;
Beneath, fleet ships from every port,
Vast landlocked bay, historic fort,
And dwarfing all - the sea.


From The Mighty Task is Done, a poem written by Chief Engineer Strauss upon completion of the bridge in 1937.









San Francisco, California

Civic Center



Golden Gate Park - hey, an indoor merry-go-round!



Peeking inside the windows...



View of downtown, from the hills

Saturday, November 12, 2005

San Francisco, California - F Market street car

Some of the street cars are even more romantic than the others. Lit by glass fixtures and richly furnished with gorgeous wood everywhere, these are hard to beat!



San Francisco, California

The Civic Center.



The Castro, aka The Gayest Place on Earth. :)



Found in a shop in the Castro district. Hee hee!



Having actually been to Canada, however, I can't really say this is accurate. Just for starters, its beauty takes your breath away and its people are an utter joy to meet. So while I won't deny that the lack of ol' "W" leading its government is indeed a powerful attractant, the fact of the matter is that there are lots of other, more important reasons for Canadian citizenship.

This button is more for someone who has never been there and doesn't know what they're missing! :D

San Francisco, California - steepest street

At a 31% grade, the steepest street in San Francisco.

Can I remember the name? Of course not! Maybe Nickie will come to my rescue here.



This reminds me of a... let's call it an "incident" ... recounted to me by my parents. We were parked on a hill here in San Francisco, facing uphill, and I was 3 or 4 years old. They got out and stood by the car discussing something, for reasons they can no longer remember. Suddenly the parking brake gave way and the car began rolling backward down the hill, with me still in it, picking up momentum far too fast for my panicked running parents to catch up. Fortunately, it wasn't long before another car obstructed its backward path and brought things to a halt. They checked the back seat for me, fearful of what they might find. There I was, still happily playing and blissfully unaware of any danger. I can only imagine their terror at the time, but now it's something we still joke about to this day.

San Francisco, California - the Palace of Fine Arts

The Exploratorium is at the Palace of Fine Arts. So once you've been dazzled by fascinating demonstrations of physics, perception, and life sciences, get ready to be wooed by dramatic architecture built around the same wetland lagoon that was originally found here at the time of development. Swans and migrating waterfowl still populate the lagoon.

San Francisco, California - the Exploratorium

Nickie electrifies plasma, causing it to glow, and then waves a magnet underneath to watch it distort the flow of electricity.



There are some seriously cool exhibits here!

San Francisco, California - the Exploratorium

Traits of Life: chick embryo exhibit

These are live, fertilized eggs that have been carefully removed from their shells, placed in petri dishes and protected by saran wrap. The embryos apparently continue to develop normally into healthy chicks, who can be seen in a separate display.

There was a mom who took one look at this exhibit and told me it made her want to never eat eggs again. It had a strong impact on me, too. It looks so much like a human embryo attached to the placenta. Maybe being a mom, it affects you more to see it.







By now, it's easy to see its little heart beating.






I told her that I am a vegan and that's one reason I won't eat eggs either, so she's not going to get any disagreement out of me. She sat down with a look of revulsion on her face and said, "I'm serious. I think that just changed my life. I don't think I can eat eggs any more."

I don't blame her a bit, but I was surprised at the intensity of her reaction. I usually don't see people struck in such a way. It was interesting to get a little window into someone's life-changing experience, just for a moment.

San Francisco, California - the Exploratorium

The Exploratorium is described as a hands-on museum of science, art, and human perception. We went here years ago and due to early closing and many of the exhibits as yet unfinished, we didn't get to see anywhere nearly as much as we would have liked. As a result it was a "must-see" this time around. This place is fascinating!

Several displays like this cast rainbows all around the museum. We felt right at home. ;)





What it would look like if Nickie and I had children.


Amusingly, we just so happened to wear the same color shirts today, making the illusion more complete. Even stranger, upon closer examination I see that the wrinkles in our shirts line up almost exactly, the line of her collar matches up perfectly with the strap of the camera bag I'm wearing as though it were trim on her shirt, and the curve of her eyebrows line up as if they were the top half of the frame of my glasses. Wierd! To all of you who call us "Lickie," now you know who you're talking to.


Ice crystals growing. Enhanced by viewing through a polarized lens.

Friday, November 11, 2005

Santa Rosa, California

Nickie's sister was kind enough to show us around town. She told us this giant hand is here to welcome visitors.



This place is just a riot of color!







Thursday, November 10, 2005

Talmage (Ukiah), California - City of Ten Thousand Buddhas

This is a buddhist monastery. It's a gentle place where all living things are considered family and visitors are asked not to harm so much as a fly or mosquito out of respect for life. Diet is vegetarian or vegan. Quiet and serenity prevail here and street signs bear such names as Compassion Way, Generosity Way, Proper Thought, and Proper Speech. Just a lovely place! More than one hundred monks and nuns live here and there are ceremonies, meditation, and chanting throughout the day. There is a Buddhist university, seniors' home, and vegetarian restaurant here. Alas, we came too late in the day to enjoy the restaurant, which we've heard is a culinary delight not to be missed.



A white peacock greeted us at the door to the temple. We never even knew they exist! I've since learned that this is a rare but naturally occurring color variation of the blue variety. They have blue eyes and are not albinos. They shed their beautiful long trains in late summer, so we've missed his display for this year. To see one in full display, click here or here.



Front and back of the temple. The number 10000 is normally used figuratively to denote infinity. In the case of this temple, however, it is also meant literally. There are 10000 buddhas in this temple. The gold figurines you see lining the walls on all four sides are all buddhas.







Mixed peafowl



"Teaching and protecting all nations"
nineteenthcentury-no