Thanksgiving 2004 – Day 2

Winchester Mystery House in San Jose, California

Up in San Jose, we must make time this morning to stop at the Winchester Mystery House where we’ve seen the signs on the freeway a number of times as we pass through this way.

Winchester Mystery House in San Jose, California

A young man by the name of Wayne was our guide on this informative tour of Sarah Lockwood Pardee Winchester’s home. Sarah was the widow of William Winchester, who created the “Gun that Won the West,” better known as the Winchester.

What started as an 8-room farmhouse became a 160-room mansion with 10,000 windows, 2,000 doors, and 52 skylights. Exactly why she built such an extravagant maze of a home after the death of her husband is part of the mystery that draws people in.

Winchester Mystery House in San Jose, California

I was ill-prepared with our relatively cheap point-and-shoot camera to photograph architecture in a confined space. I probably should have had a 10mm lens for a good wide-angle with a 1.8 aperture for the lighting conditions, even though there are so many windows in this house.

San Francisco, California

From there, it was a short jaunt to San Francisco, and the main reason for this Thanksgiving drive north.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at the Legion of Honor Museum in San Francisco, California

It didn’t take much thinking about this visit to Northern California and the Legion of Honor, where this bronze of The Thinker by Auguste Rodin stands out front. Originally known as The Poet, as it was part of a larger sculpture titled The Gates of Hell, it was meant to depict Dante and is based on The Divine Comedy. Obviously, we are not amused by any of this as we are here for a Mayan art exhibit and not an entry to hell. Though, come to think about it, how fitting is it for middle America if they knew that San Franciscan’s sense of humor acknowledged that theirs was a city that led to hell?

Courtly Art of the Ancient Maya at the Legion Of Honor Fine Arts Museum in San Francisco, California

Sadly, NO photography is allowed of any of the pieces on exhibit and there is enough security to ensure nobody snaps a photo. So, how’d I get this one? With some amount of stealth and trust that the camera might capture something, I shot blindly. Thanks to San Francisco for hosting such an amazing collection of works; I only wish we had more visual memories of the pieces we were able to witness. We did buy the companion book for the exhibit, but as usual, the items that caught our attention were not featured enough.

Gottfried Helnwein exhibition at the Legion of Honor Museum in San Francisco, California

Nobody stopped us from taking photos of Gottfried Helnwein’s work, but then again one needs to be careful what they use from his work to give an example of his controversial pieces. Nazis, menstruation, nudity, and deformities are normal elements of his work, and while Otto Dix played with similar themes, they didn’t verge on the photorealistic that makes one almost ashamed to be looking at Helnwein’s paintings.

Legion of Honor Museum in San Francisco, California

What’s not to love about this piece titled The Russian Bride’s Attire by Konstantin Makovsky?

After leaving the Legion of Honor, we took a walk around the park the museum is set in called Lands End, which is also a part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. The trails are well-marked but also well-traveled, though this being the long Thanksgiving weekend, they might be especially busy today.

San Francisco, California

Back into the core of the city, with Chinatown being our big draw after finding a parking garage at the corners of Stockton and Vallejo, which also happens to be just around the corner from the City Lights Bookstore. It was right near here 13 years ago that Caroline stepped into San Francisco and America for the very first time. That was back in January 1991, and if you are interested, you can visit a page with a few of those photos by clicking here.

San Francisco, California

Chinatown is still a magic corner of San Francisco to the two of us. We pass by the elegant eateries, the snobbish trendy places that are of such great appeal to the wealthy tech workers of this great American brain trust of a city. Shopping for trinkets and cheap shoes while taking in the sights of the exotic world of Asia represented on these streets is our cheat of needing to visit China for a small taste.

Caroline Wise on the USS Pampanito submarine in San Francisco, California

Time for the obligatory cheesy tourist traps to make sure we see the really important sights of the city before these kinds of places lose the interest of a public more interested in being seen than going out to see. This is the USS Pampanito submarine that is moored at Pier 45 next to Fisherman’s Wharf.

Musee Mecanique in San Francisco, California

Next door is the Musée Mécanique that was opened by Edward Zelinsky who passed away a couple of months prior to our visit. Mr. Zelinsky owned one of the largest collections of coin-operated mechanical art on earth. There’s a lot to see here and the limited time we have before they close tonight will demand that we return someday to properly appreciate this labor of love.

San Francisco, California

San Francisco is an undeniably beautiful city, made more so at night when some of the crush of tourists and residents start to return home and to their hotels. We’ll continue our exploration, not wanting to give up on the buzz that happens here, like further south in Los Angeles. By comparison, the city of Phoenix enters rigor mortis an hour after the sun sets, allowing you to hear the sound of a cactus needle drop.

San Francisco, California

Our room at the Colonial Motel ($59 for the night) is over in San Rafael, so we were able to stop on the north side of the Golden Gate Bridge at night for this view that should never grow old to us. Tomorrow, we continue our trek north.

Thanksgiving 2004 – Day 1

Rhyolite Ghost Town in California

Yesterday at 3:00 p.m., we left Phoenix via Wickenburg, Kingman, and drove to Las Vegas in Nevada before continuing northeast to Beatty, where we spent the night at the El Portal Motel for only $38. Sometime after Las Vegas, we were pulled over out in the middle of nowhere. Turns out that the road I chose to relieve myself had some kind of military secrecy thing, and the last place I should be dealing with my bladder is on this road off the freeway. There was no ticket, just a stern warning to move along quickly.

We were staying in Beatty so we could visit the Rhyolite ghost town and head through Death Valley National Park for a second time this year.

Death Valley National Park in California

Our plan is to cut through the park and head north at Olancha and then take the road over Yosemite from Lee Vining and maybe stay the night in Modesto, California.

Death Valley National Park in California

Can one ever experience enough Death? I mean Death Valley. This is our third visit and we are far from bored and feel we’ve barely scratched the surface of being able to claim we’ve really seen this national park.

Death Valley National Park in California

Spending a bit more time exploring the sand dunes as that’s the easiest and quickest thing we can do, seeing we are only supposed to be passing through.

Death Valley National Park in California

Remnants of trees are an intriguing sign of life when everywhere else we look, we see sand, salt, and scrub brush.

Death Valley National Park in California

How many other visitors feel kind of guilty about walking over dunes where there are no other footprints? Their pristine appearance should be left in perfection so the next visitor can experience how cool they look, but then we might as well just look at this stuff from the car. So we accept our destructive actions and trod on the virgin sand.

Death Valley National Park in California

Dried mudflats are almost like cement or maybe more like cobblestones.

Death Valley National Park in California

Got stuck at Stovepipe Wells talking with a guy who was working in the gift store about his years spent working in Yellowstone before moving out to Death Valley. Maybe someday we’ll be able to spend more than a week or so at Yellowstone.

Death Valley National Park in California

How much water was pooled here that left the earth so compacted? And who was so lucky to have been here to see the mountains and deep blue skies reflected in the pool?

Death Valley National Park in California

Not a blade of dead grass nor the remains of a bush offer evidence that anything here ever grows.

California central valley

Well, this is a wicked turn of events that testifies to some serious poor trip planning on my account. In Olancha we learn that the road we intended to travel over Yosemite is closed for the season due to heavy snow that collects up that way. We’re told that the mountain passes north of that may be closed or require chains, so we might want to consider an alternate route.

California central valley

Our adjusted plans take us south towards Kernville, where we can head west for a 200-mile drive across the Central Valley. This “lake” is irrigated land somewhere out here in the middle of California where so very much of our food is grown.

This being Thursday and Thanksgiving day, we decided to call it an early day and call it quits in King City. Spent the night at the Sage Motel for only $35 after having a wonderful Thanksgiving dinner at a place lost in time that we forgot to note.

Santa Barbara, California – Day 3

Cold Spring Tavern in Santa Barbara, California

We got an early start for a drive up to San Marcos Pass Road to the Cold Spring Tavern, which serves a pretty good breakfast.

Anne and Woody Burns at Cold Spring Tavern in Santa Barbara, California

But it’s the old-fashioned ambiance of the place that makes it perfect. Well, that and hanging out with these two.

Looking out over Santa Barbara, California

Late fall or early winter is a great time to visit Santa Barbara. Many of the summer visitors are gone, as is the morning fog that hangs on at times well into the day during the summer months.

View from 288 Placer Drive in Goleta, California

Here we are at 288 Placer Drive, where it intersects with Cathedral Oaks Road. On my right (out of sight) is the house my great-aunt and uncle bought in the late 1960s. Like with all of our brief weekend visits, we were typically gone by around mid-day as we had an 8-hour drive ahead of us. That’s if we don’t make any stops.

On the beach near Ventura, California

But of course, we could never just drive home, especially on such a beautiful day during low tide.

On the beach near Ventura, California

Yep, I said low tide, meaning exposed tide pools.

On the beach near Ventura, California

Sea life at the shore or in the Monterey Bay Aquarium, which we visited just last month, is all perfect.

On the beach near Ventura, California

In the rave community, this is known as a cuddle-puddle.

On the beach near Ventura, California

There’s no ignoring the sun that will set today, and as we likely don’t want to get home after midnight, we’ll have to say goodbye.

Caroline Wise and John Wise on the beach near Ventura California

Right after we take this selfie, proving it was us here once again at the ocean.

Standard disclaimer that this post was not written on or near the date it shows up on my blog. This particular sequence of days wasn’t written about until September 2022 as I was trying to better catalog our travel images on this site.

Santa Barbara, California – Day 2

Woody Burns in Santa Barbara, California

Nice orange shirt, Uncle Woody! Orange is one of my favorite colors when it comes to shirts. Here we are in Goleta, very near to Santa Barbara, with my great-aunt and -uncle while Tata (Annie) is getting her hair done. Afterward, it was time for breakfast, and my guess would be that we likely ate over at Cajun Kitchen, as that’s our regular morning place during these visits.

Santa Barbara, California

Over the course of the day, we likely visited Costco for pizza, a roast chicken that Tata will share with Sophie (the German Shepherd above), and who knows what else as we scoured the store, and she tried talking us into taking stuff back to Arizona.

Caroline Wise in Santa Barbara, California

Spending time with family is always good for more than a few laughs, but taking some John-and-Caroline time to walk along the beach just makes our efforts to get out here all the better.

Fishing at sunset in Santa Barbara California

I likely have shared this elsewhere, but I don’t think my great-aunt and uncle really ever cared about seeing these beautiful sunsets or visiting the beach that was just a couple of miles from their front door. Caroline and I, on the other hand find non-stop romance while out walking in this light.

Standard disclaimer that this post was not written on or near the date it shows up on my blog. This particular sequence of days wasn’t written about until September 2022 as I was trying to better catalog our travel images on this site.

Santa Barbara, California – Day 1

Driving west on Interstate 10

We are literally driving into the sunset as we head west on Interstate 10 from Phoenix to Southern California towards our destination, Santa Barbara, over on the coast.

Standard disclaimer that this post was not written on or near the date it shows up on my blog. This particular sequence of days wasn’t written about until September 2022 as I was trying to better catalog our travel images on this site.

Tucson, Arizona

Sophia Silva losing her teeth in Tucson, Arizona

This was a surprise trip down to Tucson, as Arturito, who had been gone a couple of months for his first year in college up in Flagstaff, Arizona, was able to get a ride as far south as Phoenix. I took him the rest of the way to see his parents. Guadalupe, in particular, was missing her son quite badly, so this seemed like the right thing to do. His sisters were happy to see him, and so was his father. Sophia, his youngest sister, pictured left, was losing teeth rapidly but scoring just as quickly with the Tooth Fairy. Our visit was short but long enough to get fed and fed well. I received plenty of hugs of appreciation, although not as many as Arturito, it was a brave parting.