Forgotten Oregon Trip – Day 3

Pacific City, Oregon

Disclaimer: This post is one of those that ended up being written years after the experience was had. Sadly, there were no notes taken so whatever is shared here must be extracted from the images and what memories they may have lent us. Fortunately, there was an itinerary still in my directory of travel plans, so that will help with some details. As to why this wasn’t noted or blogged about, I was in the throes of writing/editing my book Stay In The Magic and felt that any other deep writing would derail that fragile effort.

Back when we stayed here in Pacific City, Oregon, for the first time, we had no idea that its “sea stack” is the world’s 4th largest monolith and that the one up the coast at Cannon Beach is the 3rd largest. The 2nd largest is a monolith called Ben Amera in Mauritania, while the largest is obviously Uluru (formerly known as Ayers Rock) in Australia. To be honest, when we stayed in Pacific City in November 2020, I certainly didn’t know the above fact then either (thanks, Internet!). Caroline may have, as she knows everything.

Caroline Wise and John Wise in Pacific City, Oregon

A sunrise walk under clear skies in the grassy dunes at the southern end of town seemed like a good idea.

Pacific City, Oregon

That good idea only grew larger as the sun came up over the horizon with a stream of fog still hugging the Nestucca River, capturing the golden light of morning.

Pacific City, Oregon

From our motel to the Haystack Rock down the coast and back will have us walking a little more than 4 miles.

Caroline Wise in Pacific City, Oregon

This is the smile that says, “Great day!”

Near Pacific City, Oregon

With nothing but time and curiosity driving us forward, we headed inland for some sightseeing.

Near Pacific City, Oregon

Without notes, there’s little I can share other than we must have been having an amazing time out here.

Pacific City, Oregon

Here we are back at Pacific City Beach with an even better view of the 327-foot-tall monolith, but it’s not exactly why we’ve returned.

Pacific City, Oregon

Our visit just happened to coincide with the Cape Kiwanda Longboard Classic. As we’d never attended a surfing event, this sounded like the perfect way to spend a part of our day that had nothing else scheduled.

Pacific City, Oregon

Re-entering the water with style. While this may look like great form, the guy is no longer on his board at all and is about to enter the surf, but damn, he looks good.

View from Cape Lookout in Oregon

Time for more sightseeing as we head north. Later today, we have something on the schedule, but that shows up below. The view is from Cape Lookout.

Netarts Bay, Oregon

I could share 20 or 30 photos along Netarts Bay I’ve taken over the years; how would one ever get bored of these views?

Netarts Bay, Oregon

From Netarts Bay, we turned inland towards Tillamook.

Tillamook, Oregon

Ah, a late lunch at Blue Heron and the home of smoked brie cheese. I don’t know if we were on a diet or what, but there’s not a photo of us at the Tillamook Cheese Factory where getting an ice cream of one sort or another seems mandatory, especially a local Oregonian berry flavor.

Garibaldi, Oregon

We’ve arrived at the Port of Garibaldi but are too early for our 4:30 appointment; better go check some other things out.

Rockaway Beach, Oregon

Just 5 miles further up the road is Rockaway Beach.

Rockaway Beach, Oregon

Trying to write up this entry ten years after the fact, I have this strange fascination with this “other couple’s adventure.” They sure seem to pack each day with the experiences of many.

Caroline Wise at Rockaway Beach, Oregon

Two walks along the ocean, a surfing contest, a couple of scenic drives, an iconic cheese shop for lunch, and the day isn’t over yet.

Kayaking in Garibaldi, Oregon

4:30 rolls around, and we’re back at the Port of Garibaldi for some kayaking.

Caroline Wise kayaking in Garibaldi, Oregon

Yes, we’re in a tandem kayak, which works out for me as I’m mildly terrified of deep water. The only problem is that my terror is manifested as panic. I am trying to speak calmly with Caroline, whose every move threatens to make my nightmares come true. That smile up there is the look of control that she now has me exactly where she wants me. Maniacal, isn’t it?

John Wise Kayaking in Garibaldi, Oregon

That is fake calm on my face as somehow I was in denial of the fact that had we turned over, I would have had zero experience getting back in a kayak from the water. Worse, I would have been in a state of panic trying to figure out the situation of getting back atop the kayak from the bitter depths of Miami Cove. Fortunately, everything worked out once again, and as I hit dry land, I could thank my lucky stars that I was able to live to see another day.

After dinner at the Fisherman’s Korner restaurant, also in Garibaldi, nothing more of this day is recorded. Our motel was the Harborview Inn down the street for the bargain price of only $69, which has gone up to $119 here in 2021.

Forgotten Oregon Trip – Day 2

On the way to Silver Falls State Park in Sublimity, Oregon

Disclaimer: This post is one of those that ended up being written years after the experience was had. Sadly, there were no notes taken so whatever is shared here must be extracted from the images and what memories they may have lent us. Fortunately, there was an itinerary still in my directory of travel plans, so that will help with some details. As to why this wasn’t noted or blogged about, I was in the throes of writing/editing my book Stay In The Magic and felt that any other deep writing would derail that fragile effort.

My 17,704th day on earth, and while I can calculate the number of days between my birth and this particular day, I cannot offer any idea whatsoever about the number of sunrises I’ve seen. I do know I’ve not seen enough of them as each subsequent sunrise strikes me in such a way that I long for more, never satisfied that I’ve had my fair share. We were out of Portland before dawn as during the majority of our travels, we note prior to our departure when sunrise is so we have a good chance of seeing it. Here in late September, we have 12 hours of light from 6:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m., and with such a short day, you can be assured we’ll try to grab every moment of it.

Silver Falls State Park in Sublimity, Oregon

Our first stop today is in Sublimity at the Silver Falls State Park.

Silver Falls State Park in Sublimity, Oregon

This is the largest state park in Oregon, and with 24 miles of trails, we’ll barely see the tiniest fraction of this place today.

Silver Falls State Park in Sublimity, Oregon

What we will see is enchanting enough to satisfy our quotient of required natural beauty for the first part of a vacation day, but it will leave us longing for a return visit someday.

Silver Falls State Park in Sublimity, Oregon

Years after taking this photo, I’m curious how the lighting turned out so well; sure, I had to pump the shadows up to brighten the darkest areas, but I don’t typically capture these dense areas so well.

Silver Falls State Park in Sublimity, Oregon

Broken is beautiful, too. Just because the tree is gone doesn’t mean it’s not serving an important role in the forest.

Silver Falls State Park in Sublimity, Oregon

Habitats are not only homes to the myriad plants and animals; they are fertile grounds for our imaginations.

Oregon

I’d like to tell you that our next stop is the big reason for coming to Oregon, but there were multiple reasons, and all of them are equally important, including this random stop along the road. While it’s difficult to see in this low-res image, the view we were driving by elicited us to pull over due to the beauty of the landscape in the distance. This seems as good a reason as any for coming to Oregon.

Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum in McMinnville, Oregon

This is the Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum in McMinnville, Oregon. While we were in Southern California, in the Long Beach area specifically, we had many opportunities to see the purpose-built hangar that once housed the Spruce Goose, but by the time we reached the United States, the plane had already been dismantled as it never proved to be much of draw for travelers.

Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum in McMinnville, Oregon

Well, it’s an interesting enough piece of history that Caroline and I were willing to make the detour to see this engineering marvel with our own eyes. While we waited for our tour of the Spruce Goose, we explored the rest of the museum. There are plenty of other aircraft here in the museum, including an old SR-71 Blackbird, but like so many other seriously large things in small spaces, it’s really difficult to photograph. We also stuck our heads into a B-17 Flying Fortress and were lucky enough to encounter a WWII Air Force Vet volunteering as a guide.

Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum in McMinnville, Oregon

Then, it was time for the main attraction. So many times, I tried to focus on capturing some small part of the thing that may share a detail that could easily be overlooked. When I was allowed to briefly occupy the very seat Howard Hughes once sat in to fly this plane on its only journey, taking off and landing on water, I thought that the foot pedals likely go unseen and the lighting down there was so interesting that I had to take and share this image.

Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum in McMinnville, Oregon

The scale of this airplane is incredible, but only a tiny fraction of the craft may be explored by us tourists.

John Wise and Caroline at the Spruce Goose in the Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum in McMinnville, Oregon

Howard Hughes once sat here.

Approaching Pacific City, Oregon

Go west is the popular refrain, and so we did, heading to Pacific City on the coast.

Pacific City, Oregon

As you can see in the previous photo, we were driving into the fog, and by the time we reached the coast, we were in the thick of it.

Pacific City, Oregon

Early fall, fog, cold water? That will never stop Caroline from feeling the Pacific Ocean’s water rushing over her feet.

Caroline Wise at the Riverhouse Restaurant in Pacific City, Oregon

We checked into the Anchorage Motel for the nice low price of only $55 for the night. Checking on the motel ten years later, I see that the cheapest room is now $119.

Caroline’s crazy accurate memory is at work again as she happens to remember that our dinner at the Riverhouse restaurant was the place where I first tried steamers and fell in love with them. Sadly enough, my upbringing was such that things like clams, mussels, and sardines were unliked without even ever having tried them. I was afraid of something I’d never seriously considered eating. Trying and enjoying them only let me know what a fool I was for not confronting my fear.

Another Perfect L.A. Day

Caroline Wise enjoying breakfast at Zabies Cafe in Santa Monica, California

Los Angeles is one of those places where you can feel like you have a purposeful life as a part of the city, that your existence is intertwined with the culture that surrounds you – as opposed to a city where you simply exist as an element within the hive. This was our first visit to Zabie’s Neighborhood Cafe in Santa Monica, and the owners welcomed us as though we were familiar regulars coming in as we would on any other Sunday; you won’t find that in Phoenix very often.

Zabies Cafe in Santa Monica, California

Caroline and I both ordered the Whole Grain Pancakes but couldn’t choose if we wanted blueberry, strawberry, or banana, so we asked for all three, and that is what we got. Breakfast at Zabie’s was perfect, starting us off on the right track to enjoy our Sunday.

On the south side of the pier at Santa Monica beach

It was still too early to do much in L.A. – even in go-go Los Angeles. So there was but one thing to do, head on over to the beach for an early morning walk in the sand and surf. In a few hours, as the day warms up, this beach, like most others along the southern California coast, will fill up with worshippers of the sun. My preference is for a quiet walk on an uncongested strand where, for a moment, the beach is an idyllic island setting, and it is all mine to enjoy.

A stop sign with a sticker attached below the word stop, it reads, "Eating Animals"

Free parking is not always easy to find in L.A.; as a matter of fact, just around the corner from this stop sign that asks us to “Stop Eating Animals,” we saw our first parking meter that allows the use of a debit or credit card in addition to coins. We kept on driving into the neighborhood and found an empty parking spot free of charge. Approaching this stop sign, we saw a placard outside a small duplex advertising a two-bedroom unit for rent. I called the number to see what they were asking for, $2,400 a month; I choked. We pay less than a third of that in Phoenix – one of the main reasons we put up with our desert town.

Inside the Craft and Folk Art Museum on Wilshire Blvd in Los Angeles, California to see an exhibit by Jennifer Angus titled: All Creatures Great and Small

Years, it took years for Caroline and me to finally make the time to visit the Craft and Folk Art Museum on Wilshire Blvd across the street from the La Brea Tarpits. Every time we drove past this small museum, one or the other of us would sound off the reminder that one of these days, we need to stop in. Today was that day. On the second floor is where the exhibits begin, the museum typically hosts two artists or themes. For three and a half months, the second floor would be dedicated to a bug art exhibit by Jennifer Angus, titled: All Creatures Great and Small.

Inside the Craft and Folk Art Museum on Wilshire Blvd in Los Angeles, California to see an exhibit by Jennifer Angus titled: All Creatures Great and Small

When you walk into the main space, you don’t immediately recognize what you are looking at; it doesn’t even look all that striking from a distance. Then, as you approach and start to see the details of what makes up the exhibit, you are struck. You are looking at insects. Brightly colored and arranged in patterns or made up in scenes within the cases, filling in for what might normally be figures in a dollhouse. Extraordinary and fun.

The artist occupying the third floor was Ann Weber; her exhibit was titled Love and Other Audacities. Ann weaves together large sculptures created from found cardboard. We should have started up here as her work is really nice, but being overwhelmed by the exhibit a floor below, it was hard to change channels from shock and amazement to interest and subtlety.

On Wilshire Blvd in Los Angeles, California

From the museum, we needed to make our way over to the downtown area of L.A.

Wurstkuche in downtown Los Angeles, California - a hot place for an exotic sausage

Time for lunch on our unfolding perfect day. I read about Wurstküche on a blog some time ago. They have become somewhat famous and very busy. The line was longer before I snapped the photo, but then once in the lobby, it snakes through there before you arrive at the cash register and place your order. We split three sausages, the Mango Jalapeno with chicken and turkey and the Rattlesnake & Rabbit with jalapeno – this is one of their signature sausages, and it was yummy. The one sausage we didn’t really enjoy was the Vegetarian Mexican Chipotle. It was too spicy, and we love spicy, but there have to be other outstanding characteristic flavors besides just hot – this sausage didn’t cut the mustard. We also split an order of Belgian fries glazed in white truffle oil with two dipping sauces, the first was Bleu Cheese Walnut and Bacon, and the other was Chipotle Aioli. Caroline topped off her lunch with a rare find, a bottle of Aecht Schlenkerla Rauchbier from Bamberg, Germany – a smoked beer.

The 2nd Street Tunnel in downtown Los Angeles, California - made famous by a scene in Blade Runner

Over to 2nd Street for a drive through one of our favorite landmarks in L.A. – the 2nd Street Tunnel. If you don’t remember this sight, think Blade Runner, Terminator, and recently the movie Transformers. We have, on previous visits taken a moment to go over to Union Station, another location used in Blade Runner. One of these days, we’ll visit the Bradbury Building, where many of Blade Runner’s interior shots featuring J.F. Sebastian’s apartment were filmed.

A Royal Paulownia in bloom street side in Los Angeles, California

When you live in a desert, splashes of unexpected colors can be startling. We were meandering through the downtown area as we were not in a hurry to get to our next location. Along the way, we came across a bunch of Royal Paulownia trees in bloom – WOW. Our destination was Mitsuwa Marketplace at the corners of Centinela Ave and Venice Blvd. There is a Japanese grocery that also features four or five small restaurants around an open court, and a Japanese bookstore is near the entrance. We stopped here Saturday night with the hope of eating at Santouka Ramen, a highly rated and super popular ramen shop, but we arrived shortly before they closed. As we just had lunch and weren’t hungry, we wouldn’t be eating at Santouka today either; we were going back for Caroline to check the bookstore for their collection of Japanese craft books.

We had come back out towards Santa Monica and West L.A. because we had reservations for the eighth-row center at 4:00 p.m. at The Landmark Theatre on Pico Blvd for a showing of The Tree of Life. This and the Burmese food were the main reasons for our weekend trip to southern California. I was nearly certain that The Tree of Life would not play in Phoenix, or if it did, it might play in near-empty theatres for a week and be gone. As it turned out, the movie ended up playing in Phoenix for almost two months – who knew? Yes, it was worth it, driving to L.A. for a movie – we loved it.

Green Leaves Vegan Vegetarian Restaurant on Santa Monica Blvd in West Hollywood, California

After the movie, we took a drive through Hollywood. By 8:30 p.m., we were getting hungry again, but with so many choices of small, funky restaurants, it was hard to choose one. We had considered Korean in the Koreatown district but kept on driving, looking for something really different. Then, at 8:58 p.m. on a Sunday night, we spot this place called Green Leaves Vegan Vegetarian Restaurant on Santa Monica Blvd in West Hollywood. Drats, it’s 8:58. They’ll never seat us, but we’ll try anyway. Hey, no problem, come on in and have a seat – we are open until 12:00 a.m. Big frowns ensue for the city we live in because nothing is open past 9:00 p.m. on nearly any day of the week in Phoenix. I’ve stated this before on my blog: I am not vegetarian, Caroline is, but that doesn’t stop me from enjoying something different, and for most of the country, vegan and vegetarian is as exotic as finding the cuisine of central Africa. This place rocks, we split the Cha Cha Pumpkin – worth coming back for. The other dish is lost to forgotten memories, but it must have been good, too, because we both want to go back.

Now, this was a perfect day.

Off To Los Angeles

Yoma Myanmar-Thai Restaurant on 713 E. Garvey Ave Monterey Park, California

Up early in Phoenix, Arizona, for a 380-mile drive to Yoma Myanmar-Thai Restaurant in Monterey Park, California. Our first stop in California was just across the street at Shwe Minthamee, where we picked up some desperately needed Burmese ingredients for making salads that we fell in love with back when Little Rangoon was open in Scottsdale. Now well stocked, it was time for lunch. First up, we split a Lahpet Thoke. Laphet is the most famous salad ingredient in Burma (now Myanmar); it is pickled (fermented) green tea leaves. When these tea leaves are mixed with shredded cabbage, tomato, egg, and a mix of crunchy bits – including peanuts, roasted garlic, sesame seeds, and roasted yellow peas, we have the perfect salad – in our book. We had a couple of other items, but it was the salad that made our drive worthwhile.

For dessert, we visited Beard Papa’s, obviously very popular with L.A.’s Asian population. Beard Papa’s serves up “Fresh’N Natural Cream Puffs,” claimed to be the world’s best.

Shopping in Little Tokyo - downtown Los Angeles, California

Next stop was Little Tokyo in downtown Los Angeles. This was our first goofing-off mini-vacation this year, as I had to cancel any pleasure trips in order to focus on writing my book. The first shop, and really the only stop we were interested in, was the bookstore upstairs in this photo. It is called Kinokuniya, and rarely do we leave this place without spending a quick $100.

Shopping in Little Tokyo - downtown Los Angeles, California

Caroline spent a good hour looking through fibercraft books in Japanese – it is a Japanese bookstore, after all. Afterward, we took our time to walk around Little Tokyo.

Looking at the south-eastern edge of Little Tokyo in downtown Los Angeles, California

Coming out of Phoenix with our drab, conformist, and generic urban areas, it is always nice to visit a vibrant city center. We are looking at one of the corners of Little Tokyo; also in front of us is the L.A. City Hall in the distant background. A mile north is Chinatown, and adjacent to that is the Old Barrio of L.A. – where Los Angeles got its start. A few miles west is Korea Town, Little Saigon is over in Orange County, Little India is in Artesia, and Thai Town is over near Hollywood. Throughout the greater Los Angeles area, funky enclaves of culture thrive and give Caroline and me wonderful choices to choose from for entertainment and food compared to strip malls and drug stores on every corner out in the desert we live in. If you are wondering why I can complain about Phoenix while extolling L.A., we would live here in the City of Angels, except the cost of living would probably keep us as economic slaves to trying to maintain a small apartment.

Inside our tiny room at the Wilshire Motel in Los Angeles, California

Time to head west and check into our motel, one of our favorite motels anywhere – The Wilshire Motel. This tiny spot on Wilshire Boulevard on the way to Santa Monica is a cluster of cozy and clean bungalows just a few miles from the beach. The lady who operates the Wilshire always remembers us, even if it has been a couple of years between visits, although I don’t think we’ve ever gone that long between returns.

Caroline Wise walking on the beach in Marina Del Rey, California

With our lodging taken care of, we raced to the ocean and headed south through Venice to Marina Del Rey for a sunset walk on the beach. It was almost too late when we arrived as the sun had just dipped below the horizon, but we still had a short while to walk in the water and enjoy the late-day golden glow of the setting sun.

Ramenya on W. Olympic Blvd in Los Angeles, CA

Heading back towards our motel and about a mile roughly east is another Los Angeles favorite – Ramenya. Since our first visit when the line was outside the door, this small ramen shop has since gotten some serious competition, but we are still loyal and enjoy the variety of ramen on offer.

A bowl of steaming hot seaweed and tofu ramen from Ramenya on W. Olympic Blvd in Los Angeles, CA

This somewhat unappetizing view (I will not claim to be an exceptional or even mediocre food photographer) is a bowl of seaweed and tofu ramen. I opted for the spicy curry ramen. This ended our perfect day in Los Angeles after waking up at 5:00 in the morning over in Phoenix. It’s amazing what one can do with a little effort to get out and have some fun.

Zeebrugge, Belgium

John Wise and Caroline Engelhardt on the North Sea at Zeebrugge, Belgium

From that old black and white film we had developed, these photos of Caroline and I were taken while walking along the North Sea in Zeebrugge, Belgium – a favorite place of mine in winter. During the summers on the coast of Belgium, the crowds are heavy, the cafes full. But in the winter, the beach is empty, cold, and windy. The cafes that stay open year-round are mostly empty at this time. Black and white photography accurately captures the wintery gray feeling while strolling next to the dark black sea.

Do You Know How To Fly?

Our tent shrinking from the wind that is pushing it about inside the Nest at Treebones Resort in Big Sur, California

Where to begin? Last night, we arrived at the nest with wind gusts of thirty to forty miles per hour. Caroline burrito’d herself deep into her sleeping bag while I stood an unwanted vigil to the flap flap flap of our tent fly. Whenever I thought it was getting worse and the mad flapping accelerated, a brief respite would momentarily offer an absolute calm. In a quick second, where I had just enough time to tell myself that the worst was over, the freight train would plow right back into my ears. Flap flap flap would drum at five six seven beats a second. All I needed was a thirty-second pause in the vitriol of the wind’s lament so I might taste sleep. But as soon as the quiet returned, up in the trees, a whooshing sound arose to announce the re-approaching roar and another round of flap flap flap. The nest sits about six feet from the edge of a steep cliffside next to two large trees. The rain fly is tied down and secure; it is stretched taught, and still, the onslaught from the southeast tearing over the ocean three hundred feet below and racing up the cliffs pounds our temporary cocoon. The flapping becomes a staccato of nylon tent slaps. After a half-hour of this, I rest an arm on Caroline and speak her name over the growing noise; during a lull I hear the familiar sound of her sleeping breaths. I let her sleep, and I rolled over.

There’s a remote likelihood I fell asleep, but it was for moments that collectively could not amount to more than ten to fifteen minutes per hour. Around 11:00 p.m., the pauses in the wind became less frequent; when there was a short break, I recognized how accustomed I was becoming to the constant vibrations affecting the nest. I asked Caroline if she was having trouble sleeping, but my words fell on deaf ears, buffeted by the roar, whoosh, flapping, and howl of a storm that was becoming a gale. With each successive wave of hostility blowing down on us I entertained thoughts of what would the repercussions of the nest falling over be. What if the direction of the wind suddenly changed and was blowing us toward the ocean? Could one of these trees topple, and its root system dislodge the foundation of this hopefully firmly cemented nest? Sadly, an engineering study of this structure’s stability wasn’t attached to the frame for quick middle-of-the-night reference. Maybe the nest’s entire superstructure will act as a parasail, taking us aloft for a ride from six feet above the cliff side’s crest to sea level for some midnight surfing on the angry ocean. My mind reels through endless scenarios that the wind is none too shy to help facilitate.

Caroline Wise outside the Nest on a rainy windy day at Treebones Resort in Big Sur, California

I grab my headlamp and start inspecting tie-downs to ensure they are still holding fast. Then, a thorough look once or twice over the fly, looking for signs of ripping. This opens the question of what would be the likely situation if the fly were to rip to shreds exposing the flimsy tent to the full force of the storm. The tent is holding up perfectly so far. Then the rain starts in earnest at 1:30. It stops after a brief twenty or thirty minutes, but as it does, the wind takes on a new ferocity. My feet at the south end of the tent are being lifted and slightly bounced around, not enough to startle me, but this is curious. The sound is deafening; how does Caroline sleep? The tent that should be a foot from my face starts to make contact, slapping me as it is pushed in repeatedly by the wind. I roll over. Great, now the bladder joins the chorus of things keeping me from sleep. The wind bears down with renewed threat; the nest is vibrating like a tuning fork. The woven branches click and make increasingly worrisome noises that play to the imagination that the worst could happen. Once again, I inspect the tent and fly for damage, certain we are near the shredding point.

Looking south from the Nest at Treebones Resort in Big Sur, California

ROAR screams the blast of rushing air; we are in a gale. At 2:30, I reach out in earnest and stir Caroline from the depths of her sleeping bag to let her know I have to pee and that I’m having difficulties falling asleep. We agree we can’t open the tent and climb down the ladder into this maelstrom and dig in to try to sleep through this barrage – what else can we do? But now Caroline’s slumbering ignorance of the situation has been destroyed. After another half hour, Caroline reaches over, and with a near panic sound of urgency in her voice, she says, “We need to get out of here now,” and something about the Three Little Piggies and a Wolf at the fly. As quickly as she voiced her concern, a large gust pushed down so hard that our tent momentarily collapsed upon our faces, and for a second, I’m not sure if this was wind or the nest starting to break apart, the tent bounced back up as the wind-down throttles. I turned on our little hanging LED lantern, agreeing with emphasis that we needed to leave now. To be sure, there would be no doubt in our resolve; the wind pounded down a second time, wrapping us with a skin-tight layer of tent canvas and testing our fear of entanglement with a nylon straight jacket.

View from inside the Birds Nest at Treebones Resort in Big Sur, California

We put on what clothes we could and piled up everything else in the center of the tent, hoping to leave enough weight that we might still find the tent here in the light of day. Just this side of panic, we open the tent and brace ourselves as I start to open the rain fly. Ten wet steps down the ladder with only a headlamp lighting the blackness, thoughts that my rain gear will act as a kite are quickly put to rest as I reach terra firma. I need to focus my light on Caroline, who will climb down next; she attempts to zip up the tent, getting to the point of agitation as the wind whips the flapping materials, making finding the zippers difficult. She gets everything closed up and steps over the threshold and down a few steps before zipping shut the fly. We move as quickly as we can away from our cliffside adventure, feeling slightly defeated.

Ah, the discomfort of a cramped, cold car, yet we bask in the luxury of it. Even here, the wind continues to rattle us, but who cares? The heater is on, and I’m about to get some sleep.

Our guest book entry at Treebones Resort in Big Sur, California

Four hours later, we crawl out of the car and head for the lobby where we stop at the guest book and leave them an impression of our visit.

Dining room at Treebones Resort in Big Sur, California

Next up, breakfast and then our departure for the long drive back to Phoenix, Arizona. This will quite possibly stand out as one of the greatest New Year’s adventures of our lives, offering us great views, unique lodging, thrills a minute, all the beautiful landscapes one might dream of, and non-stop fun. Thanks, Treebones, for a great ride into 2011.

Morro Rock on the California coast

With nearly 11 hours of driving required today, do we really have time for a walk on the beach in Morro Bay? Of course, we do. We’re John and Caroline Wise, and our middle names are Ocean-Junkies.