Linda’s Seabreeze Cafe to Home

The Seabreeze Cafe in Santa Cruz, California

Another cracking breakfast at Linda’s Seabreeze Cafe in Santa Cruz, California. This little cafe has been a favorite since our first visit and was a required stop this trip to introduce my mother-in-law to the uber-tasty Tropical Waffles.

The Seabreeze Cafe in Santa Cruz, California

The waffle is an oat and cornmeal concoction topped with what must be close to two pounds of fresh fruit, pineapple, mango, banana, strawberry, kiwi, yogurt, and a toasted coconut-macadamia-ginger mixture – YUMMY. The place opens early at 6:00 except on Sunday when they open at 7:00. Don’t forget this is a cash-only establishment; besides that, you cannot go wrong making the Seabreeze Cafe part of your trip up or down the California coast.

Lighthouse at Santa Cruz, California

I should never lose the amazement created by days that began at the edge of the sea when I knew my head would take rest again in the middle of a waterless desert, but to add yet another wow factor in viewing a lighthouse at dawn, well, that is just otherworldly.

A lake off the highway somewhere in California

Okay, if a sea isn’t nearby to lend awe, I can easily settle on a big old lake.

Giant Sequoia National Monument in California

Diversity of views is what I’m after, but on a day with over 700 miles of driving before getting home, it might seem a bit silly to detour into the Giant Sequoia National Monument.

Jutta Engelhardt, Caroline Wise, and John Wise at Giant Sequoia National Monument in California

Sea, snow, and sand all in one winter day put smiles on faces, and what is more important than that?

Nut farm in winter somewhere in the central valley of California

These dormant trees are not walnut, almond, pecan, or citrus, and while my first inclination was to call them persimmon trees, I can’t be certain.

Calico, California

If we are passing Calico, California, we are only about two hours from Arizona; heck, at this rate, we should be home by midnight.

Alcatraz

Seagull flying to Alcatraz Island in San Francisco, California

We were able to dart in and out of Pergamino Cafe for breakfast because we were the first to be sat. We needed to be early as we were scheduled to be on the first boat to Alcatraz this morning.

Alcatraz Island San Francisco, California

Heading out on the early-bird ferry offered us the best opportunity to be on the prison island when it is least crowded and the quietest. We’ll hopefully make the evening visit someday because I feel that could be the best opportunity to gain a sense of the solitude that prisoners might have felt on the Rock many a year ago.

Alcatraz Island San Francisco, California

How strange is the dichotomy of emotions felt regarding decay? Some structures add to their gravity, and their history is magnified as they fall into disrepair, while others grow sad and tragic. My view of this likely has a lot to do with the function of the crumbling structure; the Dachau concentration camp and Alcatraz here were used to inflict pain and suffering on those who passed through their gates. On the other hand, when I see an abandoned and falling-down home, I feel sad tragedy as the lives lived here I’d like to imagine were good ones but came to a point when whatever they owned had to be left behind.

Jutta Engelhardt and Caroline Wise on Alcatraz Island San Francisco, California

If I were a better writer, I would have noted how my mother-in-law and wife felt about their time at Alcatraz, but as is often the situation, I’m wrapped up with my own senses trying to interpret what a place is.

Alcatraz Island San Francisco, California

Sadly, the private residences that once existed on the island have mostly collapsed, so other than peering into their shells and foundations, there will be no witnessing of how these people lived here.

Alcatraz Island San Francisco, California

As for how prisoners lived here, the structures are mostly visitable, but the sounds and smells that would have been as present as the bars and concrete are nowhere to be found. The kitchen in the distance looks as though it could get back to work with a minimum of work, while the dining area simply needs some extra tables, and it, too, could be put back into service. Heck, if the National Park Service were to bring in a concessionaire that served up prison food, I’d buy three plates of that gruel to enhance our time here.

Alcatraz Island San Francisco, California

I wonder if Al Capone walked these stairs?

Alcatraz Island San Francisco, California

Or maybe Frank Lucas Bolt slept here. Who was he? Back in 1934, a couple of months before this federal prison officially opened, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, wanting to prove to America how intolerant he was regarding homosexuals, transferred Mr. Bolt, who’d been convicted of sodomy, to the Rock. Ironic that Mr. Hoover was likely homosexual himself; maybe Frank and J. Edgar were able to have a private little thing here in isolation?

Alcatraz Island San Francisco, California

I’ve visited enough libraries to know how a university library differs from a small public library or how an antiquarian bookstore attracts a different clientele compared to a used bookstore specializing in romance novels. I see inmates in a concentration camp as innocent victims suffering in an atmosphere of intimidation, victimization, and impending doom, but here in prison, ruthless sociopaths would have been congregating who, after scheming how to take things from others for the majority of their lives, would have turned this place into a kind of party of depravity. I don’t think I can really ever imagine the harsh environment of the reprobates that occupied these cells and the guards that were required to keep them in order, as my emotional sensibilities lean more towards empathy for others’ pain and struggle than with those who take by force.

Alcatraz Island San Francisco, California

After a shameless night of lactose indulgence featuring gourmet ice cream, triple-thick milkshakes, and Captain Crunch with a quart of ice-cold milk, my wife’s doomsday prediction has finally come true – I actually did peel the paint off the walls, blew the lid off the can, and busted the porcelain throne, all in one movement. I am still trying to figure out what happened to the floor tiles. As for my anatomy, you don’t want to know. Oops, this is a picture of a prison cell toilet here at Alcatraz.

Alcatraz Island San Francisco, California

The lower cells must have been their own special type of hell that, although you could see the sky, you never saw the horizon, while those on the second tier had bay views. Today, those types of views command millions of dollars.

Jutta Engelhardt on Alcatraz Island San Francisco, California

This view of my mother-in-law behind bars was worth millions! Seriously just kidding, but it was funny, especially that I was able to talk her into making that grimace.

Alcatraz Island San Francisco, California

The prison yard where convicts could try imagining the seashore just out of sight but certainly within earshot.

Alcatraz Island San Francisco, California

Back in 1894, nearly 40 years before the federal prison here was built and opened, this was a military incarceration facility, and back then, the government felt it appropriate to arrest and imprison 19 Hopi men who were refusing to allow their children to be sent from Oraibi, Arizona, to an Indian Boarding School a thousand miles away to ensure their children were well trained in the ways of the white man through the policy known as “save the man, kill the Indian.” The tour of Alcatraz, by the way, makes no mention of these horrors committed against fellow citizens of the United States.

Alcatraz Island San Francisco, California

On an island in a cage within a cage, men with guns pointed at them were supposed to atone for their crimes. This type of isolation produced hardened criminals and has seemingly done little to dissuade those on the margin of civility from adopting the skills of social and economic integration. Yet, we go on treating men and women as beasts in order to create monsters so that a frightened population can better sense the protection a government claims to offer them.

Alcatraz Island San Francisco, California

Under the wings of the all-powerful, the controlled masses gaze upon symbols that assure them, like the sun that rises in the morning, that their protectors will forever be defending their ideals.

Alcatraz Island San Francisco, California

And if the symbols fail to guide you, we always have guns for extra persuasion.

Jutta Engelhardt and Caroline Wise on Alcatraz Island San Francisco, California

Jeez, don’t I know how to take an amazing moment of vacation and turn it into some societal lament where I refuse to take prisoners…yeah, I just had to play that. I almost forgot to mention that my mother-in-law is still wearing such a big smile because earlier, as we walked along the prison block, Jutta walked up to something on the wall and started laughing nearly hysterically, which brought Caroline and me over to see what captured her funny bone. She was reading the words on a red box that said, “Fire Hose,” well, her German mind looked at hose and translated it to pants, which is exactly what hose means in German. Fire pants were about the funniest thing she’d seen today.

Alcatraz Island San Francisco, California

Goodbye, Alcatraz Island, it’s time for us to go explore more of our freedom and to get out of San Francisco as other destinations beckon.

San Francisco, California

The corners of Kearny and Columbus mean two things: lunch again over at House of Nanking and a quick visit to City Lights Bookstore before leaving town. Then again, nothing is that easy.

Cherry Head Parrot in San Francisco, California

A wrong turn forces us up another street and from the corner of my eye, I spot an unusual site. In a small park stand, about half a dozen people stared into a tree, some with hands aloft. The object of their attention is a small flock of cherry-headed conures. These wonderful birds were featured in a film titled The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill. Seeing them was a moment of pure dumb luck. A friendly person shared some sunflower seeds with us that the birds clearly enjoyed. We had seen the trailer some time ago for the film but it never occurred to me that we might actually see them in person, let alone feed them. If you find yourself in San Francisco, keep your eyes on the sky for a loud bunch of green parrots weaving about overhead.

On the Pacific Coast south of San Francisco, California

Our drive down the coast is a short one at only 78 miles, but we turn it into a crawl. Who wants to sacrifice even a moment of the glorious sea? Motels and dinner are best enjoyed in the dark anyway.

On the Pacific Coast south of San Francisco, California

Turquoise, orange, red, blue, and tan, the colors of perfection until…

On the Pacific Coast south of San Francisco, California

…things turn dark orange with shades of gold and hints of blue.

Pigeon Point Lighthouse south of San Francisco, California

Our breakneck up-and-back trip already sees us going south. Here we are at the Pigeon Point Lighthouse for a quick look at the sunset before continuing on to Santa Cruz, where we’ll be staying the night. After check-in at our lodging, we’ll be right back out in a few minutes for dinner down in Capitola at Dharma’s Restaurant for some terrific vegetarian food; we know it’s good because it’s not the first time we have eaten there.

San Francisco

Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, California

After a short 242-mile drive north through the icy central valley of California, we arrived in San Francisco at noon, giving us plenty of time to visit the Golden Gate Bridge – an absolutely spectacular thrill and dream come true for Jutta. That might sound a wee bit hyperbolic, but remember that this bridge has been celebrated around the globe as an engineering feat that added a stunning visual addition to the city by the bay.

Jutta Engelhardt, Caroline Wise, and John Wise on the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, California

The weather was slightly warmer than down south, and the visibility was the best of any of our trips to Frisco.

San Francisco, California

This is the city where Caroline and I, with my mother-in-law Jutta in tow, are beginning the 14th year of our marriage – today is our 13th Wedding Anniversary.

Jutta Engelhardt and Caroline Wise on the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, California

We have walked to the halfway point on the bridge in sticking with our motto, “Always leave something undone, unseen, in order to draw you back to the special places.”

Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, California

The color of the bridge contrasts to the deep blue sky creating a design brilliance I can’t get over. The funny thing is, it looks red to me, and yet the color is officially called International Orange.

San Francisco, California

Coit Tower is in the distance as we make our way to the hotel we’ll be staying at tonight.

San Francisco, California

After checking into the Nob Hill Hotel, we took off for a walk in anticipation of our 7:00 p.m. dinner reservations this evening.

China Town in San Francisco, California

A leisurely walk through Chinatown fits the bill for finding entertainment in the form of sights one wouldn’t see in Frankfurt or Phoenix.

China Town in San Francisco, California

From diversity, the quality of life is amplified, which in turn adds to the cost of living. Just look at Anywhere, America outside of its biggest cities, and the price to take up residence is a fraction of what you’ll pay to live somewhere that art, culture, activities, great entertainment, and amazingly exotic foods are always on offer.

China Town in San Francisco, California

Things are getting quiet in Chinatown while they are probably hitting their stride over at Fisherman’s Wharf, but we’re not looking for crowds right now; we’re looking to make our way to a meal we anticipate will be extraordinary.

China Town in San Francisco, California

Our celebratory vegan dinner in honor of our anniversary was at Millennium, where we opted to try the Winter Citrus Menu. The three-course meal started with a blood orange & shaved fennel salad, followed by an heirloom cauliflower en papillote with a coconut-kaffir lime sauce. The third course was a choice between habanero-orange jerked tempeh with a sweet potato-coconut mash, roasted turnips & chantenay carrots, and a citrus-jicama salad or Meyer lemon bucatini made of seared maitake & clamshell mushrooms, sauteed escarole, white wine & Meyer lemon cream with crispy capers over bucatini pasta. Naturally, we tried both. Dessert was an assortment of satsuma mandarin, ruby red grapefruit, and blood orange sherbets with a champagne-vanilla bean anglaise sprinkled with candied macadamia nuts. What a great start to our 14th year this was.

Mozzarella

Jutta Engelhardt in Phoenix, Arizona

Having found wonderful fresh RAW milk, my mother-in-law and I embark upon making some homemade mozzarella. The milk comes courtesy of the folks over at SaveYourDairy in Queen Creek, Arizona, and while this milk is more expensive than what is now traditional milk, i.e., pasteurized and homogenized, I just feel better about using a natural product that for some 10,000 years was just fine the way it came. We made marinara the day before and will make dough for pasta when the cheese is finished. Cooking this way is quite time-consuming but the satisfaction is irreplaceable.

Happy New Year

Jutta Engelhardt and John Wise freezing at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico

Happy New Year from the Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge just south of Socorro, New Mexico. The first day of the new year began for us at 4:30 a.m. on a very cold 22-degree (-7c) windy morning for some bird watching and shivering.

Sunrise at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico

It was five years ago that we made our first visit to these lands next to the Rio Grande River, but it was March, and we’d learned that we missed the prime viewing season, so later that year, in the closing days of 2002, we returned and witnessed a phenomenon that struck at our heart and tear ducts.

Sunrise at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico

Now, here we are, sharing this experience with my mother-in-law, who was incredulous that we had to wake up so early to arrive at the refuge while it was still dark and oh-so-cold. But as the snow geese flew in from surrounding areas to congregate at this large frozen pond, she began to understand why the timing of being here was key.

Caroline Wise and Jutta Engelhardt at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico

While her face is obscured in her scarf, I can assure you that she’s as thrilled as her daughter. Her exclamations and gasps let me know that this was one of the greatest starts to a new year she’d ever experienced.

Sunrise at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico

And then sunrise happened and things just got better and better.

Sunrise at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico

Just the day before, this was a rippling pond, but overnight, a layer of ice formed, leaving the entire surface a slippery, frosty skating rink. This sure-footed sandhill crane made its way back and forth between small flocks of fellow cranes; maybe it was determining the warmer of the two groups.

Sunrise at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico

How are we so fortunate to be offered so much beauty in such a short amount of time in the first hours of the new year?

Sunrise at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico

This canal channels water from the nearby Rio Grande River into the wetlands of the wildlife refuge to maintain a healthy habitat for the wintering birds who have migrated to these southerly environs. For us lucky visitors, they reflect the beautiful light of the New Mexican early morning. The steam that arises here forms delicate ice patterns on plants, and little waterfalls spill from locks while birds float along their waters amongst the overhanging grass. All this works to enchant those who brave the cold to visit this refuge on an early winter morning.

Rio Grande River near Bosque del Apache in New Mexico

The aforementioned Rio Grande is the lifeline of these lands and the signal that we are leaving the area.

Somewhere in Western New Mexico

Never content to leave perfect alone, we have other plans further down the road as we point the car towards Arizona.

Off Highway 12 in Western New Mexico

The further west we go, the closer to home we get.

Catwalk Recreation Area in Glenwood, New Mexico

We are in the Gila Wilderness Area and are already on a trail along Whitewater Creek. Of course, we need to stop and smell the flowers or plants, whatever presents itself for inspection.

Jutta Engelhardt and Caroline Wise at Catwalk Recreation Area in Glenwood, New Mexico

Can we really ever have too many reminders of those we’ve shared great adventures with? Ten years ago, I would have said my mother-in-law was offering up a half-hearted fake smile; today, I believe it is coming from genuine enthusiasm and the knowledge that she knows she is going to explore the extraordinary with us.

Catwalk Recreation Area in Glenwood, New Mexico

This is the attraction we are visiting in this small corner of New Mexico, the Catwalk Recreation Area, which allows us to walk right over Whitewater Creek, running just below our feet. From here, we’ll focus on our return to Phoenix but what a great way of closing out one year and bringing on another.

Last Day of the Year

Cafe Pasqual's in Santa Fe, New Mexico

Cafe Pasqual’s here in Santa Fe, New Mexico, was where we were supposed to have dinner last night, but the weather had other plans for us, so it goes. With so much ice and cold in town and not wanting to encounter more snow before the day is out, we’ll be leaving far earlier than planned. As for Pasqual’s, breakfast can be breakfast, but it’s their exquisite New Mexican cuisine at dinner that draws us in, maybe another time.

Interstate 25 heading south in New Mexico

Snow mushrooms dot the highway as we make our way south.

Interstate 25 heading south in New Mexico

I wonder if people who experience this snow thing every season are as enchanted by it as Caroline and I are. I can admit that New Mexico is right on with its state motto, The Land of Enchantment.

22 Degree Sun Halo near Albuquerque, New Mexico

Approaching Albuquerque, we entered a heavy patch of fog, but as we emerged, we were greeted by this spectacular 22-degree sun halo. Not wanting to stop on the freeway to take a proper picture, Caroline grabbed the wheel, and I threw the camera out of the window into the freezing air to snap a couple of shots. This is the one that turned out okay.

Interstate 25 heading south in New Mexico

With the sun being blotted out you can bet my nerves grew brittle at the thought I might have to drive while it’s snowing. In Phoenix, most of us do poorly when it starts raining.

El Camino Family Restaurant in Socorro, New Mexico

I’ve probably said it a thousand times before, but one can never grow tired of El Camino Family Restaurant. Normally, there are colorful spheres on the center spire in the top middle of the sign; I wonder why they are gone.

Bosque del Apache near Socorro, New Mexico

Good fortune remains on our side as the weather cooperates for this earlier-than-expected visit to the refuge; we weren’t supposed to arrive until tomorrow morning.

Bosque del Apache near Socorro, New Mexico

That’s a Northern Shoveler duck. This aquatic cutey with the spoon-shaped bill has a great scientific name, the Spatula clypeata.

Bosque del Apache near Socorro, New Mexico

If we were real birders, we might be able to tell you what kind of sparrow this was, but I can’t find precisely what type it is, so it’s just a sparrow for now.

Bosque del Apache near Socorro, New Mexico

The Northern Pintail duck just doesn’t give a …

Bosque del Apache near Socorro, New Mexico

This nearly lone leaf, still clinging to its branch, shivers in the cold air here at the Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge, where we are spending the last day of the year and the first day of the New Year.

Bosque del Apache near Socorro, New Mexico

The idea of drinking ourselves into a stupor, ending a year in a haze, and beginning the next feeling as though the past year smacked you upside the head is peculiar to me, to say the least. My New Year resolutions are simple: every day is a holiday, see something beautiful at least once a day (besides my wife), and help as many people as I can in whatever little way that might make their day, an hour, or minute just a bit better.

Bosque del Apache near Socorro, New Mexico

We must be doing something right by the universe as we are yet to have a bird poop on us. Karma.

Jutta Engelhardt and Caroline Wise at the Bosque del Apache near Socorro, New Mexico

Here we are on the last day of the year, ending on a beautiful note with the hope that tomorrow begins in beauty, too.

Bosque del Apache near Socorro, New Mexico

Tomorrow morning, we’ll be standing right about here for some aviary fireworks.

Jutta Engelhardt, Caroline Wise, and John Wise at El Camino Family Restaurant in Socorro, New Mexico

We could have eaten elsewhere, especially considering we’d eaten lunch here earlier, but I’m not fooling anyone. If we’re in Socorro, we’re eating at El Camino Family Restaurant. Of course, I had the steak Tampico and Caroline the chile relleno plate. I have no recollection of what Jutta had as once at El Camino; I’m blind to the world. This is how we closed out 2006.