Travel plans and dreams inhabit my thoughts every waking hour of each day; I relive past explorations and imagine future journeys.

Thursday, March 09, 2006

The Beachcombers

Mar 8 & 9, 2006.
We have a favourite place – one that we return to and will continue to as long as we can. It’s Sea Perch RV Park south of Yachats (pronounced Ya-hats) and north of Florence, Oregon. This day and the next are to be spent in our favourite place.

It was overcast when we awoke in North Bend but not raining and we had no rain on the 65-mile drive north to ‘our favourite place’. Our last visit was a year and a half ago in midsummer when we had glorious sunshine and blue skies with an occasional bit of wind. We, along with our daughter and her family spent a week flying kites, building sandcastles and beachcombing.

This visit was different. We said back then that we’d love to come to this spot in the winter storm season and a major storm, the worst in three years according to the TV news, hit us shortly after we arrived. We nudged Maggie into her solitary site only about fifty feet from the ocean and were thrilled to discover, when plugging her in, that we had all the comforts - cable TV and free Wifi. We extended the slides, levelled with the push of a button and Voila! Let the storm begin.

Within the hour, the storm attacked the coast violently. We huddled inside glorying in the spectacle of the wild and churning sea. The wind gusts shook the motorhome and blew under the canopy over our long slide – thump, thwack, thwack, THWACK, THUMP – it sounded like we’d be sucked up into the tempest like Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz. So we retracted the slide and then felt safe.

The ominous dark olive ocean, with tide so high it seemed to be approaching our motorhome, was a boiling cauldron of foam. Gulls flying into the wind made no headway and stood still in the sky – then suddenly, the wind would catch under their wings and they were swooped away on a wild ride. They’d do it over and over again. The crows weren’t as happy with the blustery weather. They grouped on the grass, necks hunched low so their heads were scrunched tight into their bodies. It was a thrilling afternoon, watching raw nature from the warm comfort of Maggie.

About 4:30pm, the horizon started to brighten and the wind abated. The light grew and blue patches appeared in the sky. Here was our opportunity to get out and walk on the beach, but do you think we could budge Caesar? “Not a chance!” he seemed to say as we urged him. So we went without him clad in multi layers of clothes – sweat shirts, rain gear, hoods and our lovely ‘duck shoes’ and we fought the bracing wind, clambering across rocks and driftwood onto the cement-hard sand. The sound of the crashing surf was deafening. A gull had caught a large crab and was pecking at it voraciously. He flew off as we approached but watched so he could return. The poor crab, on its back, was still alive- its legs moving weakly, trying to get up I suppose. So we hastened away so the gull could return and put the crab out of its misery.

As I poured a glass of wine and prepared dinner with the most amazing view in the world right in front of me, I pondered if it could get any better than this.

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

Redwood Country

March 6, 2006
We were in no hurry to leave the KOA in Willits. Fernie was playing online poker before I got out of bed and made an additional $15. I am beginning to believe that this man could make a career playing poker. He always treats me to a nice meal out with his winnings so I’m a big supporter.

It was drizzling rain and misty as we pulled out but within the hour the landscape got brighter and the sun forced its way through the clouds and dappled the green hillsides. Random patches of blue appeared in the sky and multiplied compressing the clouds to insignificance. Deep in the thick undergrowth, the gnarled and mossy tree trunks dripped with moisture beneath the forest of evergreens as we curled up the smooth and fast highway 101. The trees got larger as we progressed along the Redwood Highway. Eagles, casting immense shadows over the road, soared overhead as if the cessation of the rain had brought out their prey. In the mountain passes, cliffs had given way sliding a murky mess of rocks and trees across the highway. Water was still gushing as we passed. The road crews in their bright yellow rain gear scraped and shovelled and loaded the muddy morass into large dump trucks, which deposited the debris on sidings along the way. Rivers had overflowed their banks; the raging waters capturing and razing anything in the way. In one spot the river had eradicated a long stretch of the old highway below.

The gargantuan redwoods began to appear, sometimes creating a wall of trunks beside the road. Squeezing through the redwoods with Maggie meant occasionally waiting for the oncoming traffic to pass and stealing a bit of their lane. Tourist inspired retailers offered ‘Chain-saw carvings’. They paraded the finished pieces along the roadside; there were gross depictions of Indian chiefs, grizzlies, polecats, totems and the piece de resistance – the jowly hunch-backed and ubiquitous Bigfoot. (I thought of my friend Bob – if he’d been with us, he wouldn’t have been able to resist - Or perhaps the ‘burl tables’ would have been his artistic choice.) Tourists were ensnared by signs starting ‘World-Famous …….’ or ‘The Largest ………’ or ‘Believe it or not ……..’.

We reached our intended destination in the early afternoon. Trinidad is a quaint seaside town just north of Eureka, California. The casino Cher-Ae Heights is located on a high bluff beside the ocean and the welcome mat for Rvers was obvious when the ‘RV’ signs guided us to a beautiful, level, paved spot with a view between the trees of the ocean. There were drinking water outlets provided and within minutes of our arrival, a van arrived to transport us to the casino, which was really within walking distance.

Trinidad is a town with a population of just over 300 and the town hall advertises a ‘crab fest’ on Friday night; I wonder if they would welcome travellers. We stopped in at Katie’s Smokehouse, in the back of a house. The owner rattled on about the history of Katies, which had been there for seventy years even though she and her husband had only owned it for seventeen years. She told us that Trinidad is the most westerly city in California and its population are fishermen, for crabs mostly. The town is high above the rocky coves where waves crashed violently and the fishing boats bobbed crazily off the end of the rocky bluff. We bought some smoked oysters and smoked salmon for our evening’s repast. An atmosphere such as this called for a ‘fish’ lunch and Fernie treated with his poker winnings – it was fabulous with a glass of chardonnay to wash it down in a quaint little harbour side cafe.

The weather became quite blustery again and we quickly got back to the car between walks to the beach and driving down the winding road with breathtaking views at every turn to the fishing dock. Fishermen with weathered faces like the ages-old deeply creviced bark of the redwoods, were clad in oilskins and sou’ westers and tinkered busily with their gear. Sea gulls the size of eagles lined the railings of the long jetty, not budging as we slithered between them. Another large group of gulls, shrieking piercingly while waves tossed them about, fought over the seafood debris tossed overboard from the fishing boats.



An evening of Texas Hold-em for Fernie while I relaxed in Maggie with Caesar was the plan. The rains returned violently, drumming on the roof as I happily tapped away at my laptop while watching a bit of TV, my little electric heater warming my feet under the table. Suddenly the heater stopped and the TV went black but I could hear that our portable generator was still running. I donned my duck shoes and Fernie’s Australian Dryzabone oilskin coat and hat and ventured outside. The water was gushing underneath the motorhome in torrents and had, I figured, splashed the electrical connection and shorted the system out. No knowing what I should do, I just shut the generator down and hustled back inside already dripping wet. I put the onboard generator on for a while and everything worked fine but it’s so noisy that Caesar and I snuggled up in bed with a book and our 12-volt TV – we were quite content. We knew that Fernie might be gone for several hours as he was in a tournament. When he returned, he yelled from the door in an accusatory tone “What the heck happened?” It only took him a couple of seconds to fire the generator back up and restore the power – quite magically!

March 7, 2006
The rain had run its course and we awoke to a beautiful day. It got us going early – well, early for us anyway. Through the trees, I spied a broad and bright rainbow arcing across the rocky promontory. I ran for my camera – it was so spectacular. Then we ventured on.

The highway exuded a steaming mist as the sun sucked up the vapour from the soaking wet pavement. Patches of mist clung to the trees and high above, as the clouds rose, the mountaintops appeared cloaked with glistening white snow. We’d round a corner to a long expanse of beach with surfing-size waves smacking the shore, emitting a salty spray that blurred the seascape into a scene from an oil painting. Suddenly, a squall hit and hail bombarded Maggie; the road ahead was slick white and we slowed to compensate but it stopped as quickly as it started.

Travelling in Maggie is a delight for the passenger – me! Our high position gives a birds-eye view rivalling that of the front seat of a tour bus. We see over roadside hedges and walls glimpsing sights we’d never view from a car. A perfect example – behind a high barrier, an expanse of meadow was visible, a large herd of elk relaxing comfortably in the long grass. We would never have known they were there from a car.

The sun barely penetrated the redwood forests but would sporadically highlight the soft spring green of the sparse but newly leaved undergrowth beneath the regal giants. I’d spy surreal clearings deep in the forest, which would take me back to my childhood belief in fairies and say “Oh, I wish we could pull Maggie deep into the forest and stay for a while”. Fernie would just ignore my dreamlike mind-set in his pragmatic way.

The sun continued to shine into Oregon. Bright yellow gorse covered the banks and hillsides reflecting the sunshine with a golden glow. The redwoods behind us, the trees were scrubbier and windswept and the occasional smooth copper-trunked arbutus (Americans have another word for arbutus but it escapes me) was interspersed. Numerous portions of the highway had been washed out and road crews were hurriedly repairing and repaving. We were really fortunate not to have been driving through in the storms only days ago because the highway must have been closed.

As we rambled, we chose so many houses as places we’d like to live; they were always perched high on the cliffs in sheltered nooks overlooking sandy coves with crashing surf bordered by rocky headlands. But we decided life was better in our rolling home with different outlooks every day.

The retail outlets differed from California – galleries, bookshops and when they did sell Myrtlewood and giftware, it was displayed much more tastefully. Further along, sand dunes materialized – I wonder why only certain spots have dunes. Isn’t it windy all along the Pacific coast? I guess I need to do a little research on the internet.

We reached our home for the night early in the afternoon – Fernie thought he’d driven a long day – we clocked 194 miles. It was in North Bend, Oregon – the Mill Casino - a great spot on Coos Bay with designated RV parking. Sadly, they’re building an RV park with hook-ups due to complete in the summer, which probably means ‘no more dry camping’. We had a wonderful feast of seafood chowder with smoked oysters and salmon from Katie’s in Trinidad, sourdough bread and chilled chardonnay. A free wifi connection was the coup de grace especially since Fernie found that the poker limits were way too high at The Mill so online poker beckoned.

Sunday, March 05, 2006

And the Winner is……!


March 5, 2006
The storm that came in the middle of the night had been forecast so we weren’t surprised but in the morning, when we heard on the news that the roads we’d travelled yesterday had got lots of snow, we were so thankful that we’d been forced to plough on through.

Leaving Hopland, north through Ukiah to Willits, the rain poured down and the wind blew in huge gusts. It reminded us of home. We agreed that we had left Arizona too soon and yearned to be back in the desert. However, today is an important one for me – The Academy Awards! I love them and have never missed them, so I opened up our wallet, pushing aside the moths and actually paid for a KOA campsite, which had all hook-ups including cable TV – Yeah! And free Wifi for Fernie to play online poker. The rain continued hard and the wind blew and our little home in the trees was so cozy. While I watched the awards, Fernie made a cool $52 – that more than pays for this campsite.

No Room at the Inn!

March 4, 2006
I had it all planned. We’d drive north of Sacramento and leave the interstate to go west on a side road to Brooks, California where the Cache Creek Casino is located. It’s one of the largest and most modern casinos and looks very new. However, security told us to pull out of the spot we chose and to go back up the hill to the area assigned for RV’s. We wound through several levels of parking lots and a security guy on a bike pointed further up saying “don’t worry, the bus will pick you up and bring you down to the casino”. So up and up we went, leaving the blacktop behind and onto gravel. Still no RV’s, so we drove further up onto a rough dirt track where a sign proclaimed “Overflow Parking” and there we spied a couple of parked RV’s on the side of a muddy hill. One of them had tried to level his unit and its front wheels were in the air. A construction site behind the lot meant trucks were travelling through constantly and huge industrial garbage containers sat in the middle of the pothole filled RV area. We didn’t feel the usual casino welcome, so we ventured on.

We were heading for the coast eventually so carried on through Highway 16 and 20 to the next casino – Konecti in Lakeport, which sounded so lovely in the book description. What a dump! And they CHARGED for their campsites - $30. So we ventured on.

I had promised Fernie a short drive but his temper was getting short now. I told him there was one more casino only 18 miles further near Hopland. As we entered Highway 175, we noticed a warning sign “No vehicles over 39 feet long”. Fernie said “we’re only 30 feet, so we’re ok”. I reminded him that the car and hitch would add about 15 feet and insisted we unhook and I drive the car through ahead. Thank goodness I did – the road was the most precarious I’d ever seen and there had been many washouts and slides in the days previous and the edge of the road was crumbling away in many places with precipitous drops beside it. Then it climbed over 3,000 feet and there was snow – luckily not any left on the road. The thirteen miles we travelled seemed to take forever. I would pull over every so often and wait to see Maggie appear in my rear view mirror scared that it might not. When we arrived at the casino, Fernie greeted me with “I need a drink – a strong one”. He related how the stress-filled drive had left him weak and how he almost hit a deer on descent and the deer ran up the steep slope beside the road, lost its grip and slid back down onto the road narrowly missing the motorhome again.

I ran over to the casino and asked if we could stay overnight and they said to stay as long as we wanted. We found a beautiful spot, set up and I made Fernie a very strong Margarita.

It’s Cherry Pink and Apple Blossom White

March 3, 2006
The storm came in the middle of the night – 5 am to be precise. The rain pounded the roof and the wind howled and then the hail came down. We snuggled under the covers and hoped Maggie would survive it unscathed and she did. By the time we got up at 8 am, it was all over and we could see blue sky creeping towards us.

It was only a short drive – about 40 miles – into Fresno on a secondary highway, which greeted us with orchards encroaching onto the road from both sides. The apple blossoms were spectacular and the ground was covered with fallen petals like a light dusting of snow. The bright pink cherry blossoms were just beginning to open and the pale pink of the almond trees were well on their way. It was a patchwork of colour.

Having missed seeing our friend who lives in Fresno when we drove south, we decided to try again. We didn’t have her phone number so about 10:30 am, with trepidation, I knocked on her front door. We left Maggie and Caesar in a Walmart parking lot and unhooked our tow car. The door opened and I recognized ‘B’ right away even though I hadn’t seen her for ten years of so. It took her a couple of minutes after I introduced myself to figure out who I was though. I immediately explained that we were just passing through and didn’t have her phone number and asked her to come out to lunch with us. It was so last minute but she said she could be ready within the hour. While she was getting ready, we drove to a nearby commercial area and hunted WIFI with quick success. When we picked her up, ‘B’ came out with a little vase and a gorgeous fuchsia-coloured camellia for us. We had a happy get-together for a few hours, swapping travel tales and reminiscing, and we were on our way. We drove a couple of hours and let Walmart in Turlock provide a haven for the night.

Friday, March 03, 2006

The Navigator – part 2

March 1 (the day we got Fred and Max in 1980)
A storm was forecast for March 2 and 3, so we decided we’d better get out of the LA area before it started. We especially wanted to clear the area called the Grapevine, a 4,000 foot pass between San Fernando and Bakersfield, that expected snow.

I poured over the maps trying to devise the perfect route to avoid the chaos of Los Angeles in our more than 40 feet of transportation. I ruled out the picturesque but treacherous highway 74 over to 215 after the torturous day we spent transiting the Anza-Borrega desert. So I asked D&D for their advice and we decided on I5 to 605 to 210 and back to I5. This route circled the worst of LA’s freeways but didn’t add too many miles.

However, it was so stressful – sometimes 16 lanes of speeding traffic and huge wildly handled trucks each side of our wide-berthed Maggie, leaving only inches of space each side. If Fernie had sneezed, we’d be toast. And the highway was so rough; Maggie rattled and groaned, our teeth hurt from clenching them and Fernie’s shoulders were numb from clinging on to the steering wheel in a death grip. It took two hours to clear Los Angeles and reach the northern mountains.

The Walmart in Bakersfield was our home for the night and we settled in comfortably and went to bed early.

March 2, 2006
A ninety mile drive through magnificent orchards of blooming apple and cherry trees took us to the Palace Indian Gaming Centre and Casino in Lemoore, CA, south of Fresno. It’s a monstrous sprawling structure in the middle of flat farmlands and they are in the process of enlarging it by building a huge hotel. It can be seen from miles away. There’s obviously money to be made by running a casino. So how do all those people I know ‘always come out ahead’ when playing the slots, which are the largest income generator for the house.

We parked Maggie in a beautifully landscaped corner of the parking lot, with not another soul around us, double-checked with security that it was ok and were told “stay as long as you like”. A battered silver catering truck pulled up at the side of the road with the insignia ‘El Toro Tacos’. A pretty young Mexican woman jumped out and leaned up to the window to kiss her husband goodbye. She was in uniform and ready to put in a shift at the casino as a waitress or cleaner. He pulled around the corner into a widening of the road and opened up the side of the truck forming a countertop, set up a couple of tables surrounded by chairs and within a few minutes cars were pulling in to dine on his tacos. I think he stayed open as long as his wife was working. It was a very touching to witness that hard-working young couple making their way in their new country. I commend them.

It was laundry day and the casino had to wait for Fernie’s money. We found a Laundromat after trying to understand the directions received from a little Mexican woman who didn’t really speak English even though she obviously understood it. While Fernie washed and dried, I drove around the corner until I found WIFI – and got a connection almost right away, did our banking, cleaned up email and did a little surfing.

It started to rain later on – not much and not long. I was happy to snuggle in with my books, some TV and a bit of blogging while Fernie braved the casino. They had a great poker room segregated from the rest of the casino and non-smoking, so he played a few hours of Texas Hold-Em. A cheerful face appeared at the door about three hours later – he was up $80 and was ‘ecstatic’ - in his words.

Back to Humidity

Feb 27-28, 2006
After the trying day yesterday with those perilous mountain roads, we elected to take the most major highway to the coast through Oceanside, then north on I5 to Dana Point and Doheny State Beach, near San Juan Capistrano. We had reserved a couple of nights right on the beach with the surf crashing on the sand right in front of our motorhome – what a view! Mind you, they made us pay for it - $30 a night and no services but it was worth it. We chose Doheny because of its proximity to our friends (D&D) who live in Laguna Niguel.

We barely got settled when the rains came. We hadn’t seen rain since January 9th (50 days) so you’d think we might have welcomed it but we cursed it expecting it would last for days – Vancouver style. But – California style, it stopped by the following morning and we awoke to a glorious day.

Waking to the smell of the ocean and the crashing of the waves was a thrill – it always is. I stumbled out of bed and threw back the curtains. Our huge front window framed the fabulous sight – hundreds of gulls, soared and squawked and massed on the wave-beaten beach, the tide was in, the sky was azure with nary a cloud and Catalina Island could be seen silhouetted on the horizon. WOW!

Couldn’t wait to get out and walk on the beach – but a big sign with a picture of a dog and a slash through it “No dogs on beach” ruined that. We would feel so guilty going without Caesar, so we walked through the tropically vegetated park and along the strand beside the beach. The rain from the previous night had extracted the most amazing aromas from the tropical plants and flowers; the intensity of the perfumed air made me giddy. I felt all my senses were heightened.

As usual, we drove around searching for unsecured wifi signals and as usual, found several almost right away. It boggles the mind to try to estimate exponentially how many wifi spots are in the country – billions? It never takes me long to find one in any built-up area, particularly in an area of small business or commerce. I wonder why anyone would go to Starbucks or other pay Wifi spots.

Early afternoon, D&D picked us up. It had been twelve years since we’d seen them but we started chattering as if it were yesterday. They took us for a tour of the area – Dana Point, Laguna Beach, etc. The properties along the coast are superb, but many of the homes are humble abodes while being worth millions. At one small park on a high bluff overlooking a sandy cove that sheltered about a dozen homes, they told us Diane Keaton lived in one – quite fitting that quirky woman would not be in a mansion in Malibu. California (like Mexico) does not allow the beach areas to be owned – they must remain public lands. I find it amazing that in a city full of billionaires they can’t own the beach in front of their houses – but because I’m not a billionaire, I approve. Next time I’m in Southern California, I’ll tuck my folding chair and beach umbrella under my arm, pack a picnic lunch and maybe dinner complete with wine and beer and hike down Malibu Beach until I figure I’m in front of someone famous’ house and plonk down and get comfy. Oh – and I won’t forget my binoculars. It must drive them crazy if that’s what people do.

There are some great little shops and galleries in Laguna Beach that beg us for more time – next time, I guess. We went back to D&D’s for drinks, high up in an aerie of a perch in the mountains above Laguna Beach. As we entered their front door, the eagle’s eye view of endless sky and sun-kissed ocean arrested our attention – it was other-worldly (some would say ‘heavenly’). I don’t think we’d ever visited Southern California at this time of year before because I’d never seen it so green – the hills were a velvety emerald. We finished the lovely day with dinner at a little Austrian restaurant called Mozart – crab cakes (are they Austrian? I don’t think so) for me that were better than Emeril’s – a perfect day.

I think I could easily live in this oceanside area just far enough away from LA that has no smog.

The Navigator

Feb 25-26
Our destination was Dana Point just south of Laguna Beach. I, as navigator always try to choose routes we haven’t traversed before. Hence, I zeroed in on highway 78 connecting to highway 76 west across southern California. They are two lane highways, which we usually prefer to freeways but we weren’t prepared for what was to come.

As we left the four-lane highway on the west side of the Salton Sea, we immediately started to climb at a gentle grade on a fairly straight road. The desert changed every mile or so at the different altitudes. No cacti at the bottom but sequentially – first a few Joshua Trees, then some blooming Ocatillos and yuccas, and what looked like huge aloe plants with about eight-foot stalks protruding topped with bright yellow blossoms. They were lovely.

Before we entered the Anza-Borrega Desert State Park, we passed through Ocatillo Wells vehicular recreation area. What a beehive of activity – RV’s of all kinds parked here and there all over – most of them those ‘toy-carriers’ that are so popular with young men. They are 5th-wheels with a small living area in front and large vehicle storage in the rear, carrying their ATV’s, dune buggies, moto-cross bikes and every conceivable ‘sand-manoeuvrable’ vehicle. They roared over and through the dunes, along the water-gouged gullies, kicking up dust storms and they raced, revving their vehicles loudly on the sandy flats. It was Sunday and they were getting ready to leave for home so they would swerve dangerously onto the highway in front of us, their youthful testosterone at its highest level after a weekend of fun and beer. They drove their huge 5th wheels as fast as if they were still in their ATV’s and I’m sure thought that we (ol’ grandpa and granny) were a real nuisance, so we pulled over periodically to let them roar by. Some would lean out their windows and yell “thanks Pops”, others would honk their approval and some would just speed on by.

It got more difficult to pull over as we got to the mountains and entered the Anza-Borrega Desert Park. The road narrowed and curved with no shoulders and we travelled with steep cliffs down to deep valleys on one side with sheer rock face right to the edge of the road on the other, allowing no room for driving error. The road wound precariously mile after mile and I’m sure Fernie cursed the navigator but he handled it with great skill while I white-knuckled it through. In spite of the terror, I did enjoy the absolutely beautiful scenery. Around about the summit, the desert was filled with a virtual forest of red-blooming ocotillos, a glorious sight. As we came across the mountains, we left desert behind and trees started to appear, getting thicker as we descended. We suddenly emerged into the tiny hamlet of Julian but it was twisty and turny and we couldn’t find a place to pull over our 40+ feet of motorhome and tow-car. Such a shame because it looked to be an artsy community full of coffee houses, quaint shops and restaurants.

The highway continued to snake until we reached the Pala Casino about five miles east of freeway #15. We had travelled almost one hundred miles through those narrow, twisting roads and the driver was exhausted. However not too tired to go and play a little poker in the casino ----- or so he thought. It’s a massive and upscale resort casino attracting such stars in concert as Toni Braxton, Johnny Mathis and Michael Macdonald and the table limits reflected this. There was no Texas Hold-Em poker room and the Pai-gow tables lowest limit was $25. There were 75 varied tables and it would have been almost impossible to snare a seat. The patrons were mostly Chinese and they were obviously not turned off by the high limits. Oh well, we had a nice Asian dinner and toddled back to Maggie and Caesar and spent the night playing cards.