March 4th - San Diego
We arrived on Sunday morning at the Escondido RV Resort, travelling from Alpine California only 1 hour away. Good thing it was only a short distance as it was a horrible rainy day to travel. By the time we backed into our spot the rain had reduced to just a slight shower so we did not get soaked getting set up. This is the first time we have been plugged in for 3 weeks so lots of laundry, washing walls and vacuuming from all of the dust storms we have experienced over the last couple of months. Our house on wheels needed some major TLC.
Before leaving the restaurant we made arrangements to come to Bill and Kathryn's house for dinner on Wednesday and hopefully the weather would co-operate to be able to eat outside at their pool area.
The beautiful
entrance to Bill and Kathryn's gated community. |
Kathryn with her fabulous appetizer tray. |
Bill pouring us some of their families wine. |
Now here is a very romantic looking car, an E-type Jaguar, the first sports car that started off Bill and Kathryn's love of cars. Totally original and kept beautifully restored.
"Victoria" |
Bill reminds us so much of Ray's Dad, Bill in his expressions, mannerisms, and soft spoken nature. It was great to meet him. |
Our attempt at a "Selfie". |
March 5th - Temecula
On our last day in San Diego at the Escondido RV Resort we decided to take the short trip up the road to visit Old Town Temecula. What a beautiful little touristy town. Lots of old buildings and eclectic shops. As we strolled though the town Ray was snapping pictures. They have piped music speakers attached to the street lights. Lots of construction happening and at the same time the towns workers getting ready for the big hot rod show this weekend. I am glad we came on Wednesday before all of the hustle and bustle.
After a
hour or so of walking around it was time to go for lunch. We had seen a craft
brewery called the Garage Brewery on the way into town so we decided to go back
there for lunch. Great flatbread pizzas and good beer and very reasonably
priced. Our pizza was a 12" that we shared for $8.95.
Ray, Doug and Terri |
Friday, we decided to take a trip up the mountain to a quaint little town called Idyllwild which is nestled in the San Jacinto mountains. Doug drove us in their truck and Ray relaxed in the front seat while Terri and I sat in the back and yakked some more. The write up about this town is "Set among tall pines, sweet smelling cedars and Legendary rocks. The town has kept its "small town" atmosphere. Locally owned shops and restaurants are all you will find here." It sure reminded us of what a small village in the Alps would look like.
The road up to the town is very windy and steep. You climb up from 1600 feet at Hemet to about 5400 feet in Idyllwild and the Tahquitz Peak at 8846 feet tall. The drive up to Humber Park is even steeper and probably went up to about 6000 feet.
Dour, Terri and me at the beautifully carved town entrance sign. |
Last week when we had 2 days of rain in Escondido, they had 6 inches of snow up here. The ambulance still has chains on.
Tree (in) house. They built the house around the tree. We noticed
that most properties only cut out the exact number of trees that they needed
for the house footprint. |
A couple of sweet old trucks! |
March 8th - Pool Party at Golden Village Palms RV Resort
March 11th - Lake Success, Porterville CA
We departed Golden Village Palms RV Park in Hemet on Sunday by 10:30 am and headed
up to I-215 to I210 which got us around LA and hooked up with the I-5 north
towards Bakersfield. Wow is that portion of the I-5 road bad. After all of the
gravel roads we travelled last summer, this was the first time that the lamp which is stuck to the dash actually fell off and broke from the road
vibrations. We decided to stay at a Walmart parking lot south of Bakersfield to
spend the night as it was too far to get to Lake Success with Ray's comfortable
amount of driving time before his back really protested.
Monday morning we were up early and on the road by
9am travelling down Highway 99 to Lake Success. What a beautiful drive, through
grassy fields, and oil patch with those donkey things going up and down and
lots of orchards growing, olives, oranges, lemons and grapes.
Oil Donkeys |
Fields of Wildflowers |
Lots of orange orchards |
Just
before Porterville we turned right on Highway 190 to Lake Success, a Corps of
Engineering campsite. We arrived at the lake after a short drive and were very
pleased with the view. Very few campers here at this time of the year. 50amp
service with water and a sani-dump for $15/night (1/2 price because we have an
America the Beautiful pass). Ray and I were all set up by 11am and sat out
enjoying the sunshine. Early afternoon another Phaeton pulled in beside us, Jim
and Pat, so we enjoyed a lovely happy hour outside and shared lots of RVing
stories. The only "ding" about this place is that we do not have any
cell/internet coverage.
First view of the campsite |
View out our front window |
Big sites |
Picnic area |
Water shortage |
We stopped on the way up at a small day use recreation area called Lower Coffee Camp, right on the Tule River. It was very pretty so we decided on the way back that we would stop there for our picnic lunch.
Back at camp, I made Ray the promised cookies and then we sat in the shade enjoying the view and throwing the chuck-it for Freya. It was about 84 degrees out but there was a slight breeze so quite tolerable. The neighbours Pat and Jim came over for happy hour. We managed to scrounge enough left over wood in the campground for a fire when we arrived so when the sun set and it was cooler out we started it up and Pat and Jim came over with a little bit of wood as well. A lovely day, and evening spent with new friends. I did not take any pictures so Pat sent me a couple so I will recognize them in the future. Ha. Ha. They live outside Sacremento and have a spot in Friday Harbor on San Juan Island.
Jim and Pat LaRondelle |
March 13th - Del Valle Regional Park, Livermore California
We left Success Lake Thursday morning and took some back highways and eventually ended up on the I-5 towards Patterson, CA. To get to our destination we took the I-580 west to get to the Del Valle Regional Park. I did not take many pictures as the windshield was covered in squashed bugs.
Lots of
vineyards in Livermore (more than 40 of them) |
Large generous sites. |
Last night I spotted a flock of wild turkeys on the grass on the other side of our road.
As all
the park operators said they were fairly empty this time of year until May, we
did not make a reservation at Del Valle Regional Park.... ooops. We could only
stay one night. They are fully booked every weekend since February with the
great weather. What now. Oh well. With no internet signal at the campsite I
used the GPS to take us to the closest Walmart so we could regroup. It must
have been because today is Friday the 13th! Ray and I both got on our computers
and as we know where we are meeting my cousins for dinner Saturday night in
Dublin just off the I-580 we scoped the adjacent areas for an RV park. We
decided on Tradewinds RV Park, a Good Sam park in Vallejo CA. We are about a
hour from the restaurant but there is a ferry 5 minutes away that can take us
to Fisherman's Wharf downtown San Francisco, so I guess it is a win for us. The
park is condo camping (our big slide is only about 3 feet from our neighbours
bedroom!) but as we have internet and are close to where we need to go so it
works.
March 14th - Tradewinds RV Park, Vallejo, CA
This was
the right-up on the RV Park.
(This is
a picture from their website.) Note the picnic table is for the next
site! Talk about, shall we say false advertising, in a big way!
March 15th - Napa Valley and Dinner with Family
Yesterday we determined Napa Valley is only a half an hour away, so we decided to take a drive through the countryside. We left early, at about 10am, as it was going to be a hot day. First we stopped at the Farmer's Market here in Vallejo. It was one of the best produce markets I've seen. Unfortunately I did not need very much for the next few days, but I did buy fresh bread, eggs and flowers.Spring
has sprung and the workers have begun the tending of the vines. |
The
pathway to the special wine tasting rooms and special events. They have old
wine crushing equipment displayed. |
Public wine tasting room |
Lots of choices including amazing desserts. They even have prepackaged plates and cutlery for you to buy if you have forgotten to bring your own.
We decided to take advantage of the weekend barbeque and shared a stone fire roasted flatbread pizza. It tasted fantastic. I went into the wine tasting room and one of the staff pointed out the chilled wines that would go best with the pizza, a Sattui Family Chardonnay. Yumm. Freya, Ray and I sat in the shade eating our pizza, and enjoying the atmosphere.
Next time we are in this area and have more time we are going to take this train. This is the write-up regarding the train.
"The
Napa Valley Wine Train provides a relaxing three-hour, thirty-six mile
round-trip journey from the historic town of Napa, through one of the world's
most well known wine valleys to the quaint village of St. Helena, and back.
Guests aboard the Wine Train enjoy a freshly prepared lunch
or dinner inside a fully restored 1915-1917
Pullman Dining Car or 1952 Vista Dome car as
they pass the vineyards and wineries of Napa Valley."
After an enjoyable couple of hours we headed back to the motorhome so that Ray could relax and put some ice on his back, as we had dinner plans with my San Francisco cousins that Ray and I have not seen for about 20 plus years. A couple of them we had not seen since our honeymoon 38 years ago.
From
left around to right. Rob, (Wendy's husband) Lin and Sue-Ann, Pete and
Kim, Emily, Kate and Wendy, Deb, Jeannie and Aunt Tuyet. |
What well-behaved
little girls, good job Wendy. |
The best thing about family is that even though we have not seen each other in a long time it did not feel that way. Thanks for dinner Rob and Wendy. We had a great time at Frankie, Johnny and Luigi Too's, Italian Restaurant in Dublin, a 40 minute drive away from us and where Wendy lives in Fremont. Hope to see you all in the near future rather than 20 years!
There is a ferry that takes an hour from where we are (Vallejo) to downtown San Francisco Fisherman's Wharf ($16/person each way), very inexpensive way to get a boat cruise. We had hoped to take the ferry today, but after a long day yesterday, Ray is in need of another day of rest before we leave tomorrow heading north so we will put that on the bucket list as well.
March 18th - Oroville Wildlife Refuge
Holes from nut grinding |
Acorn orchard |
"In 1967 Lake Oroville was created by the Oroville Dam, at 770 feet the nation's tallest earthen dam. The lake conserves water distributed by the State Water Project to homes, farms and industries int he San Francisco Bay area, the San Joaquin Valley and Southern California Oroville's facilities provide flood control, smog-free generation of electric power and recreation."
These next two pictures are from the picnic area above the road down to the dam.
Picnic area and boat launch, above and below |
Floating campsites with a slide |
Floating outhouse |
Back home for lunch and we sat outside in the shade of the coach and watched the river and all of the birds. There is even a bird of prey on a nest across the river from us. We think it might be a golden eagle.
Here is a picture of a rainbow and beautiful sunset
Tomorrow
it is time to head further north, so today will probably be the last day for
shorts until May!
From the internet this area is described as follows:
"As you drive east out of California's Central Valley into the foothills of the Sierra Nevada, the landscape gradually changes from flat, irrigated fields and orchards to rolling pastures, which in turn give way to oak woodlands and eventually to dark green conifer forests. Just north of Oroville, however, the landscape changes abruptly, with one of northern California's premier wildflower gardens rising dramatically out of a sea of blue oaks, interior live oaks, and foothill pines. This wildflower garden flourishes on a plateau of ancient volcanic rock.
About 30 or 40 million years ago, a sheet of thin, runny lava flowed southwestward from somewhere in northeastern California, past Oroville and on as far as the Vacaville area. Several more such flows occurred, one on top of the other, until a layer of dark volcanic rock several hundred feet thick accumulated. Then other geologic processes took over, and the Central Valley was formed, obliterating much of the hardened lava. Along the edges of the Central Valley, though, and in the northern Sierra Nevada mountains and southern Cascades, there are still remnants of this ancient lava flow, including the plateau just north Oroville, called Table Mountain."
Very windy road |
When we reached the top of the mountain this is the view that opened up to us. The flowers were very colourful. Some of these pictures Ray took with his fancy camera and some of them I took with my Canon Elf.
We carried on further up the road and to our surprise there was a whole parking lot of people (including portapotties) with people scrambling over the fields.
Next it was off to see the advertised covered bridge. It obviously was a replica as it contained all new wood.
Ray off doing his thing again |
Before heading home we took a quick drive through the Orville Refuge Area:
Picnic area |
The dam mid pic creates the refuge area and the other dam we just visited is just above that. |
Valley River Center, Eugene - 2015-03-22 08:37
Anyways the fog cleared and the sun came out after we were set up. I was a little worried as when we stopped a whole bunch of police cars showed up on the trail in front of us. After about 1/2 an hour we figured out that they were taking a homeless man, his bike and trailer into custody. It required 2 police cars, 1 police surburban with a plainclothes officer and then a pickup truck to collect the bike and trailer. The old guy seemed pretty harmless for all of this fuss.
Here is a picture of our "camping spot".
Our view of the walking path. |
There is a bridge called the Greenwood Bridge from this walking/biking path over the Willamette River to the Maurie Jacob Park.
Greenwood Bridge |
The forcasted rain started in the wee hours of the morning, but by 7am it stopped. Glad we had a chance to get these pictures yesterday.
Oregon's Famous Covered Bridges - 2015-03-22 15:52
While Ray drove us down the highway in the coach to Eugene yesterday morning, I did a little online research and found out about Oregon's historical covered bridges. I'd no interest shopping in this mall, so this morning while the forecasted rain held off till this afternoon, we decided to take a short tour of the bridges near Cottage Grove, 20 miles south of us. With me driving, Freya loaded in the back and Ray navigating with his online instructions printed, off we went. The weather held and we were able to see 6 covered bridges and one suspension bridge advertised as a covered bridge. For more info go to CottageGrove.net (Covered bridges)
The Currin Bridge was originally built in 1925 and
was rehabilitated in 1995 and spans 60 feet across the Row River.
Lake Dorena Reservoir |
The Chambers Railroad Bridge is the only remaining covered railroad bridge in Oregon. The original bridge was built in 1925 to bring logs to the J.H. Chambers Mill in Cottage Grove. The original bridge was 78 feet long but recently had been rebuilt as it almost blew down in 2010.
We did not have this but what a deal! |
Ray ordered the above ... wood-fired halibut. It was fabulous. I ordered the grilled fresh cod with
fresh shrimp and crab in a white wine sauce. Yummm. We would definitely go
there again. www.mcgrathfishhouse.com
March 25th - Champoeg State Park, Oregon
Getting a little sunshine before the rain comes again. |
The large field behind us for people ... no dogs. |
Here is the huge pet area though. |
After we
were all set up we took Freya for a walk along the river. There are some
beautiful houses on the other side. Pictures a little dark though due to the
cloudy days.
Yesterday, Ray and I did a little shopping and checked out the Woodburn Outlet Mall. We both needed some shoes and that is the only location with an actual Icebreaker store where Ray likes to get his Moreno Wool Shirts at a greatly reduced price.
Today, Wednesday, I walked the loop this morning to see who was leaving the first come sites and we were able to move to another lovely site a short distance away, site B9 and by 10:30 we were all set up again with 50 amp and water.
Pavilion built in 1918 |
Mother's Cabin |
Flower gardens left over from the flooded out townsite. |
March 27th - Evergreen Air and Space Museum
Once
again Ray here at the keyboard this time visiting the Evergreen Air and
Space Museum in McMinnville, Washington. This museum houses the iconic
Spruce Goose and a large number of vintage air and space craft.
These
are two of the four engines on one side of the plane. It is 17'6"
from one tip of the prop to the other tip.
28 Cylinder 3000 Horsepower engine. |
Coming through the WWII collection I stopped in my tracks.... there was a B-17 Flying Fortress, the mainstay bomber of the US air force in Europe. For $4 I got to have a tour of the inside of the plane.
This was on my bucket list as my Dad served in the RCAF during the conflict crewed in B-25 Mitchell bombers manufactured in Canada.
William Verner Kyle on enlistment He was a wireless airgunner crewing a gun turret and responsible for radio communications
|
Bomb Rack |
Side Guns |
Forward Turret |
B-24 Liberator |
F4U Corsair |
"M.A.S.H." Medi-vac Helicopter |
ME-109 |
ME-262 1st Jet Fighter |
P-51 Mustang |
Saturn IV Rocket |
Sopwith Camel |
Spitfire |
SR-71 Blackbird |
Titan IV Rocket |
"Wrights" 1st Airplane |
March 28th - Lucky Eagle Casino
Lots of grass to throw the ball for Freya. |
March 30th - Judy and Milt in Tacoma
We enjoyed a very slow start and left the Lucky Eagle Casino shortly after 11 a.m. We only had an hours drive to Ray's sisters place in Tacoma where we are going to "mutchdock" in their driveway for 2 nights. Because we were not expected until 12:30 we stopped at a Rest Area and Ray gave Freya a good bit of exercise with the chuck-it so she would be ready to have a quiet afternoon while we visited. Judy had a delicious lunch ready and waiting for us and we spent the afternoon getting caught up with each other's adventures.
For dinner we tried to go to a "Triple D" place but there was an hour wait for a table so we went back to the Tide's Tavern that we had enjoyed going to last fall with them. Pretty busy place on a Saturday night but fortunately we only had about a ten minute wait for a table.
Saturday morning Judy called us at 9:15, come on over, breakfast is ready! What a deal, quiche, fresh fruit salad and mimosas. Great start to the day. We blabbered again for some time and before we knew it, it was 1pm so we decided to drive to Dash Point State Park and see if their were campsites that would fit us for another time. Nope, very small, shady and damp. The bunch of us elected for a late lunch/early dinner so we tried out a brew pub called Harmons Brewing Company. A great venue, good beer and great food. (Ray and I had enough leftovers for dinner too!)This pub is in Tacoma's University and Museum District with lots of eclectic shops and eatery's. Being Sunday the stores were closed though. It reminded us of the Yale Town area in Vancouver with old plank floors, exposed ceilings and exposed brick inside the pub.
March 31 - Tulalip Casino and visiting family in Lynnwood.
Ray's cousin Nicky and her husband Mike worked yesterday and did not get home until after 6:15 and 7pm respectively and still managed to provide us all with a barbecued steak dinner with salad and a scrumptious dessert that they hauled across the street to her Mom's (Mary) and Katie's where we had dinner. Talk about organized. Thanks a bunch guys. Unfortunately we missed Ray's other cousin Val as she had to work nightshift at the hospital.
Mike, Katie, Nicky, Deb and Ray |
Aunt Mary and Katie |
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