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Posts tagged "california"

US West Coast – California

California is worth a visit, or even two, if there is a good excuse. I had the perfect excuse: a wedding of a very good friend made me decide what my long holidays in the year would look like: another road trip along the West Coast, adding the Grand Canyon to the equation, which was the big miss of my previous visit.
West Coast
The trip started and ended in Las Vegas for a simple reason: very cheap tickets. There we took the car and drove to Los Angeles (A), a Cinema and TV town: there we visited the Walk Of Fame, looked for some good views of the famous Hollywood Sign, and drove around the Beverly Hills’ mansions, ending in the Santa Monica Beach, where we met the Pacific Ocean which would be our companion for the next days.

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We drove North in the Highway 1, one of the best scenic drives in the world. The southernmost part of it is quite famous and is densely populated (in comparison with the rest of the road), being Malibu the most famous area thanks to the TV shows. We stopped in Santa Barbara (B), where we slept that first night.
The next day was long day on the car with beautiful views in every corner. We headed to Carmel-by-the-Sea (F), the richest town in California, and one of the surfers’ paradise, which was ruled by Clint Eastwood, but did several stops before.

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Sea Lions like to strand in beaches in big groups. One of these beaches is located in Piedras Blancas (C), and it is always fun to see these huge animals fighting and sunbathing.

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One of the next milestones in the road is the Bixby Bridge (D), a beautiful piece of engineering, built in 1931 in a wonderful environment.

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The great discovery in this trip was the Pfeiffer Beach (E), a hidden treasure that is now a must in this route.

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After Carmel, our next stop would be San Francisco (G). Well, I would say a mall near San Francisco (a must when US dollar is cheap), and then San Francisco downtown. San Francisco is always nice to visit, not only because I had the chance to meet Fabio after too many years, but also because it is an attractive city to walk around. Our first stop was Twin Peaks, where one can see the city that would host us for the next couple of days.

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During these days, we took a guided tour around Chinatown, where we learn a few interesting facts about the city. The big increase in population took place in 1848/9 with the Gold Rush: from 300 people, the population grew to 25,000 citizens, and only 300 of them were women! The Chinese came also after the gold promises, but did not count with what was approaching. From 1882 to 1943 (61 years!), the Chinese Exclusion Act was in place. This Act stated that no Chinese could become American citizen, and they could only own grocery stores or laundrymats.

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San Francisco is synonym of the Golden Gate bridge, the most iconic bridge in the world, and which is sometimes hard to see it complete due to the fog… not this time, though. In fact, this year we explored a new viewpoint of the bridge and the city.

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After San Francisco, we headed to the wedding venue: Camp Navarro near Mendocino. This camp in the middle of a forest hosted the most hipster wedding I have ever lived, and we could enjoy the American way, with the conversations around the bonfire while having a sugar shot in form of marshmallows and chocolate.

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After the wedding we flew back to Las Vegas where we took another car, crossed the Arizona desert and arrived to the Grand Canyon (I), where we enjoyed one of the most amazing sunsets you can have. The sun changes the some time before the sunset. I have tried to describe it several times, but I prefer to leave it to the pictures.

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Between Las Vegas and the Grand Canyon, you can detour to the Historic Route 66 (J), that linked Chicago and Santa Monica. “Historic” is there because since 1985, Route 66 was mostly replaced by an Interstate highway, although it is being revitalised lately by nostalgic people and tourist-avid businesses.

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Our last stop before Las Vegas was the Hoover Dam (K), another impressive historic construction in the Colorado river, between the Nevada and the Arizona States.

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California Roadtrip – Part 3

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After Los Angeles, we had a 2-day drive north to San Francisco through the Highway 1, which is the Coast Highway. We started the journey with a small incident, as we got a flat tyre when trying to leave one of the beaches in Los Angeles. Anyway, we just “lost” a couple of hours as we had to get a new car in the airport. In our way north, we stopped in the Malibu wharf, and in Santa Barbara, a nice town, with also an impressive wharf, being the oldest in this coast. We stayed in San Luis Obispo, a student city very well located, and less expensive than the coast towns.

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The sixth day started in Morro Bay, a small fishing town, with a volcanic cone in its bay, and with a long tradition of surfing. We continued following again the Highway 1 north, enjoying the amazing oceanic coast, with a beach home of a couple of hundreds sea lions who go there to breed and change their skins. To make it (even) more interesting, the coast at this part became hillier, and there are a couple of viewpoints worth to stop and enjoy. Our next stop was Santa Cruz, famous for surfers clothes, but whose main attraction is the Boardwalk, which is an amusement park on the seaside.

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And we finally arrived to San Francisco, and we started with the very basics and essential: the Golden Gate bridge. I had the impression it is far apart from San Francisco downtown, which was correct, but we were lucky to be staying next to it and we could see it several times. Well, “seeing” might be too optimistic, as we only saw it partially covered by the fog one day, and fully covered the day after. The locals say summer is the worst time of the year to visit SF as it becomes quite chillier and the fog is more frequent. Crossing the bridge by bike is one of those musts San Francisco has, and combining it with having lunch in Sausalito (one of the best burgers place according to local recommendations is there) and taking the ferry back to downtown makes a great roundtrip, and gives you the chance of seeing Alcatraz from a closer distance.

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But San Francisco is not only about the bridge, it is also about the skyscrapers in downtown, and the hundreds of hills in all directions which makes you confused about where you are heading to, and which are also quite fun to drive up or down (a bit tough to walk, though!). San Francisco is also close to the well known Silicon Valley, home of most of the new Internet and technology companies, like Google, or Apple, and we also payed a geeky visit there.

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I fully recommend to visit this area, and if possible, make even a longer trip to either visit more things (nature is all around, vineyards too) or enjoy more the coast towns, where life passes by slowlier than in the big cities.

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California Roadtrip – Part 2

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Las Vegas is an interesting place to be once in a lifetime. A city in the middle of the desert, which has based their economy in taking advantage of a difference in the law among States in the US (gambling is only permitted in Nevada) since 1930’s.

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An amusement park for adults, they use as a motto: “Do whatever you wouldn’t do at home”, and they complete the picture with tematic hotels, full of casinos, restaurants and shops, with constant light making you feel it’s always nightime, in order to make sure your appeal to consume is as high as possible. I am glad to say that I got benefits from the small amount I “invested” in the Roulette.

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We drove to Los Angeles the fourth day. We had been told Los Angeles was quite deceiving, and hence we only programmed half day there.

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A quick visit to the Walk of Fame in Hollywood Blvd, uphill to Hollywood Hills (where the famous sign is still presiding), and then down to Beverly Hills to check the huge houses of some well off film industry professionals. Impressive.

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California Roadtrip – Part 1

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Based on the excuse of visiting a friend living in San Franciasco, we organized a 10-day trip around California and hitting Las Vegas as well. A lot of miles (they don’t use kilometres over there) with what they consider a “too small” car (Ford Focus, Kia Soul), including nature (Yosemite Park, and the Central Coast), desert (Death Valley), craziness (Las Vegas), big cities (Los Angeles, San Francisco) and coast towns (Santa Cruz, Santa Barbara, etc).

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I will split the trip in three different posts to make it more readable, and make the pictures also viewable without falling asleep. The first part covers Yosemite and Death Valley, the second will take from Las Vegas to half of Central Coast, and the last part will cover the second part of the Central Coast to San Francisco.

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The first day we visited Yosemite. It is one of the famous National Parks in United States and its fame is very well deserved.

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The park surrounds the Valley, which is the result from the presence of a glaciar 10 million years ago, and which now is full of trees, and surrounded by steep granite walls, where waterfalls find their way out (or down).

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The day after it was time to drive to Las Vegas. Long drive through the desert in Nevada State, and also a quick visit to the deepest point in North America, in Death Valley (which you may guess it is not full of life).

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I liked the experience of being in the middle of nowhere for real. We crossed just a couple of small towns, with very long distances among them, and which made you reflect, how it would be living over there, especially when we looked to the steady outside temperature over 40ºC.

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