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Summer Fun Along the Southern California Coastline Road Trip
December 27, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
Last time, we cruised along the Northern California Coastline; now it’s time to rev up your Road Trip Planner and zip along the southern coastline to complete your own California Cruisin’ Dream Trip.
We left off in one of my favorite areas, Big Sur. Simply put — and the main reason to include this in your road trip planning — Big Sur offers stunning views. It’s that stretch of highway where land meets sea in a jaw-dropping way because the Santa Lucia Mountains rise like colossal sentries from the Pacific Ocean.
I recommend staying on Highway 1 for an unforgettable coastal road trip. This way, your Road Trip Planner will include highlights like hiking at Limekiln State Park, and treasure hunting at Jade Beach, one of the few places in the world where you can find quality Jade strewn about like pebbles.
Settle into your road trip with a scenic drive along the Cabrillo Highway till it turns into the San Luis Obispo North Coast Highway. Soon you’ll find San Simeon, home of the opulent Hearst Castle. Hearst Castle is the palatial estate built by newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst. It’s one of the largest of historic house museums in the U.S. and well worth the ticket price for the informative tour.
From here, suggested places to add to your road trip planner are Morro Bay, San Luis Obispo, and Pismo Beach (a popular ATV camping spot because of all the sand dunes).
Now here’s where I’ll recommend cutting over to Highway 101 to discover a California city with a decidedly Danish twist, Solvang. I found it utterly charming, with stores offering delicate lace and handmade quilts, Danish cuisine in quaint restaurants, and a European flavor to the buildings lining the main streets. Of course, you’ll see the ocean again once you head into Santa Barbara, a quintessential California coastal city.
Below Oxnard, you’ll find the sexy city of Malibu, full of opulent homes on the lolling hills and beautiful bodies on the beaches. Be sure to enjoy the Santa Monica Pier as you continue south. It’s a fun place to spend the evening. But you’ll definitely daylight to people-watch the myriad of characters found at Venice Beach.
By now, you’re in the thick of Southern California, a region where sunglasses, shorts, and flip-flops are the main attire. Another well-to-do city is Newport Beach, worthy of inclusion in your road trip planner. A delightful surprise on my last trip south was the Dana Point Harbor, one of the prettiest harbors I’ve come across in my journeys. Nearby, you’ll find San Juan Capistrano, another great cultural stop, this time with a Spanish twist, as you stroll the grounds of the California icon, Mission San Juan Capistrano.
If you want to taste the salt air & be completely surrounded by water, then add to your road trip planner a stop near Newport Beach and hop a ferry to Santa Catalina Island & explore the appealing city of Avalon. This is a popular cruise stop destination so you can enjoy glass-bottom boat rides, take a trolley car up to some lush gardens, or enjoy snorkeling to the left of the pier (on the pier, facing land).
Now it’s San Diego time, the biggest southern city before you hit the Mexican border! There you’ll find a thriving city with distinct areas like Little Italy, the Gaslamp Quarter, and Balboa Park. Include in your road trip plans a fun side trip by driving to an island, compliments of the San Diego-Coronado Bay Bridge. You’ll easily spot the famous Hotel Del Coronado, a sprawling white and red-roofed resort, which housed Presidents, movie stars & tycoons in its illustrious past. From there, scoot along the Silver Stand Highway just for the sheer enjoyment of cruising a highway flanked by water on both sides. For even more fun, enjoy a sunset gondola ride and pretend you’re in Venice, Italy! From there, you’re less than 5 miles from the Mexico border with San Ysidro being the southernmost community.
So there you have it. Between this blog and Cruisin’ The California Coastline Road Trip – Part I, you’ve now hugged the California coastline from stern to bow, complete with side-trips only the locals know about. To do this road trip justice, I’d recommend at least two weeks. But however you fill your Road Trip Planner, you’re guaranteed awesome photos, spectacular sunsets, and a lot of cool cruisin!
To plan your next , please use the Tripwiser ultimate, which leverages the collective wisdom of thousands of users worldwide, and makes road trip planning interactive and fun.
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Denver is Located Near The Southern Rocky Mountains
December 20, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
The City and County of Denver is the capital and the most populous city of the US state of Colorado. Denver is located in the South Platte River Valley on the High Plains just east of the Front Range of the Southern Rocky Mountains.
Denver is often named the Mile High City because it is exactly one mile above sea level.
The Rocky Mountains get a lot of snow every winter but Denvers climate is mild. The city sees approximately 300 days of annual sunshine and when winter storms do occur, the snow melts fairly quickly. Summers are warm and comfortable while winters see a lot of snowfall and can get quite cold. Summer temperatures are highest in June July and touch 80. An average of 15 inches of rain annually. The ski season is from Nov to March. January is the coldest month with temperatures dropping to 30.
The people of Denver are friendly and their attitude and dress are usually casual.
The area offers plenty of outdoor recreation, including 200 parks in the city and 20,000 acres of parklands in the local mountains, making it the largest park system in the USA. It has a thriving arts and cultural scene. It is passionate about sports and is a popular destination for visitors.
There are many excellent museums and art galleries providing interesting information on the history of Denver and a range of other exhibitions. Some of the major museums and art galleries include the Childrens Museum packed with hands on exhibits designed especially for young, the Colorado History Museum a comprehensive museum documenting Colorados varied history, the Denver Fire fighters Museum home to historic fire fighting equipment; the Denver Art Museum containing many galleries showcasing a wide range of artwork from around the world.
The Denver Zoo is an 80acre facility located in City Park. Founded in 1896, it is owned by the City and funded in part by the Scientific and Cultural Facilities District. The zoo is accredited by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums. It was the most popular paid attraction in the Denver metropolitan area in 2005.
The United Kingdom and Colorado have a longstanding relationship that predates Colorados statehood in 1876. Today the UK is one of Colorados most important international partners. It is one of the largest investors and foreign providers of jobs, in Colorado. The UK is also a major market for goods and services produced by local companies.
Douglas Scott works for and is a free lance writer for
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Idyllwild is Easy Mountain Getaway in Southern California
December 15, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
While living in or visiting Southern California, a trip to the mountains is closer than you might think. The San Jacinto range offers a stark contrast to the warm, arid climate just a few miles away and, for that reason, places like Idyllwild have become popular getaways for people who want a taste of the four seasons.
Not too much of a taste, mind you. This is a great place to try out that four-wheel drive and see if it’s worth the extra money you paid for it. The fact is Southern California residents, for the most part, don’t need four-wheel drive.
So up these weekenders go to the windy roads and steep ridges that take them 5,000 feet, 6,000 feet and higher above Hemet, the nearest city of any size in this part of Riverside County. The community of Idyllwild is set in amongst the pine trees that Mother Nature has combined with oak and spruce to create a powerful allure for people who grow weary of what passes for trees in Southern California’s cities.
During winter, most visitors are more than happy to return to warmer climes after their weekend dalliance because shoveling snow is just not one of the things Southern California residents are programmed to do. Many of them think it’s better to get just enough exposure to the snow and frigid temperatures to appreciate why they are willing to pay the high price of living in sunny Southern California – and then go home.
That’s why about three-quarters of the residences in Idyllwild remain vacant most of the time. It’s a city of vacation cabins – most now going for more than $300,000 – and at any given time there are only a few of them being used. Only about 2,000 hearty souls choose to reside on “The Hill” as Idyllwild has become known over the years even though as many as 50,000 visitors on a weekend day can make it tough to find a parking spot anywhere close to downtown Idyllwild. Yet no one seems deterred – people flock to Idyllwild because it’s so close and yet so different.
The “Yosemite of the South,” another common nickname for Idyllwild, has grown up sporadically over the years. There have been a few attempts at major resort developments in the area – ski hills and golf courses were part of some plans – but nothing big has really taken hold. So today you find a mountain village with a few earthy folks willing to brave the elements, and then a whole bunch more of those weekend vacation warriors who turn around and head for sunny L.A. in time for work Monday morning.
There are no big resorts — the accommodations range from smaller motel-type units to “executive’ vacation homes. There are several bed-and-breakfast or country inns as well as cabin motels offering mini-cabins mixed with several others on the same property.
For our recent trip, we chose to rent a three-bedroom “cabin” about three miles outside of Idyllwild. It really was as large as a house, but with its cedar interior, two fireplaces and a free-standing wood stove, this house gave every bit the impression that it was in fact a cabin. It was well furnished with a complete kitchen and all dishware and utensils, a living room with a comfy couch, lounge chair and satellite TV and plenty of deck space to gaze out at the spectacular – albeit slightly obstructed – view of the mountainsides and valley below.
Muir’s Mountain Vacation Rental set us up with a cabin that was exactly what we wanted – a true mountain retreat that was nicely separated from any nearby cabins on wooded property that gave us a true feeling of seclusion. Built just in front of a massive boulder, we hiked just a few yards higher and could gaze out on views that stretched all the way to the Pacific Ocean. The views from inside the cabin were great, too, and enhanced by the ample use of picture windows on the upper two floors.
On this particular trip we were content to spend much of our weekend at the cabin. We spent a lot of quiet time reading and just soaking up the atmosphere, or playing with our five-year-old, choosing to leave the television turned off so we could focus on being a family more than we sometimes do at home.
Even though this was a January trip, we visited Idyllwild at a somewhat atypical time when there was little snow on the ground and no need to crank up our own four-wheel drive. Skies were clear and blue but temperatures dipped down to the 20′s in the evening. We were thankful we had brought lots of warm clothing. Daytime temps were in the 40′s and 50′s, just cool enough to feel like we were a continent away from our home near San Diego.
We enjoyed spending some time in downtown Idyllwild where there seemed to be an endless variety of shops and a steady stream of visitors. There were shops selling anything you can imagine and in some unusual combinations. California Street Collectibles, for example, sells Christmas ornaments, dolls, Harley merchandise, Nascar merchandise and – financial planning.
We enjoyed strolling the streets of Idyllwild, where we discovered such fascinating attractions as the old-time theater – the “Rustic” – which shows just one movie three times a day, but leaves the snack stand open for passersby to enjoy popcorn with real butter. Just down the street is the homemade candy shop which had nearly a dozen people waiting to go inside. Even the ice cream shop a few doors down was enjoying brisk business despite the cool temperatures.
In the town center is the Idyllwild Tree Monument, a 50-foot totem pole that was carved by chainsaw in 1989 as an effort to salvage a dying 400-year-old ponderosa pine. The monument depicts an eagle, mountain lion, squirrel, raccoon, American Indian, coyote and butterfly and, interestingly, is the final resting place of Ernie Maxwell, a longtime Idyllwild civic booster and founder of the local Town Crier newspaper.
Art galleries are also a big part of Idyllwild and there are no fewer than 17 of them for visitors to tour. In fact, Idyllwild is included in a new book “The 100 Best Art Towns in America” by John Villani.
We stopped by the Idyllwild Historic Society Museum, a historic 1920′s summer cabin that now has exhibits pertaining to the Idyllwild area. It turns out that the area was first settled by the Cahuilla Indians some 2500 years ago and followed by the first mining prospectors in the 1850′s. Ranching and farming came a few years later and, by 1875, there was a significant lumber operation in Idyllwild. The museum also depicts more recent history when, from the 1920′s through the 1960′s, several Hollywood films were shot on location in the area.
We enjoyed the La Casita Mexican restaurant, but there were several other dining options. Other choices in the area include Greek and Chinese as well as several steak and seafood restaurants, pizza restaurants and more.
When we go back in summer, we will take advantage of many of the outdoor activities that Idyllwild has to offer. Lily’s Rock – a.k.a. Tahquitz Rock – is a dramatic rock face visible high on the mountainside that symbolizes the rugged outdoor beauty so prevalent in this area. Several hiking trails take visitors deeper into the forest, including the Pacific Crest Trail. There are, in fact, 272,000 acres that have been set aside and designated as the Santa Rosa & San Jacinto Mountains National Monument.
AT A GLANCE
WHERE: Idyllwild is just west of the Palm Springs area and is easily reached on Highway 243, accessible from Highway 10, the main route to Palm Springs.
WHAT: Idyllwild and nearby mountain communities represent an easy-to-get-to four-seasons getaway that is just a couple of hours from Los Angeles.
WHEN: Year-round. Summers are sunny and pleasant. Winters can be cold and occasionally snowy.
WHY: It’s a charming mountain village with a wide selection of accommodations and tourist services. The scenery is spectacular.
HOW: For more information on Idyllwild, visit www.idyllwildchamber.com or phone 888-659-3259. For more information on cabin rentals, visit www.idyllwildcabins.com or phone 877-270-3285. If looking for a room rather than a cabin, the Atipahato Lodge comes recommended. Visit www.atipahatolodge.com or phone 888-400-0071.
Cary Ordway is a syndicated travel writer and president of Getaway Media Corp, which publishes websites focused on regional getaway travel. Among the sites currently offered by GMC are , covering and other Golden State destinations, and , covering ideas as well as other Pacific Northwest travel destinations.
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Major storm expected to slam southern Utah, then head north
December 15, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
Major storm expected to slam southern Utah, then head north
The big snowstorm Utah skiers have been craving moved into southern Utah Monday afternoon and was expected to make its way north, leaving up to three feet of snow in mountains in both ends of the state by mid-day Tuesday.
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