Saturday, April 15, 2017

Around Palm Springs

With the Bay Area being cloudy and rainy, Palm Springs has sun and warm temperatures.  Here's the view from our villa compound.

Breakfast by the pool......

....isn't complete with someone's phone addiction.  I'm talking about me, not pictured!

Our second day, we spent in Palm Springs itself and started with a hike on the mountain above the Palm Springs Museum.  Here's a view from about half way up looking east down the Coachella Valley.


The trail was quite steep and we didn't feel our shoes had enough grip so we came down short of the end.

So we spent an hour or so inside the Palm Springs Museum.  Here's one of my favorite pieces. 

I'll just leave this here.
In the afternoon, we went to a spa where I got a hot stone massage and Onions got a seaweed wrap, and we spent a few hours laying by the pool and enjoyed the steamroom and jacuzzi.  Quintessential Palm Springs!

That evening, based on the recommendations of two friends, we ended up eating at a restaurant called Workshop. Trendy and expensive.  $26 dollars for a hamburger isn't our style.  I think we've decided that going out to fancy restaurants isn't what we really get much out of on vacation.

At the museum there was an exhibit on the furniture of mid-century modern houses of Palm Springs so before we left for the airport the next day, we spent a few hours driving around finding famous mid-century modern houses.  Here's the Kauffman house.  This is the same man who built Fallingwater who had this house built in Palm Springs.

This is the "Tramway Gas Station," now remodeled and open to the public as the Palm Springs Welcome Center.


Elvis spent part of his honeymoon here in this house.


Up in the foothills, this is the Edris house, with its great views.  I'm not a real fan of mid-century modern, but I can see how it became popular in this landscape.

Friday, April 14, 2017

Joshua Tree National Park

In our growing quest to visit as many of America's National Parks as possible, one of the reasons we chose Palm Springs was to visit nearby Joshua Tree National Park.

The famed Joshua tree for which the park is named, but it's a park because of the three different deserts (Mohave, Sonoran and Colorado, as if I could tell the difference) that intersect and overlap in the park.  According to Wikipedia the Mormon's named the Joshua tree because it looked like it has hands praying to god. (Eye Roll)

Driving through the park, there are a couple places with huge swaths of Joshua Trees, but I didn't see any outside the park, however apparently they are found at certain desert elevations in the American Southwest.

Another bonus for the trip was to see the desert flowers.  I expected to see vast seas of colored flowers, but it was more a "look, there's some bright color."  I'm not a desert person, but I was surprised at the many different flowers in bloom.















This picture doesn't give much scale, but this plant, the ocotillo, is over 10 feet tall.

We did a couple small hikes, but the hike up Ryan Mountain gave us some great views of the desert.



Finishing up the clockwise loop from Palm Springs through Joshua Tree, we ended up heading to the Salton Sea.  As we descended below sea level, we saw the magic of irrigation.


The sea is actually an "accidental" sea was formed when a canal was breached in 1905 and for two years water flowed into the Salton Sink, now the Salton Sea.


The increasing salinity means that fish can no longer survive in the sea.

Sunset over the mountains above Palm Springs.

Thursday, April 13, 2017

Butano State Park

Catching up on some back posts here.....but a few weeks back, Onions and I had a free Sunday and headed down the coast to Butano State Park, near the town of Pescadero.

Not as famous as its nearby sibling state park, Big Basin, the scenery and draw are much the same......coastal redwoods!

We ended up hiking the longest loop in the park upwards of 9 miles that took back around a small canyon and over some creeks.


BANANA SLUGS!!!  This is why the mascot of UC Santa Cruz is the banana slugs.  They were all over the trail.

Kiss a banana slug for good luck!





After the hike, we headed to Pescadero for lunch at the famed Duarte's.

We dined on their two best known dishes, artichoke soup and Olallaberry pie!  Another Sunday outdoors!