Strange looking craft ….. with helipad $300 million yacht belongs to Mark Zuckerberg. Moorage costs 30,000 per day. Longest operating aircraft carrier, the Midway…. since ‘41, is in background“Unconditional Surrender” statue of the kissCarrousel inside from the late 1800’s
Marriott Marquis
1867-San Diego was referred to as Rabbitville. Alonso Horton paid $240 for 640 acres down by the waterfront that nobody wanted cuz all there was there was cacti and rabbits… 10,000 rabbits for each person
Gas lamp quarter … used to be bad part of San Diego
Modernized gas lamps San Diego conference centre—- sails and waves
San Diego-Coronado Bridge is 248 ft high-2.4 miles long
Naval base on the island. 27,000 population. There is no fresh water on Coronado Island. They have to pipe it in from San Diego.
3.3 m dollar for the average home.
Posh place but the outside seating is rustyThe beach on Coronado Island
1888 Hotel Del first all wooden, all electric hotel in North America
All shops storefront have to be different… quite cool.
All navy seals have done training on this base. It was first for a whole lot of things aeronautical.
In Balboa parkHome sweet home… same problem exists here as at home $26,000,000 for this over 100 years old house… barged to Coronado Island from San Diego.
Balboa Park – Kate Sessions schoolteacher turned master gardener known as the mother of Balboa Park. She asked the city for 30 acres to build greenhouses on the promise that she would plant 100 trees per year.
The dome is left over from the exposition of 1915Schenkel donated the worlds largest outdoor organ
2,000,00 people showed up in San Diego for celebration for opening of Panama Canal at the 1915 Exposition. They were only expecting 600,000. Most never left.
Average year round temperature is 78 degrees
The most haunted house in America The Whaley HouseOops… too long truck beyond the back wheels…. Couldn’t get up the hill cuz it bottomed out. Very odd cactus…. All twistedScenes from Little Italy. Lots of outdoor patios parked on the street , all started during COVID much like at home
3 million pop. Average price of houses is almost 1 million dollar making it most expensive in America.
Ships seen along the foreshore
Lindbergh Field is the name for the international airport. It only has 1 runway. It also has curfew…11:30pm to 6:30 am no planes can take off out of respect to the residences nearby.
See how close that plane is coming into landLeaving beautiful San Diego
10 year waiting list to anchor sailboat in the harbour.
Today we are doing a bus tour over the Golden Gate to Sausalito and later a ferry ride and tour of Alcatraz.
Sun coming up over the San Francisco-Oakland Bridge and Angel Island….in the fog
In the early days San Francisco, it was predominantly Catholic. Fishermen’s Wharf was run by the Italians.
If there is any flat land, it is made of sand/silt. 90% of the city was destroyed in the earthquake of 1906, not by the earthquake itself but mostly it was from fires. They used fill from the rubble from earthquake to level ground to make the worlds fair of 1915.
Tunnels are not through mountains but are bridges for wildlife to cross over the highway.
As we cross the Golden Gate Bridge, you cannot see the top for the fog. The colour of the paint of the bridge by the way, is called “international orange”. It is actually primer & so is rust proof. Good thing cuz of the dampness from the fog most days. As we “turn the corner” from the bridge toward Sausalito, there is not a stitch of fog to be had… just beautiful blue skies. How can that be!!!
Tunnels built for wildlife crossingFog shrouded Golden Gate BridgeSupport at entrance to the bridgeTo beautiful clear skies near Sausalito
Sausalito originally was started as a Portuguese fishing village because the Italians wouldn’t allow the Portuguese into SF. The village is built on the hillside. It was built using steel pins driven into rock so the houses were safe from earthquakes.
There are a lot bikes lanes along the Marina. It has a reputation for being kind of like bohemian place … it’s always been a place for artistic and adventurous types. Artistic types would come to Sausalito to escape the strait jacket of San Francisco culture. In the 60s people could live for free along the shore as long as they were sleeping on something that floated. They would use wooden stoves to cook with on the floats. There were horrific fires, in one fire, 1210 vessels were destroyed. To solve the problem they made water lots that they gave to the people. Some people, when presented with the opportunity to become a landowner, sold their water lots and made money. Once you owned the lot then people would have to have floating dwellings built that were up to code. Portuguese descendants are still involved in the building and the repairing of boats.
If you expand picture, you can see the bridge in background There is a lot of money tied up Storage at the pier Cool sculpture on the waterfront in Sausalito
There is a big sandy beach, next to the old hippie beach that back in the 60s and early 70s was a nude beach.
Coming back across the Golden Gate Bridge, that was still shrouded in fog, you can see the Palace of Fine Arts… the only building left from the Worlds Fair. It actually has been totally reproduced to the millimetre but is now 100% earthquake proof.
Again you still cannot see the top of the bridge Palace of Fine Arts
The cable cars of Nob Hill ….were built for the really steep hills By the late 1870s when it became fashionable to for the richest and wealthiest people to build at the top of Nob Hill, it was no longer fashionable to have quarters in your mansion for the help so they had to have some way to get there. There were at one time, 17 different cable car lines. One company didn’t care if they made any money on fares because they were making all the wire rope for all of the other cable car lines. The cable cars are just simple old-fashioned mechanical are now at only two different locations in the Fishermans wharf district area. Those cars are pulled by one continuous loop of steel cable, a half inch thick, that only last for three months….. very costly. But, a politician can’t afford to suggest getting rid of them or they will lose their job. Third rails cable car Golden Gate Bridge
The steep hills of SFRobot taxi…. No driver… really!!!
Then to Alcatraz Island.
It was the first permanent harbour fortification on the West Coast. From 1861, it was used as a military prison up until 1934 when it became a US penitentiary. It was closed in 1963 by A.G. Robt. F. Kennedy.
AlcatrazOfficers clubSomething beautiful in all this bleakness Military schoolhouseNice accommodations!!3 tier cell blockExercise yardConvict KeithLighthouseReturning to SFLeaving San Francisco…..going under the bridge
As if it wasn’t bad enough that I was going to have to get up before the birds got up, I awoke to rain making a hell of a racket coming down the downspout…. at 2am. Well we won’t be seeing much of fall weather for the next 8 weeks.
Following the Sapphire Princess out of the portBye Lion’s Gate BridgeLeaving Vancouver
History of Capt. Cook- a presentation that we went to hear.
Cook the 2nd of 8 children, went to live with a family of Quakers then lived his life as a Quaker, lived it as a good person, never swore, was meticulous & allowed no drinking on his ship.
The very detailed maps of the St Laurence River that he had developed, are said to have helped the British win the battle of Plains of Abraham . He circumnavigated NFLD for 4 years…..was a fabulous map maker.
He questioned that scurvy that sailors were dying of, was caused by lack fruits and vegetables in their diets. On the journey from England to Tahiti, a journey that took 8 months, he brought fresh fruit and vegetables …. and pickled cabbage… no crew died from scurvy. Cook was very concerned with well-being of his crew.
He learned to measure longitude ….for the benefit of the safety of sailors.
To many of the South Pacific Islanders, European boats brought fear because with them they brought death from disease.
He circumnavigated Antarctica, also found Easter island and Marquesas
Sailed thru from Tahiti… (Raiatea was his favourite), then headed north to Kauai, one of the Hawaiian islands(called the Sandwich islands at the time) that had not been yet discovered. From there he went to California, Vancouver island, and north to frozen Berring Sea to find the North West Passage. Unlike some of the Polynesians, Hawaiians were not cannibals.
He returned to Hawaii after being unsuccessful at finding the northwest passage. Cook was not received well after returning and was in a confrontation with the inhabitants, running to get away. Some say he was murdered but actually drowned. He was 50.
Elizabeth Batts, his wife, burned all his papers just before her death. All his 6 children predeceased Cook.
I am doing a test run because it seems that some people that apparently signed on to receive email notifications when I post, are not showing up on my system.
If you received this, would you please send me a message by text or email. It is much easier for me to respond through either than through this website. Please, the same applies when I am on “tour”.
Some days like this, you can walk to the corner where there is a military baseDead eelThose babies got nasty teethFishing toursKitty waiting for fish treatsBringing up some of the catch Guayabitos has a nice flat walking beachCrown of thornsLove the kick-ass strawberry margaritas at PikikosIn the square in Guayabitos (Courtesy of Linda)Guayabitos has the most amazing sunsets
Bucerias-Feb 29-Mar 2/24
I went to Bucerias for the last 2 days in Mexico and stayed at Ross and Greg’s “Casa Mexi-Cana”. If you want to stay at very nice place in Bucerias, Nayarit…..check it out. It has amenities that you don’t normally get in Mexican accommodations…..plus it is pretty! I had posted other pictures of the outside seating areas from when we were PV at the beginning of February.
The Country Bar under the big palapaBig comfy bed….and pillows, sofa and chairs Table and chairsRecliner, balconyFull kitchen with all small appliances….bonus!~Soaker tub and removable shower-headCounter space around sinkSecurity and windows artfully installedFrom the back showing the poolOne of the entertainers they haveCheck out the lamp in the corner window
Scenes from Bucerias
African Tulip TreeAnother place for rentBeautiful hibiscusMotorized boogie boards…first time I’ve seen themThe beach in Bucerias…..not nearly as flat as GuayabitosThis hill off the highway is horrid
I am home now. I expected that I would have a short 5 hour journey home on a direct flight. Not! Because of freezing temps and snow in Calgary, the plane was delayed by 3.45 hour on coming to pick us up. I returned to spring flowers and sunny skies only to have on 2 separate days, have it turn to hail and snow. It is still good to be home 😅!
Orchid tree (Bauhinia)Paperflower or bougainvillea Cape JasmineJava Apple ( I was told before that they were called the “King’s balls” who knows??Murals in the alleyways of La PenitaBeautiful restaurante My friend in front of someone’s well taken care of home and gardenStain glass …. In Guayabitos residential zona The view from some friends’ placeCardboard Palm… have never seen one beforeValentine’s Day decorations still upDinner outing at Buhardilla restaurant Guayabitos has such beautiful sunsets
I apologize in advance if you get multiple editions of my posts. I have heard that when wifi is very poor that it sometimes will do that. And the wifi here is very poor. I have also heard that there is a glitch with Microsoft. Who knows.
Crazy numbers of people on the beach. We didn’t know but it’s Constitution DayHibiscusFlamevineFriends from Prince Albert and Victoria that we got to spend eve with again
Below are at a fundraiser put on by Hinde y Jaime in La Penita
Frigate bird resting on light. They cannot rest on the the ground. They have to be able drop to take offOn La Penita maleconThe beach in La Penita has improved since malecon was built. A La Penita alleyMs Linda and friends formerly of Victoria who were attending fundraiser. Feb 5/24Stained glass at residence in “Residential Zona” Guayabitos Fisherman scraping the bottom of his boatLots of fish being hauled from the boatsAll Dorados (aka Mahi mahi)The only tern we have seen in this area…. Unlike when we were in MelaqueGluttonous pelican with fish trimmings caught in gulletBeautiful colouring of male brown pelican that are so common herePretty entrance to a hotel/posadaBullhorn acaciaTexas Ranger or barometerbushCelosia (plumed cockscomb)African Tulip TreeThe Catholic Church across from usPretty pink beetleSelf propelled hang glider As yet un-opened hotel on the beach in Guayabitos Riverbed between La Penita and Guayabitos Fishermen leave boats at mouth us they can’t make it up the river “The river”… full of sewage and egrets and odd crocodillo “Fred” our local iguana … on the roofFred under raftersNew accommodation in Residential ZonaTom and Glenda FrigateObserved from Las Brisas The band “Availables” coming to BC in summer Nice setting where we went for (Deras) pizza after showWood fired pizza ovenTom GoughAnd Glenda Lea of Yesterdays WineAnd Donnie McLennanNew friend SIL of Bev Dancing friends from home in Victoria Peacock flower….red bird of paradise
We arrived back in Puerto Vallarta after a very long bus ride on a very winding “highway”. Although the bus was quite luxurious, after all it had 2 toilets, it was extremely treacherous to find your way back to the bathrooms without falling into someone’s lap or flat on your face.
This time we stayed for 3 nights at the Comfort Inn instead of the “One”. It has nicer accommodations and lovely pool, the breakfasts were not much better. The first evening we just strolled around the Marina area. It is very nice but OMG so many people.
Hotel poolColourful visitor
Next day we went out to see a friend who has along with a business partner from Victoria, opened a small hotel. It will have seating for 150 by next year with all the outside seating and upstairs “Nickel” country Bar named after the Canadian nickel. It’s called Poncho Beave’s. The job they have done on this place is absolutely amazing. Below are pix of the Casa Mexi-Cana
At entrance to Casa Mexi-CanaUp to the Nickel Country BarThe poolMe, Ross and Linda Waterfall down the wallThe bar
The following day we took the Hop on, Hop off bus around PV. It certainly worth it.
Symbol at entrance to the “Marina”Pocket change for someoneIncluded is the helicopterParasailing behind a boat. The 1st time for me was here in 1976On the PV MaleconLove the support when building upper floorsPV from the road to MismaloyaSculpture along the road
Saturday the 3rd, we travelled by bus again but that was not nearly as zigzagging……to Rincon de Guayabitos. We are here for +/- a month.
Again the orange breasted bunting Prickly pear Bougainvillea Queens wreathBistro Escondido in MelaqueMexican holdbackPink morning glory treeMango margarita Restaurant open only on Saturdays and Sundays. You wouldn’t want to come down those steps intoxicated. Fish eagle or… hawk??Santa Rita prickly pearBlue crab just under waterSweet little boy with his 1 month old chihuahua Malecon in BarraIn main squareSpray from the incoming wavesSurfer in BarraJust as we take water taxi to the hotel Swim up barHot tubsPosh hotel complex where we went for lunch One of the boat at the hotelBeautiful double hibiscusIn Barra Fishing boat flying US flag???Heading into that hotelPelican with fish inIt’s craw. The other birth had thought it could steal it… huh!SunriseThe local singing hoboAnother of my favourite birds… the bunting Hawk but don’t know name… maybe fish eagleA whale far out… breaching