Friday, June 13, 2014

Randall & Debbie’s California Vacation, Part IV

Randall & Debbie’s California Vacation, Part IV


Mendocino and Redwoods

Heading north from the SF Bay area we stayed on 101 until Cloverdale and then took the twisty/windy 128 up to the coast.  Yes, we know we mostly bypassed wine country - we did stop at a winery but it wasn't the focus of our trip.  

We explored the Russian Gulch State Park just north of Mendocino - another beautiful location.  








We stayed at another Airbnb - a small cabin in someone's yard.  It was a nice experience even though there was no room for our suitcases.  For dinner we went to The Ravens which is an upscale vegan restaurant associated with the Stanford Inn - a vegan resort.  The food was wonderful!  We returned the next day for a great breakfast.  Mendocino is a small town right on the ocean with lots of artists.  We walked along the beach, which is right near the main street.  



It was a morning with lots of fog/mist over the shore and this made for some nice photography on our drive.  


Next we turned inland and hit the Avenue of the Giants - Redwood country!  We stopped at various places to walk among and shoot these beautiful trees.









Thursday, June 12, 2014

Randall & Debbie’s California Vacation, Part III

Randall & Debbie’s California Vacation, Part III


San Francisco and Berkeley

In our last post we didn't quite make it to San Francisco.  After we left Palo Alto we drove to an area where we thought we would be able to hike on the San Andreas fault.  After looking over the warning signs for rattlesnakes, mountain lions and ticks we decided to skip that portion of the program.  We drove towards SF along the fault on Skyline Blvd (but at no time in CA did we feel any shaking).



We stopped at a park to see if we could catch a glimpse of the Golden Gate Bridge but it was fogged in.  We did see Alcatraz...  Later we had a fine meal at Herbivore in SF with Danny Brook and his family, with a stop at Dandelion Chocolate afterwards - yummy!  Our Airbnb was located in Berkeley and was a nice house with friendly people.  The next day we took the BART in to SF and walked around.  The first stop was at the Coit Memorial Tower which gave a nice view of the city and had great depression era murals painted downstairs.  












We also stopped at the cable car museum which is a fun,
SF favorite.




 The Fairmont Hotel on Nob Hill was beautiful!


 We also took some time and explored the majestic SF City Hall.


 We had lunch in Chinatown at the Loving Hut and for dinner we went to Gracias Madre in the Mission District.  Gracias Madre was really outstanding - what a wonderful place!  I hear they will open in LA as well.


After a long day we wound up in Oakland because we got on the wrong BART train but made it back to our Airbnb OK.

On our way out of Berkeley heading towards Mendocino we had breakfast at the Berkeley location of Herbivore.

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Randall & Debbie’s California Vacation, Part II

Randall & Debbie’s California Vacation, Part II

Big Sur, Monterey and San Francisco



We left SB and drove up the 101 towards Monterey, Big Sur and the coastal highway.  The coastal drive is slow but beautiful!


Our first major stop was the Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park, on the Big Sur coast.





As you can see from the photos, this is a magical place.  Here is a short video as well.

We capped off a beautiful day with a delicious dinner at Julia's in Pacific Grove and then a sunset over the Pacific Ocean.  Earlier this year we saw a beautiful sunrise over the Atlantic Ocean in FL, what a nice companion experience.



The next day brought cloudy skies but our day was brightened by a 3 hour guided kayaking adventure in Monterey Bay.  We saw (and smelled) seals, saw and (heard) sea lions, and were treated to a playful otter.






After spending the morning paddling, we went back down the coast to another magical place - Point Lobos State Natural Reserve.  Again we were treated to stunning views of water, surf and rocky coast with lots of wildlife.  We decided to eat dinner at Julia's again because it was so good!









On Sunday we checked out the famous Pebble Beach 17 mile drive and then headed up to Palo Alto to visit Marcy, Levent and baby Derin.  Thanks to Levent we enjoyed a deliciously prepared lunch and spent some time catching up.



Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Randall & Debbie’s California Vacation, Part I

Randall & Debbie’s California Vacation, Part I

LA & Santa Barbara

We (along with Mr. Duck and the turtle) just came back from two glorious weeks out on the left coast.  We drove (well Randy did the driving) over 1600 miles up and down California coast.  We visited friends, ate lots of great vegan food, took many photographs of beautiful vistas and wildlife and had a wonderful time!

We started in LA with lunch at Sage Vegan Bistro and experienced our first AirBnB, a loft apt. right downtown. We were surprised at how vibrant downtown LA was on a holiday weekend but happy that there wasn't that much traffic.

We loved the art deco architecture and did a self guided tour.  One of our favorite spots was the Oviatt building. From there we explored the beautiful downtown library and the stunning Biltmore Hotel where we went for a nightcap on our 2nd evening in town.


The best part about LA was spending time with Judy.  We met for dinner at Crossroads an expensive but tasty all vegan restaurant on Melrose.

It was great to catch up!

Up early on a quiet Memorial Day morning in LA, we headed to the renovated Union Station.

With a few hours to kill before meeting Judy again for lunch, we decided to go to Hollywood and look at the stars.


The  we met with Judy in  Santa Monica and ate at our favorite, Native Foods Cafe.

We then went down to the famous Santa Monica Pier and had our first look at the Pacific in years.



The next day we hit the Getty Center Museum where we saw a photography exhibit and walked around the beautiful grounds.  Later we had lunch in the Westwood Native Foods before heading up the coast to Santa Barbara and our long awaited visit with Carol and Artie in their beautiful new home on the west coast.





Santa Barbara, the real life home of Sue Grafton and the setting for Kinsey Millhone's Santa Teresa.  

I had to do the alphabet series tour and with our hosts Artie and Carol we succeeded in seeing many of Kinsey's haunts.

Debbie also got to catch up with her high school friend Doris who lives nearby with her husband and three children.



To be continued...

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Keeping us safe...

So Edward Snowden revealed the vast nature of domestic spying through leaks of classified documents in the Guardian newspaper. I appreciate your efforts, Mr. Snowden. President Obama says that this domestic spying is necessary to keep us safe - bullshit, but further I believe that it isn't even meant to keep us safe. The real purpose is to keep tabs on dissent and to keep the corporatocracy safe from anyone who might oppose it. President Obama represents the corporatocracy and all of its tentacles - big banks, multi-national corporations, the military-industrial-security-complex, industrial agriculture, medicine for profit, etc. In fact, he is probably one of the finest supporters of the corporatocracy ever, mainly because he pretends that he isn't (and a lot of people believe him). By dividing what little opposition to corporate rule remaining he is doing a better job than his Republican rivals in promoting the existing power structure. I told many people this before the last election but most thought I was crazy.

Firstly, I'm not counting on the government to keep me safe. There was a period of time when the government made some modest efforts to regulate toxic chemicals in our foods, drugs and consumer products, safety in workplaces etc. but the whole regulatory framework has been taken over by corporate minions and underfunded to nonfunctionality. Presidents don't try to keep us out of wars either, in fact they actively work to get us into them. This is why the founders put the ability to declare war in the hands of the congress - Presidents have found many ways around this little detail though and we have been on a permanent war footing as long as any of us can remember. Terrorism is the new thing to scare us into keeping the purse strings open for the military but I don't expect that the government will protect me from terrorism either. In the twisted logic of the way our system now works, acts of terrorism further the goals of the military-industrial-security-complex by promoting fear even if any single citizen has a much greater risk of being struck by lightening. I have more fear of being labeled a domestic terrorist for resisting the corporatocracy than I have of harm from the kinds of terrorists I'm supposed to be afraid of. Overall, I'm far more worried about my own government (police overreach, domestic spying, etc.) than any supposed threat from abroad.

Just to be perfectly clear, I think it's fine for the feds to obtain warrants and gather information when there is evidence of criminal activity. This isn't about the ability of the government to fight crime or even terrorism - it's about the ability of the government to keep tabs on dissent. This desire and in fact this practice is not at all new. The government has been keeping tabs on dissenters for over a century and probably longer (as long as we have pursued an empire, I guess). What's new is that the technology now allows for massive dragnets that collect and store an incredible amount of data on virtually everyone. So much so that enormous new data centers are being built to cope with the flood of personal data that's being intercepted. Algorithms look for keywords and associations and highlight individuals for further scrutiny. Of course it never ends with merely keeping tabs on dissenters, they are targeted for retaliation in many forms - up to and including arrest and assassination - check out what happened to Michael Hastings.

Government informants join groups of dissenters to report back, disrupt and sometimes even plan and execute protests in such a way as to allow for easy prosecution. Agent provocateur's instigate or commit acts of violence in order to have a pretext for police intervention. People can be blacklisted, held back from promotion or denied employment with no knowledge and certainly no recourse. Chris Hedges gives a good history of this kind of government retaliation in his book "Death of the Liberal Class", which I highly recommend. Even if there were no overt targeting of dissenters, the very fact that the government is listening in on our conversations has a chilling effect on speech.  None of this history is taught in school so young people are far more likely to accept pervasive government spying because they're unaware of how the government has used and abused information about dissenters in the past.

Anyway, I figure I'll save the hard-working government agents a little time and trouble and state right here that I'm opposed to the corporatocracy (if they haven't figured it out already...).

I oppose overseas wars, the bloated Pentagon budget, CIA interference in other countries, the so-called global war on terror, domestic spying without a clear indication of criminal activity, private prisons, the war on drugs, the militarization of domestic law enforcement and the war on whistleblowers.

I oppose the desperate attempts to extract the last remaining fossil fuels using environmentally damaging methods - including drilling in the Arctic, tar sands and hydraulic fracturing or fracking.

I oppose the profit driven health care system and the private insurance companies which have been protected by Obamacare. I oppose Monsanto and the corporate domination of our food supply.

I oppose the too-big-to-fail banks and the casino-capitalism of Wall Street.

I oppose corporate personhood and everything that it implies, especially corporate participation in elections.

A better world is possible - free of corporate domination, based on renewable energy, local agriculture, equality of opportunity, sustainability and true justice through the rule of law - where the laws are written to protect people, not the wealthy elites. I fear it's too late but my conscience dictates that I speak out anyway.


Wednesday, May 22, 2013

My new blog home

I have decided to ditch my old blog platform and blog here on my Google account. I also have a photography blog on my Zenfolio page. I will try and migrate some of my old content to this site but there doesn't seem to be an easy way to do this. I will probably just put up some of the more popular posts.