Monday, 31 December 2007

Sonoma and Napa - wine country

The poor Hula Guy felt a little out of his league today in the very upmarket towns we visited in Sonoma and Napa counties (Healdsburg, Calistoga, St.Helena). There are over 3000 wineries in California and in this part of the state, there are neat grape vines growing everywhere. It's really beautiful.

Near the spa town of Calistoga, we visited a petrified redwood forest. Over 3 million years ago, Mt. Helena erupted and coated the trees with ash. The trees eventually turned to stone. More about that HERE. We also visited a geyser which spouts boiling water out of the earth every 40 minutes. More about that HERE.

Photos of our day HERE.

Sunday, 30 December 2007

Bodega Bay, Sonoma Coast















We are staying in the Sonoma wine region. It's a really beautiful part of the world. Today the Hula Guy, David and I explored the coast around Bodega Bay (did you ever see Hitchcock's "The Birds"?) Photos here.

Road trip with the Hula Guy















Oh yes, we really did drive around with The Hula Guy on the dashboard today. He's on a spring and dances and bobs away as you drive - it's pretty entertaining (see video below).

Saturday, 29 December 2007

Muir Woods

We stayed a night near Mill Valley. We had been warned that motels were expensive near here and we paid a lot to stay in a basic Holiday Inn. Fortunately it was next to a really good Italian restaurant where we went for dinner.

When we got up the next morning, it was raining. The first rainy day of the holiday, so we can't really complain, but disappointing all the same as we had planned to do some walking. Instead we bought umbrellas and went to Muir Woods, the setting for one of the scenes from Vertigo. We saw trees of 112m tall - the tallest living things on earth.




Following a white pickup through the fog






A scene of Muir Woods from the movie Vertigo













Friday, 28 December 2007

The Hula Guy

We always play this silly game at Christmas with Amy and George. It's called the Yankee Swap and involves buying one good gift and one joke gift and wrapping them both up. At the end of the game you end up with two gifts. David bought this Hula Guy as his joke gift from a cheesy shop in San Luis Obispo. Lucky Amy ended up with it, so I am wondering HOW IT GOT INTO OUR SUITCASE.....












I sense that this isn't the end of the road for the Hula Guy.

Silicon Valley

You won't find Silicon Valley on a map, and I have often wondered where it was. It is basically the area not very far south of San Francisco incorporating Palo Alto, Santa Clara and San Jose and is the birthplace of the silicon chip. Last night we stayed in San Jose, the third largest city in California (after L.A. and San Diego). We stayed a little bit away from the city center and there wasn't too much going on, so we got an early night ready for the Tech Museum.

The Tech Museum is showing an AMAZING exhibition called Body Worlds 2. We missed the controversial Body Worlds in both London and Yokohama, so were very excited to be able to see it here and it was the reason we were in San Jose. The exhibition basically displays plastinated human bodies and was pretty shocking. Unlike the first exhibition which used the bodies of executed Chinese prisoners, these exhibits bequeathed their bodies willingly to the project before their deaths. It is probably the best exhibition I have ever visited. Read more here.

After the exhibition and a quick lunch, we motored on up the 101 through San Francisco, over the Golden Gate Bridge and into Marin county. We stopped for coffee in a very European-looking town called Sausalito, explored the quaint hamlet of Mill Valley and found a motel nearby to stay for the night. I wonder what tomorrow will bring.

Some photos here.

Thursday, 27 December 2007

The way to San Jose

Today we said goodbye to Amy and George and got back on freeway 101 heading north. Our first stop was at another Spanish mission (San Miguel Arcangel).



















In our excitement of being on the road again, we forgot to fill up with petrol before we left SLO. This meant we were in the middle of nowhere when the red light started flashing. We are used to regular service stations in Japan and the UK, but there aren't any of these on the 101. We pulled off the freeway at a town called Bradley (population 120). It was not much more than a collection of tatty trailers and a church. A scary white pick-up truck overtook us then vanished. We saw no other people, and this is a photo of the gas station.










We got out quick.

The next town was called San Ardo (population 501). The first gas station looked like this.










Fortunately, the second one was open. Just as well as we have seen the movie with Kurt Russel where one of them goes off for gas in a pickup truck with a local.....and never comes back.

We drove past the town of Gilroy. We spent 24 hours there on the way down at the outlets. We stayed at the classy Motel Super 8.










We haven't shopped like that since we were last there almost 2 years ago.