Showing posts with label weekend getaways. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weekend getaways. Show all posts

Spring Green

13 comments:



 A weekend drive

 This is a working ranch about 10 minutes from my home
heading South toward Santa Paula
 We usually drive out this way on Saturdays 
to our favorite little burger joint (picnic tables)
for great burgers (they grind their own beef)  
great milk shakes  (no body does malts like this any more)  
and awesome fries...yum
 I am always inspired along this drive by the beauty of the Oaks in the hills,
 the  amazing clear blue sky and the vastness of the ranch land...
and today
the beauty of spring 
 These are walnut trees, perfectly spaced,
 aligned like wooden soldiers
soon to be green and loaded with fruit
The yellow mustard won't last long 
but who really cares?

today it is beautiful and perfect
and it reminds me 
to be thankful 

Spring!





A Few More Photos of Catalina

11 comments:
Just a few more photos of Santa Catalina Island...
I met two wonderful women last summer and guess who I ran into the minute we got to shore?
  Meg is on the left.  She owns a wonderful gift store called Golden State, full of items from local artisans.  
She herself being an amazing one!  
And her friend on the right is Angie.  Angie and her husband own Dingy Docks which sells Eco-friendly products and organic foods.  You can also  get boat parts which makes me laugh but somehow makes total sense. 
This is Megs work.  I bought these tea towels which she screens her designs on. These are the famous flying fish of Catalina.  
 I used them for pillows which  I forgot to tell Meg about. 
Meg...they turned out great!
No trip would be complete with out a souvenir of some sort
Look at this store and look at what I bought....Don't you love it?
I was thinking of getting a whole set until I turned the plate over.
The lodging seems to be getting a bit more upscale here.  They have done a nice job with this hotel.
The old school retro stuff is what I really enjoy.  
This bus takes you on a scenic tour for about an hour.  It comes equipped with oscillating fans and those huge windows and skylights. 
 You really have to wonder how they got this huge thing over here. 
 But then again, there are Buffalo on the island too.
More weird tours.  I bet the old Casino building is haunted
This is Descanso bay below.  
All new cabanas and chaise lounges with food service too.  
Very Mediterranean looking.
This is paradise for kayaking and diving.
Greg and I always try to walk as much as we can.  The back streets are usually the most interesting.
How about that green paint WOW
A bit like stepping back to the 50's I think
We walked up to the country club. 
 This is an ideal spot for a Wedding, very picturesque and lush with lots of huge old palm and eucalyptus trees
And the people watching is the best part....
I have absolutely no idea why or what this was about but it's much better than television.
Poor Millie. 
 She was so waterlogged after three days of swimming.  
She will probably sleep for about 24 hours and then be ready for her next adventure.  
Sorry about the dirty socks and boat shoes. Comes with the territory. 
Don't forget to enter the giveaway on the previous post.

Thanks for stopping by and your comments are so great!  
Feel free to email me if you have any questions about a trip to Santa Catalina Island.

~*~

have a great week

kelley

Crystal Cove: Seaside inspiration Part I

19 comments:
This is the time of year when every one begins to plan for a summer vacation.  About two miles south of us on Pacific Coast Highway, is an amazing collection of historic beach cottages, that can now be rented for a few days through the California State Parks Department. 
   
How about this for a vacation idea!

This wonderful and inspiring spot is known as Crystal Cove.   
This amazing three mile stretch of beach is sprinkled with timeless beach shacks and the ambience  of coastal California as it must have looked in the 1930s.  The history dates back to the 1920s when rancher James Irvine, Jr., allowed a small group of families to "camp out" on this unused parcel of coastline.
The history of the cove plays out like a Hollywood movie script, with characters and politics that could rival any great screenplay.  The politics of late have been about the sale of the cove and the surrounding 3000 acres to the California Department of Parks and Recreation in 1979.  Although I was born and raised in California and have lived in this area for over 28 years, the first time I was able to visit Crystal Cove was in 2006.  
The earliest "coveites" were there in the 20's to manage the property, which was used extensively as a movie set.  Most of the palm trees you see today are  those planted as props for  silent pictures.  The crews would work all day and then leave at dusk to have drinks and retire to bed in neighboring Newport or Laguna.  


The 20's and 30's was also a time for many now famous Laguna artisans,  working in the french Plein Aire style of painting, to paint along this unusual and majestic coastline





Crystal Cove  is still an extremely popular site for Artists of all mediums and the cottages are almost always a central theme.




What a spot to paint!!!



Early coveites were tent campers who later converted their spots into more permanent sites.  Eventually some of those sites became the cottages of today.
The "tents" were so elaborate at times, that it was hard to tell exactly where the  word "tent" fit into the equation,  but it was part of the culture of the cove and somehow everyone managed to get along.



Finely discontinued in 1962, it was the end of an era for many 
The lucky families who called Crystal Cove home in the 40's and 50's eventually passed the properties on the their children or sold them for a "finders fee".  All of these little homes were land leases brokered through what is now known as the Irvine Company.   The leases were for ten years and families had no ownership of the actual land or the buildings themselves.  It was, however, a small price to pay for this amazing little coastal paradise.  
Cocktail hour began with the raising of the flag, promptly at 4PM and was greeting with much revelry.  The coveites motto: "every night is Saturday night"


Dinner was usually, the catch of the day.   Abalone, albacore, corvina and halibut was still plentiful along the coast and surf fishing was and still is very popular  

Luaus were a favorite theme in the 50's and the 4th of July beach parties were legendary blow outs!


Notice the guy on the left...oh the things men do for attention... 
Below is the original "office"
Most cottages are a cobbled together mixture of boards and shingles as well as "beach junk" and drift wood.  Put all of those elements together and these little gems exude charm.  It's the kind of washed out, warn down simpleness that is so appealing.  The air is fresh and salty and the sand is as clean as any along coastal California.


This is the famous house from the movie "Beaches" made in 1988.  It sits at the very end of the cove and is perhaps the most painted and recognizable cottage.


The cove is a special spot.  It is nostalgic and simple and makes me think things have gotten way too complicated sometimes.  
This little bit of history of Crystal Cove will perhaps  get you thinking about vacation plans at the beach.  In my next post I will share the Cove as it is today;
 a spot for every family to enjoy.

  What is and will become an important legacy for our future

All photos are from the book:

Crystal Cove Cottages
Islands in time on the California Coast 
by KarenE. Steen


~*~


thanks for stopping by
kelley