Day 97: Leaving LA

Here we are getting ready to leave what’s been our home base for the last 4 days.  We had a great time visiting our friends, but tomorrow is supposed to be really hot so it’s time to go.  While packing up, I noticed that one of the struts we added to the bike rack was cracked almost all the way through.  I used a strap to hold it in place and hoped for the best.

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On the way out of LA, we stopped at an all-kosher supermarket and stocked up on meat and cheese.  We then went to the California Science Center, which is free except for the $25 oversized vehicle parking fee.  We were told to park in Lot 2, but the Lot 2 attendant wouldn’t let us park there because they were moving all the Lot 6 folks over to Lot 2 because Lot 6 was being use for a special event.  He directed me to Lot 3, where I was told I couldn’t park because we were oversized.  The Lot 3 attendant called his boss, who told us to park curbside:

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Our son tried out the video input sports game:

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Full size replica of the Cassini probe:

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…And a 1:5 scale Hubble model:

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California Science Center is the home of Space Shuttle Endeavour, so they had a Space Shuttle themed display area which includes a collage video of all 135 launches happening at once:

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Finally, we got to see Endeavour, the Shuttle built to replace Challenger:

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The Science Center also had a display about different habitats, including a kelp garden:

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We went back to the RV for lunch, then back in to the museum:

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The museum has a display for Felix Baumgartner’s high altitude capsule jump from the Red Bull Stratos capsule at over 120,000 feet above the ground.  A capsule and suit were on display:

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By the time we left the Science Center, it was dark, and we had the pleasure of experiencing LA rush hour traffic on the way out of town:

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We stopped at the Lowes of Moreno Valley for parts to fix the bike rack.  When I got out, I saw that the strut had completely failed, so we decided to spend the night here.    See the trip map for today’s drive and our current location.

Day 96: Wheels and Blades

This morning, I got up before dawn and rode from where the RV was parked up Fairfax and up Laurel Canyon to Mulholland.  As I rode west on Mulholland, I passed a lookout towards the north:

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I crossed the 405 and continued west until Mulholland went to gravel:

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On the way back, I didn’t take Laurel Canyon back down, but instead continued on Mulholland eastward until it ended, then taking Cahuenga back down.  In the last section of Mulholland, I could see downtown LA to the South, as well as the Hollywood sign on the hills:

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That afternoon, Trish and the kids went ice skating with our friend’s family.  I had to stay behind due to lack of seating in our friend’s van, so I stayed “home” and did some chores.  I hear they had fun:

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Day 95: Tour de Museums

We had a wonderful Shabbos with our friends in LA, and come Sunday morning, I was genuinely surprised to see that, as of yet, we have not received a parking ticket.  We have a visitor permit, put even so, I was sure that somehow parking enforcement would find something…..

This morning we walked about a mile and a half from the RV in LA to the La Brea Tar Pits in Hancock Park.  The naturally occurring tar pits preserved Ice-Age mammals, insects, and plants.  We visited the museum at the tar pit site:

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We had arranged to meet Ariza, our friend from Portland, and her daughter at the museum.  Together we contemplated the tar lake, watching methane bubbling up:

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The tar just bubbles up to the surface:

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Here’s some tar pushing up through the grass:

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My cousin Melissa joined us at the tar pits, and after Ariza said goodbye we headed up Fairfax and had pizza, then returned to the tar pits, for next door is LACMA, Los Angeles’ art museum:

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The most interesting exhibit was the sculpture Metropolis II, a huge “marble run” for matchbox cars.

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Thankfully, Melissa took us home so we didn’t have to walk back in the dark.

Day 92: Farewell, Yosemite

On the way out of the Valley, we stopped to photograph a grove of aspens in the meadow near Yosemite Village:

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This was the angle I had been thinking about since we arrived, but this is the first time we were here at the right time of day:

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The old Ahwahnee guard house:

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We left the Valley via Highway 41, but before continuing south out of the park, we drove out to the Sentinel Dome parking area to hike up to Sentinel Dome, which affords a view of the Valley from above.  On the walk, B found a large pine cone:

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The hike was somewhat steep, but at the top we were rewarded with a view of Yosemite Valley from above:

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Liberty Cap and Nevada Falls to the right:

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Half Dome:

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El Capitan from the opposite side as yesterday’s Tunnel View.  In this photograph, it’s on the right:

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The dry Yosemite Falls:

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From Wikipedia:

Sentinel Dome is known for a Jeffrey Pine that grew from its peak.  The pine was photographed as early as 1867 by Carleton Watkins, and was the subject of a well-known photograph by Ansel Adams. The tree died during the drought of 1976, but remained standing until August 2003.

I photographed the tree when Trish and I visited in ‘93, I photographed the already dead but standing tree.  It looked like this.  Today, only the trunk remains:

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At this elevation, there was some snow on the trail:

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Coming down from Sentinel Dome, we drove south to the south entrance to the park, unhitched the RV. and drove on the “no trailers” road up to the Mariposa Grove, home to the largest living things on Earth, the Giant Sequoias.

While not as tall as Redwoods, the Sequoias are far larger by volume, with basal circumferences of over 90 feet:

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The Grizzly Giant is 1800 years old and in 96 feet around at its base.  Note the people in the lower left corner of the photograph:

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This tree was tunneled for the passage of cars.  Despite the hole, the tree is still alive.  Here the kids stand inside the man-made arch:

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It was pretty dark by time we finished the trail amongst the sequoias.  Here are son shows off the Sugar Pine cone he found:

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We spent the night in the Walmart of Selma, CA.

  See the trip map for today’s drive and our current location.