We entered California four months and 15 days ago for our yearly visit. This year, besides visiting with family in the Sacramento area, we visited the Santa Cruz, Yosemite, Kings Canyon, Alabama Hills, Carson City, and Truckee areas, along with a six week trip up in the Northwest portion of California, and Southwest portion of Oregon. We celebrated Dad’s 90th birthday, Mom’s 88th birthday, both of their 70th anniversary, and the marriage of my oldest son Michael to his lovely bride Anna. Tomorrow morning we head out…at this time tomorrow we will be somewhere in Nevada along I-80 headed to the Salt Lake City area to visit with my daughter Stephanie. It has been a wonderful 4 1/2 months here…despite the hot hot hot weather, and the fires which are a yearly occurrence here in the west. The Sacramento and San Joaquin Valleys have always filled with smoke…accounts of early settlers talk about smoke layers due to winter fires used to keep people warm to wildfires which broke out from what is believed to be lightning strikes. As a kid, I remember the heavy smoke from the burning of the dry rice straw left over from harvest each year on the western side of the Sacramento River, a practice which is less common now days. And I remember many large wildfires, some in the Sierra Nevada Mountains and lower foothills, which others were in Southern California or along the Coastal Ranges. It is a part of living in the west.
Sacramento is a wonderful place for flowers. It is the Camellia Capital of the World…just ask the Camellia Society of Sacramento. They use to have a Camellia Festival in late February or early March--which ran from 1955 to 1993 which featured a debutante ball, princesses and a parade with flower-covered floats. I think in 4th grade we had to make a Camellia Poster as part of a city-wide contest to help promote the event. My posters were only good enough for the trash can… I don’t know why they stopped the huge festivities…but they do still have a yearly Camellia Show, this year was the 94th year, still held by the Sacramento Camellia Society. Not sure, but I think the parade probably stopped due to the Naked Ladies. All I know is that the Naked Ladies appeared again yesterday, and we are headed out tomorrow!
Naked Ladies are also known as Belladonna Lilies…and they appear each year in Sandy and Arny’s backyard. In the spring they appear as a green, leafy plant, which lasts for 4-8 weeks before they seem to die off. Then in July or August a single stem starts to sprout upward…and lily opens up. In the picture above, the short ones will be as tall as the lily that is open in just a few days. The lilies will last for a few days, then die off. It is an amazing show… I am glad we were able to see a few of them bloom before we leave.
These two fur kids are not going to be happy campers tomorrow…especially the one of the left. Bubba (upper left) absolutely LOVES being at Sandy and Arny’s house. Arny is Bubba’s best friend…and outside of our trip to Oregon for six weeks, and the three weeks we were sightseeing California, he has been here at their house for the past year. However, we were here for all but three months of that time…this time we will be gone for 7 or 8 months…so Bubba is coming along with us. Boy, he is going to be one depressed dog for a number of days…perhaps a couple of weeks…but he always adjusts to it. We just hope that at 15 years of age, he has a few more visits back to see his buddy Uncle Arny, and also Aunt Sandy. Skruffy, on the other hand, is fine as long as she is with me or with Marcia. But she too LOVES Sandy and Arny’s house…the daily small treats of fried pork that I cook up and give them to hand out twice a day, the squirrels, the lawn, being in Sandy’s lap every now and then…she too will miss them.
For us it is a two-sided sword. We have had some meals with mom and dad, including finding a great breakfast/lunch place called Annie’s right near to their Assisted Living facility. We LOVE visiting family out here, we LOVE staying in Sandy and Arny’s backyard when we are here, we LOVE the sights we can explore getting here, short trips we take while here, and on the trip home. We also LOVE our friends and family who don’t live here…and we miss our friends and family back home. Next year my youngest son Ryan is graduating from Chiropractic School in the Kansas City area in April…and our plans will be to return to California sometime after that. When, How Long we will stay is all up in the air for now. But the Lord willing, we will return, and seeing family out here is always a wonderful thing.
Back to the map…this is our proposed route. It will take us through Salt Lake to see Stephanie, through Kansas City to see Ryan, Aunt Vera and other relatives in the area, then down to Arkansas, and finally back to Florida. I am not going to see my doctor until next March or early April since we pretty much will be going through Arkansas again on our way to Ryan’s graduation. We decided to NOT go through the Chicago area, probably saving that for next spring. Marcia’s driver’s license needs to be renewed in September, and they will require her to take a vision exam…otherwise we could do it over the Internet. We want to take a bit of time going through the northern portion of Colorado, so we are not ready to set time periods for our Kansas City or Arkansas Visits as of now.
Love those lilies. Back in the days after cattle, we grew rice and burned off the chaff. It was crazy to set entire fields on fire. They are not allowed to burn any more. Environmentalists put a stop to that. Trouble is, those leftover stalks will not break down if disced under and can't be used for anything but septic system barriers. It's made for less rice growing.
ReplyDeleteThat's a long trip getting home .... drive safe!!! Hug the puppies for me!!
I read something that if the rice field has a certain mold or infection, they will allow them to burn it "when the conditions are right", but it is a rare event. Dogs give you "licks to your face" back at you....
DeleteYou managed to have a lot of family fun and traveling adventures even with the fires and hot weather! I love Colorado so I'm looking forward to your posts as you travel through the state. Have a safe trip back home!
ReplyDeleteFrom Utah we will travel old US-40 until we get over to the Rocky Mountain National Park. It has been many years since I went that route.
DeleteIf you get an eye exam by an optometrist who is .certified to do them for the DMV, they fill out a form you can mail in with your drivers license renewal.-Mary
ReplyDeleteMeant to add or send it via internet
DeleteThanks Mary, we knew that, but it is just time to get back home...we weren't even home 3 full months after last year's travels...and next year is going to be another long one most likely.
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