Santa Cruz

Santa Cruz

The predecessor to this mural at Day’s Market in Santa Cruz was the second mural I became aware of and that I would look forward to seeing. This is the third version of the mural that I have enjoyed on this wall over the years.

Santa Cruz

And this is a recently created new mural with mosaics next to Sea Bright Beach.

Santa Cruz
Santa Cruz

I love the color, textures, and lines that presented themselves all within this one little space and time.

John Muir’s House

Muir home

John Muir himself planted this redwood tree about 120 years ago. This is his home in Martinez on the San Francisco Bay. I was happy to learn how close it is and happy to find that you may walk around the property and throughout the entire home at leisure here during open hours.

Muir home
Muir home

A statue of John Muir in the visitor center on the property of Muir’s home, now a National Historic Site maintained by the U.S. National Park Service.

Muir has an impressive story you can read about elsewhere. For a few reference facts, he co-founded the Sierra Club, wrote numerous naturalist books, and played important rolls in the creation and protection of Yosemite and Sequoia National Parks. If you can imagine, John Muir took then President Theodore Roosevelt on a three day back county camping trip to convince him to make Yosemite into a National Park. It worked. I find it amazing to imagine a time when a president would agree and be able to go off on foot with a naturalist to just camp and be in nature for three days out in the back country. It is a pretty fascinating form of lobbying.

Muir home

John Muir himself use to ring this very bell from this cupola above his home to let the workers on his orchard know to come in for lunch. Today, you are welcomed to go on up and ring the bell as much as you like! Of course, they keep the windows closed now. Not that there are acres and acres of orchards anymore to call in the workers from. From the windows of the cupola you can now see part of the town and a 7-11 across the street from Muir’s home. Times change and so it is all the more wonderful that this part of the property is preserved.

Muir home
Muir home
Muir home

Each bedroom had it’s own sink.

Muir home
Muir home

The view out the front window onto the porch.

Muir home
Muir home
Muir home
Muir home
Muir home

It’s neat to imagine John Muir also using this door knob to enter his front door as I use it.

Muir home
Muir home
Muir home
Muir home

Part of the Muir property includes this historic two story adobe house called the Martinez Adobe built in 1849 as part of the Martinez land grant.

Muir home
Muir home

These are the thickest, and presumably the oldest, grape vines I have ever seen up close in person.

Muir home

Door knob to the Martinez Adobe where John Muir spent plenty of time visiting his eldest daughter and her family who lived there.

Visiting and exploring this park and historical site was a treat. Walking around, touching and appreciating nature, thinking, and absorbing a part of a glimpse into another time in our history was wonderful. Muir’s life is fairly fascinating and intriguing to learn about. To walk around and within his home was special.

Pacific Grove

Pacific Grove

Inside the Pacific Grove Natural History Museum, one of the many interesting things to look at is this well aged donated collection of carefully labeled sand from around the world. There is a list with the location of sand origin and the corresponding label number.

Pacific Grove

There are a lot of sand samples that this collector had gathered.

Pacific Grove
Pacific Grove
Pacific Grove

Sandy, the gray whale, was celebrating a birthday during our visit. Sandy was used for years as an educational model that could be disassembled and reassembled to spread knowledge. Today, Sandy rests permanently assembled to greet visitors of the museum.

Pacific Grove
Pacific Grove
Pacific Grove

NASA

NASA
Just a corner of the largest wind tunnel in the world at NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View. So big that full size airliners go into it with wing spans up to 100 feet across.
NASA
A close up of the wood from the original fan blades of the wind tunnel. Each blade is taller than a tall human and would have been one of many blades around each of the six motors filling up a four story tall space and generating the wind in the tunnel. So smooth and flush, these wood pieces.

Serpentine

Don Edwards Wildlife Refuge
The rock is a blue green in color and smooth to the touch. The above pictured giant serpentine rock has orange colored lichen growing on it. Found in Don Edwards Wildlife Refuge.

What happens when you start with mantle rock, that bendable hot semi-fluid-like rock that is miles below the surface and that the Earth’s crust floats on top of, and get it to come up a bit after mixing with ocean water and the heat induced chemical reactions that follow? You get a beautiful rock called serpentine that is usually miles deep but now makes up significant portions of the US west coast having been scraped off the ocean plates that sank below the US west coast in the last 200 million years.

A few interesting facts about this rock. It is awesome that it is the Earth’s mantle come up to the surface where we can touch it! It is the state rock of California. It can be mined for talc or asbestos. Did I mention it comes from miles below the surface? It is pretty. It is found where rocks from deep in, and below, the ocean have come to the surface through strong geologic events. The chemicals of the rock make it toxic to most plants and trees. Many California native plants have adapted to survive amongst the rock. You can see, for example, the Toyon bush (also known as California holly or Christmas berry) growing on the serpentine in the top photo.

Don Edwards Wildlife Refuge
A close up look of serpentine that is broken up a bit by erosion. It is soft and smooth to the touch as you might expect from a magnesium and talc rich rock..
Don Edwards Wildlife Refuge

Knowing that most trees and plants can not grow on serpentine rock, a previous owner of this land, now a part of the Don Edwards Wildlife Refuge, planted agave plants to add some garden interest where he hoped to build a house. While the agave was not growing naturally in this particular area, it is one of the native plants that had adapted to grow among serpentine rocks in California. Today, in this national refuge, the planted agave continues to grow.