Saturday, May 31, 2008

Mount Lassen


Tanya on a Mount Lassen trail

Mount Lassen

Mount Lassen is one of my very favorite places on this great planet to be—and I mean anywhere on the mountain or in the whole Lassen area!

Mount Lassen itself is a splendid peak of stone, all set about with quiet forests, splashy streams, pretty lakes, sweet smelling high meadows—and as a bonus, good stinky sulfurous hot springs and nifty bubbling mud pools ‘cause its also an active volcano just biding its time until its next big blow!

Some winters there’s masses of snow—I mean feet on feet of that great ski stuff! Enough snow to mash cabin roofs and make the few year-round residents of Mill Creek or Mineral or even Chester long for spring!

Summers are cool and wonderful—the kind of cool that would lure Ishi and his Native American ilk back year after year until the European folks wiped them out--the kind of cool that today’s sweating Redding or Red Bluff valley people dream of on their hundred-plus degree July nights.



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Friday, May 30, 2008

The Perfect Traveler


Tanya in the ruins

“A true traveler is always a vagabond, with the joys, temptations and sense of adventure of a vagabond. Either traveling is “vagabonding” or it is no travel at all. The essence of traveling is having no duties, no fixed hours, no mail, no inquisitive neighbors, no receiving delegations, and no destination. A good traveler is one who does not know where he is going to, and a perfect traveler does not know where he is coming from. He does not even know his name and surname.”

Lin Yutang, “The Importance of Living”.


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Thursday, May 29, 2008

Nothing New

Old Shasta town.

Nothing New


There’s nothing new here.

No, nothing new.

There’s nothing new here,

And still-- it touches you.


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Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Shasta, СA

Tom in the ruins of Shasta town.

Shasta State Historic Park

There is nothing much left now of what was once a prosperous and thriving town, Shasta, California.

The historic district which has been partially preserved as a state park is located six miles west of Redding CA on highway 299--but you can drive through it in less time than it takes to read this sentence.

This nice little park is not a “must-see”—it is not Disneyland-- but if you happen to be in the area, it makes for a very interesting hour or two snoop. And there is very nice, quiet grassy area with some shady picnic tables, running water and clean restrooms.

Gold—that magical mineral “that makes white men crazy” was discovered in nearby Clear Creek in 1848 and by 1849 a boom-town of tents and shacks called “Reading Springs” mushroomed. This instant town became the commercial and cultural center of northern California. Next year the fast growing settlement was renamed Shasta and before two more years had passed two and a half million dollars (in 1850 dollars!) in gold had passed through the town—though not much stayed!

In 1852 most of the new town was destroyed by fire—it was enthusiastically rebuilt and six months later was destroyed by fire again—all 70 businesses on Main Street disappeared in a cloud of smoke. A few of the most successful businesses rebuilt with brick walls and iron doors. In ten years the gold ran out—the new Central Pacific Railroad bypassed the town for another town on a downhill bend of the Sacramento River—Redding—and the little town of Shasta more or less dried up and blew away.

An early resident, Mae Helene Bacon Boggs, who was raised in Shasta by her uncle, led an effort to save some of the historic town for future generations and she donated land, buildings and a fine art collection to a Shasta Historical Society and the Native Sons of the Golden West. The California State Parks took over in the 1930s and the Courthouse Museum opened in 1950.

The Museum and Visitor’s Center is very nicely restored to its 1860 appearance and preserves a good collection of early memorabilia. The Jail in the basement has some spooky surprises for the unwary visitor too!

The unusual collection of 98 paintings by 71 artists donated by Ms Boggs is probably the most important feature of the museum. See it if you have the chance!

The rest of the little town—the restored Masonic Hall, the ruined brick buildings and the two vandalized cemeteries (Catholic and Protestant) give one pause to reflect how quickly things pass!


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Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Redwood National State Park


Tanya on Trinidad, CA. Beach



Redwood National State Park

The boundary of this National Park encloses three earlier state parks: Prairie Creek, Del Norte and Jedediah Smith. They are also a part of a World Heritage Site and the California Coast Ranges Biosphere Reserve which includes and protects miles of Pacific shorelines, rivers and streams, estuaries meadows and prairies.

The park is located on the Pacific coast in the far north of the State of California. US Highway 101 runs through it from north to south and US 199 passes through the Jedediah Smith Redwoods State Park section.

These parks are wonderful to visit.

The most prominent living feature of the parks, the immense and amazing Coast Redwood trees, probably covered almost two million acres when they were “discovered” by European explorers in the 1790s but by the 1920s so many had been cut that without legal protection they could all have been eliminated.

As it is, not many have survived the greed of the loggers of an earlier day but fortunately for us, State of California legislators preserved a few of the remaining groves in the 1920s and the US congress created his super-park in 1968.

To walk in these silent, awe-inspiring groves of giant trees is an experience which I hope you too may have some day.



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