POSTCARDS FROM ALONG THE COAST
My family made a trip up
the Calif. coast in 1954 to see Fort Ross.
Not a whole lot to it, but it’s interesting. I climbed up into this tower to see what I
could see. Mostly ocean. Fort Ross was established as an agricultural
and trading center to serve the native American, native Alaskan, Russian, Finn,
and Swedish settlements in the area and did so from 1812 to 1841.
The fort chapel.
An overview of the
fort. There are pictures of our visit,
but unfortunately they’re in albums in my sister’s keeping at the moment.
I do have this one picture, however, of our picnic lunch along the
way to the fort. Dad found this nice
little sandy roadside spot next to a little creek to have lunch. We had a couple of friends with us on this
trip. That’s yours truly in the
light-colored jacket, standing. The
little person next to me is my youngest sister.
The fellow in the plaid shirt is a friend with his wife next to
him. Beside her is my Mom, then my
immediate younger sister in the coat, and beyond her is the friends’ son. My Dad was taking the picture. I don’t know where my brother was? He was always wondering off somewhere.
The Russian River
I remember we came to the
Russian River a couple of times. It
wasn’t as close to home as some of the other places we liked to go, and I can
only remember actually being on the
river once – perhaps in a quiet spot like this one with a small dock. I remember pretending to dive off a small
dock like this one. Be fun if it was
actually this one, but I don’t think
so because the backgrounds don’t quite match.
In any event, there I am
on the Russian River in 1952 with one of my younger sisters, pretending to
dive. Before I was 17 I never dove or
jumped into the water because I didn’t like getting water up my nose. Once I learned how and loved to dive,
however, it didn’t bother me so much anymore.
But I was still 12 here. It might
have had something to do with getting stuck upside down in an inner tube when I
was younger and panicking when I couldn’t get myself turned upright. Thankfully my Dad noticed the problem and
rescued me but not before I’d gotten a lot of water up my nose! It’s actually kind of amazing I turned out to
love diving in later years.
Mostly I remember being at
the mouth of the Russian River to look through all the driftwood that collected
there. My Mom loved to look through
driftwood for pieces she could do something artistic with. I enjoyed doing that too. Don’t know about my sisters and brother? The girls, especially, were kind of young
back then. As I remember, they looked
for driftwood pieces they could play with or make fun things out of. Dad usually helped Mom look for stuff.
Stinson Beach. In this view showing the long and open
expanse of beach you can see why I’ve talked before about this beach being so
windy. We came here a few times and it
was always windy – sometimes just a little, sometimes quite a bit like the time
I’ve mentioned before in another post about packing up our picnic lunch and
heading home to have it on a blanket spread out in front of a fire Dad built in
the fireplace and calling it “Lunner” because it was now halfway between lunch
and dinner time. J
The grasses at the top of
the sand dunes behind the beach.
My family sitting behind
those grasses. You’ve seen this photo
before of my family hunkering down behind the dunes from the wind trying to
decide whether to brave a picnic lunch here, or head home?
On this particular trip it
must not have been too windy because
it looks like we stayed for lunch. And
look! There’s driftwood!!
So naturally we all did a little beachcombing!
I was here with my family at least once when I was young. I remember having a lot of fun in what was then called the “Fun House”. I remember long polished wooden slides we flew down seated on gunny sacks; wooden sidewalks that jiggled back & forth & sideways with railings you could hang onto to keep your balance; and a large revolving concrete ‘tunnel’ that you tried to walk through without falling down. There were other things, too, but I can’t remember the rest. Sadly, the Fun House is gone now. I came here with my church group and/or boyfriends when I was in my teens. Back then I loved to ride the rollercoaster – sometimes several times in a row. In later years, however, I couldn’t manage it. I was here several years ago – like about 18 or 19 (!!!), with my own family when the grandkiddos were still young (they’re all but graduated from college now!) and they all rode the kiddie fun rides.
Granddaughters on the Dragon Ride.
A late 1800s or early
1900s photo of folks walking along Santa Cruz’s ‘boardwalk’.
The Wharf.
Having dinner at “Bubba
Gumps” on the Wharf with my daughter, brother, and husband.
We were part of a whole group here to celebrate my brother’s wife who had passed away from cancer. She wanted her ashes scattered across the ocean in the Monterey-Carmel area where she and my brother loved to go. So before we had dinner at Bubba Gumps, we went out on the ocean in a boat like this one to scatter her ashes along with rose petals over the water. Unfortunately it wasn’t a sunny afternoon like the one in the picture. It was overcast, a bit on the cool side, windy, and the water was not all that smooth with sizeable waves beginning to roll in. But her ashes were scattered beautifully with the rose petals and we made it safely back to shore. J
:->
La Nightingail
Oh you California gals have so much fun! Loved how you coped with the wind when wanting to have a picnic at the beach. I remember hiding behind dunes on an Atlantic beach for the same reason. This was neat, seeing the post cards and then your own experiences in the same places.
ReplyDeleteI am always astonished at the number of photos you have of you family travels. It does seem odd to see you and your family bundled up on the beach, but those ocean winds can get quite cool. We used to go to Cape Cod, Mass., during my childhood -- and no matter how hot it was during the day, by nightfall we were all in hooded sweatshirts in July! That last pair of boardwalk photos (old and new) is amazing -- quite a contrast from the days of floor length skirts to today.
ReplyDeleteI always enjoy your California travelogues as I've only visited the state once as an adult. Having lived many years on or near the Atlantic, I know the East Coast pretty well but the West Coast is still largely unknown territory for me. The few times I've seen the Pacific Ocean in Oregon, Washington, and Alaska it always felt very strange because its horizon was best at sunset and not sunrise.
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