John & Anne Wiley

2013/02/10

Nice Change

A few days ago the two of us were flying along the magnificent Santa Barbara coast seeing sights like this at Naples just West of town.

2962 Naples Coast

2962 Naples Coast

Starting last night, we’re a large family doing things on the ground together. My precious Daughter and her fun husband brought our delightful Grand Daughter (I call her Lulu) to visit us for a week. So we woke this morning to this warm family scene with Lulu intently enjoying the toys and other kid supplies loaned by our sweet grandparent friends.

4073 Toys N Us

4073 Toys N Us

We’re re-learning all the skills we learned raising our daughter, like kid-proofing hazardous and breakable stuff, keeping toys off the floor, and most importantly how to handle tantrums and naps. Luckily we all have patience, knowledge and skills, and best of all she’s a Perfect Child. We took them to the farmer’s market, and they rather enjoyed the contrast with Edmonton where they were yesterday in sub-zero weather and the color-free realm of snow and ice we visited in February 2011.

4088 Contrast

4088 Contrast

2013/02/06

Capitan

The area around El Capitan has many attractions for us. When I was in flight training most of my flights beyond the airport where I had to fly in circles for hours to practice landings, began after reaching the El Capitan area. That’s what local pilots (and ATC) refer to as the West Practice Area, so often you’ll see planes doing all sorts of strange things (like stalls) out there. It’s also home to a great state beach and campground, and across the highway is El Capitan Canyon retreat center where we once spent the night in one of their cabins and attended a magical Inca event in one of their yurts.

2954 El Cap

2954 El Cap

Like many locals, we call it El Cap and it’s popular with surfers so on most flights we’ll see some boards waiting for the perfect wave, just to the right of the point. You might be able to make out the RV park that the retreat center added a few years ago, just across the freeway at the base of the hill on the far side of the canyon. Speaking of yurts, I hadn’t noticed before that there’s a tiny settlement just to the West of El Cap that includes this yurt.

2953 Tiny Settlement

2953 Tiny Settlement

I wonder what the story is with this place. Looks like some creative people live there. A little way to the East of El Cap is this larger and more spread out settlement we call Naples and just beyond that is Dos Pueblos Ranch where this private beach sits beneath another beautiful rusting railroad bridge.

2965 DP Beach

2965 DP Beach

Even though it’s a very short flight from SBA, the El Cap area always seems to have many attractions for us. I guess a part of the whole magic of flight, is that everything is new when seen from the air. Even places we go every day, take on powerful magical qualities when we fly over them. Our spirits rise with our eyes, and transform the mundane. We are elevated to another realm of renewal.

2013/02/05

Bridges

I like old railroad bridges. Some are truly magnificent, but even the more “ordinary” steel ones have a romance for me. The whole metaphor of a bridge as connecting people and places is of course powerful. Another factor for me is that when riding trains the best views are often in those brief moments when you’re on a bridge. Now that we fly, those fleeting bridge views pale in comparison with what we see for every moment of every flight. Even so, I now enjoy looking down at the bridges as we pass them.

2919 Western Bridge

2919 Western Bridge

This one’s close to Point Conception, near the Western end of the Santa Barbara coast where the rails turn toward the North and only a few people not riding Amtrak ever see it. Closer to home is this one still on the private ranch land where many mansions have been built in recent years.

2920 Lonely Bridge

2920 Lonely Bridge

Other than every train going to points North, and the few who drive this end of the private ranch to and from their homes, some surfers probably know this bridge best. The next one is more popular with them though, because we see cars parked here on most of our flights along that private coast.

2924 Surfer Bridge

2924 Surfer Bridge

There’s something very “California” about a surfer bridge. An iconic one of those is the longer railroad bridge across the public Gaviota Beach next to the popular pier below the bend in Highway 101.

 

2927 Gaviota Bridge

2927 Gaviota Bridge

Freight trains cross all these bridges of course, as beach campers on this coast well know from their late night rumbling passage. But I mostly think of the passenger trains with most people crowded on the South side gasping when the expansive views from beaches out to the island whip past on each bridge crossing.

2949 Amtrak Near Refugio

2949 Amtrak Near Refugio

We saw this one clickety clack along the water just East of Refugio beach and campground. Maybe some day I’ll get excited about train rides again, but for now I’d rather be flying looking down at them and back in time to memories over the years. The first I remember was going to San Diego as a small child and more thrilled by seeing the long curve to each end of the train at every gentle bend in the track, than by the bridge glimpses I enjoyed in later years. Trains are much shorter now, and made even smaller for me by this aerial perspective. Now it’s the bridges more than the trains, that capture my imagination.

2013/02/02

Eye Rock

Filed under: Flying,Happiness,Has Photos,Nature,Random,SB Region — John @ 22:11

Our friend Spence told us this is called Eye Rock on Mission Ridge. Even more fascinating than Tooth Rock in some ways, and I guess this cave is the “eye” it’s named for.

2742 3D Eye Rock Cave

2742 3D Eye Rock Cave

In case you’re wondering where it is, this pic shows the peak I gather is called either Mission Ridge or White’s Peak. I’ve circled Eye Rock in green. I wonder how many people have been out to see it, given how rough the terrain looks.

2743 Eye Rock Location

2743 Eye Rock Location

I’m enjoying looking at all these pix from recent flights, especially the ones that reveal more detail in 3D. I am a hawk riding the thermals. Except I’m looking for beauty instead of mice. 🙂

2013/02/01

Dr. Phil

Was it Johnny Carson who said his dentist’s name was Phil McCavity? Well as you may know this distinctive peak above Santa Barbara reminds me of a dental work so I call it Tooth Rock. It even has several “cavities” on the face. OK, it’s true I intended to stop sharing 3D pix here but I really like how the shape and cavities stand out.

3884 3D Tooth Rock

3884 3D Tooth Rock

Again, to view it look at the line in the center and gradually cross your eyes until you see three photos side by side and then focus on the peak as you cross or uncross your eyes slightly to bring together the two images of the peak in the center of the three photos you see with your eyes crossed. Once you learn to do this it’s quick and easy, and it’s great fun to look at the pix.
Here’s a frontal view of the rock, that shows the caves better. Especially in 3D!

3887 3D Tooth Face

3887 3D Tooth Face

This is more the view from town, where it looks like a conical tooth shape. In the first pic at the top, you can see it’s actually a thick slab of rock. The second pic is fuzzy at the top-right because the angle on the hills behind changes so much between the two pics that make it 3D.

Having seen it close up like this, often when I look at it from town now I can imagine us up there with friends sipping wine and watching the sunset. Later quiet guitar and singing around a small campfire during the wet season. Maybe sleeping in the big cave at the base and watching the stars whirl by outside the opening. Surely many people have spent time there over the ages. Their enchantment there has captured my imagination, and resonates in my soul.

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