John & Anne Wiley

2010/11/13

Sunset Cruise

Not long after moving to Santa Barbara we went on a romantic sunset cruise of the harbor. So delightful to look back at our “new” town snuggling in for a cozy night beneath the mountains. Dappled hues on the gently rippling water, as we joined other couples talking quietly and cuddling against the mild chill. Lovely.

Well today we enjoyed another romantic cruise, this time 1/4 mile up flying slowly West in the calm air. Sunlight was still caressing rolling hills.

3408 Sunset Knoll

3408 Sunset Knoll

In the West there was a fascinating orange “cloud” that stood out from a few slightly pink clouds more toward the northwest.

3413 Smoke Fingers

3413 Smoke Fingers

We decided it was smoke from a wildfire or more likely from agricultural burning, as was the consensus on a different photo of it I sent to Edhat. As the fun finally thinned to a sliver on the horizon, I snapped one last photo before we turned for the gentle ride home to SBA. Have I ever mentioned that Santa Barbara is an exceptionally beautiful place? 🙂

3433 Smoky Sunset

3433 Smoky Sunset

2010/11/11

Yesterday

All our troubles seemed so far away, floating dreamily past Stearn’s Wharf on a slow climb.

3359 Stearns to Mountains

3359 Stearns to Mountains

How many times have we enjoyed a bike ride, walk or drive from Stearns straight up Altered State Street? I like how many trees our town has, making the narrow corridor up State stand out due to the lack of green. Some day I’ll need to get a camera that doesn’t emphasize haze so much, because it actually looked pretty clear and crisp yesterday. Approaching the air traffic pattern at Camarillo (KCMA) there’s this agro island school.

3376 Agro Island School

3376 Agro Island School

I call it that due to how it’s completely surrounded by agricultural fields. I wonder how long it will be, before those fields give way to housing developments. We used to always look for high vantage points, like this church tower in Ventura.

3379 Church Tower

3379 Church Tower

While it does seem like a nice place to watch people walk the courtyard maze, we feel differently about “high” places now that we often look so far down at the tops of them. Even when we passed Sears tower in Chicago last year, it didn’t seem all that impressive. Maybe partly because we can choose from such a wide variety of altitudes and locations to look at points of interest. In a tower (if you can even find a way to go up) you’re limited to one location and often only one height above ground. We do still enjoy glass elevators though. 🙂

2010/11/10

Quiet Flight

Filed under: Flying,Happiness,Has Photos,Random,SB Region — John @ 02:24

Weather was glorious today, so we decided to take the short hop to Camarillo. As always, the Santa Barbara harbor shimmered with colors and life.

3356 SB Harbor

3356 SB Harbor

Coming home just before sunset, Anacapa Island was floating in a bath of ocean mist.

3391 Floating Anacapa Island

3391 Floating Anacapa Island

Such a magnificent place to live, sail, and of course fly. I took another deep breath just now, adding this pic. As we flew Anne turned to me and asked, “Why do we ever go anywhere else?” Guess we enjoy going away so we can come home, and also maybe seasoning our quiet time here with the spice of adventure. 🙂

I’ve sent a different pic from today to Edhat, and will probably add some to our Photo Page later.

2010/11/08

Back Again

Filed under: Aviation,Flying,Happiness,Has Photos,Nature,People,Random — John @ 09:28

I distracted into looking back again at pix from our 10/10 flight to San Diego, and found yet more to share. Here’s the Solana Beach and Del Mar area.

2585 Del Mar Area

2585 Del Mar Area

On the large version of the pic you can make out the race track this side of the lagoon. In the closer shot below, click to see the relatively large number of people walking the sandy shallows at the creek mouth.

2591 Del Mar Fair/Track

2591 Del Mar Fair/Track

Near the hang glider/ultralight spot, nude beach, and UCSD there are some fancy buildings perched on sandy bluffs. The glass one looks like some sort of upscale display case. Pretty cool architecture.

2606 La Jolla Farms Rd.

2606 La Jolla Farms Rd.

At last, over Mount Soledad we turned toward Montgomery Field to prepare for landing. There was just time to snap this hazy view of the skyline as we began our descent. I’ve uploaded a larger image than usual for this blog, so if you click to view the largest version of this it may show some detail. The ship at the left end of the Coronado Bridge is at SIMA where we once taught advanced computer classes for Navy techs.

2615 Distant San Diego

2615 Distant San Diego

The tip of massive Lindberg Field shows at the right below the bay, and reminds me of the fun we had landing there with Molly & Dustin. Above that is the tip of Coronado Island leading to the Strand beyond. I once rode my bike along the Mission Valley green belt (foreground) from Mission Gorge to the beach. They’ve been restoring the river front and adding more access, so it’s probably even nicer now than when we lived there. Such a fun flight it was, and the return trip on a slightly different route brought new adventures but no more pix so you’ll just have to imagine. 🙂

2010/11/05

Remember

Do you remember a time when the Democratic party “controlled” both houses of Congress? Back in that era, do you recall we “brought you along” with pix of our flight from Santa Barbara to San Diego? Well today we watched a bunch of recorded TV from the election analysis and puttered around the house. I suddenly remembered that there were more pix from that flight you might enjoy. In the Laguna area is a beautiful beach at Crescent Bay and it was popular 10/10 with people on the sand, in the water, and climbing on the rocks.

2465 Crescent Bay

2465 Crescent Bay

Laguna Canyon Beach was understandably busy too, with its lovely wandering waterfront walk and grassy area complementing the great beach.

2470 Laguna Canyon Beach

2470 Laguna Canyon Beach

Just past the grand hotel at Laguna Niguel and Dana Point, the tall ships at Dana Cove offer a glimpse of the last millennium.

2500 Dana Pt. Tall Ships

2500 Dana Pt. Tall Ships

Surfers were out in numbers past San Clemente at the Trestles Surfer Beach, where the sea bottom shape offers exceptional rides in some conditions. If you click to view the large size, you can make out rows of boards standing in the beach sand.

2516 Trestles Surfer Beach

2516 Trestles Surfer Beach

To some the San Onofre nuclear facility is beautiful, to others frightening, and to many passing on the freeway perhaps just an architectural oddity. There’s something fascinating to me about its close proximity to Trestles on one side and the “Tijuana North” border patrol inspection point on the other.

2525 San Onofre Nukes

2525 San Onofre Nukes

The hovercraft base at Camp Pendleton is mostly hidden from the freeway, but it would be fun to see the Marines launching down the ramp into the ocean during a flight like this sometime. Maybe even loading into their transport ships offshore.

2540 Camp Pendleton Hovercraft

2540 Camp Pendleton Hovercraft

Another landmark along the old Highway 1 at Carlsbad is the older alternative to those San Onofre nukes. I remember this power plant from my youth, and like me it’s still going strong.

2571 Carlsbad Power Plant

2571 Carlsbad Power Plant

A highlight of every drive along Hwy. 1 and this flight offshore was seeing San Elijo, because this is where we had our “honeymoon.” We’d both left our jobs in the Pacific Northwest, we bought a 280Z sports car together, and tented on the bluffs above the beach at the left. During this break between careers we’d talk, walk, sing, swim, write, and muse. I remember riding the rip current to the left in shallow water along the beach just right of the lagoon outlet, as Anne kept pace at a brisk walk along the sand. It would take me out a bit near the outlet and then more slowly back along to the right to repeat the ride. Years later we took my daughter and her boyfriend there to play on that same beach one night in the bright lights of the restaurant. It seemed bigger then than it does from this vantage point, now that we’re in one of those small planes we used to watch flying along the shore.

2580 San Elijo Lagoon

2580 San Elijo Lagoon

Well this sure got long! Guess I’ll stop for now, and maybe look at the remaining pix from this flight sometime to see if there are more you might enjoy.

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