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Showing posts with label channel islands national park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label channel islands national park. Show all posts

Friday, October 11, 2013

Fake lighthouse on Catalina Island, plus 9 other Funny Facts


At Tough Love Travel, Melanie researches and designs unique travel itineraries to Catalina Island and around the world.
 Go to TLT's website now to pick YOUR next adventure!

Ferrying out of San Pedro to Catalina Island, the Channel Islands National Park’s most touristed spot, make sure you catch the San Pedro lighthouse at the end of the breakwater.  

Catalina Island has a history of exploition by pirates, otter smugglers, and goldrushers until 1891 when the Banning brothers brought the Catalina Island and established the island's first stagecoach.   Fire destroyed their little empire in the 1920s and gum magnate, Wrigley, took over to create the now-iconic Catalina Island Casino, or meeting place.  Today, many restauranteurs are proud to be descendants of these early Catalina Islanders and, on my visit, I found these funny facts about Catalina:
1.  The eucalyptus trees grow backwards.
The eucalyptus trees which were imported to Catalina Island from South America where Spanish explorers found their intertwining fibers supremely strong and useful.   Who would’ve known, though, that – just like bats out of a cave or water down a toilet – the fibers of the eucalyptus tree grow backwards in the northern hemisphere, rendering the wood weak and useless.   Good thing that the leaves still smell so good, baking in that Catalina island sun! 

2.   There a one-stop shopping wedding consultant on Catalina Island!
On-the-sand ceremonies, particularly at sunset, are popular in Avalon, the main town of Catalina Island.  And if this is how you want to get hitched, you should hear about Catalina Island's one-stop wedding planner.   She arranges the entire event -- delivers equipment, showing up earlier that afternoon to stake out space and set up chairs and trellis, complete with a carpet of rose petals down the aisle.  She makes and delivers the bouquet and boutineer, walks everyone through the rehearsal (including the fidgety 6-year-old ring bearer who was more interested in climbing the palm tree than standing at the altar).     She straightens the brides train, lines everyone up, and then quickly changes her top to become the officiant. 
After the ceremony, she whipped out the paperwork and delivered the new couple their certificate, and then she unpacked her SLR camera and became the offical photographer! 
Oh!  Did I mention that she also provided the music, via a CD player color-coordinateth the flowers? 

3.  Fish-n-Chips Mama retired at age 80. 
For decades, she ran Earl and Rosie’s Seafood on the Green Dock, right in the heart of Catalina Island.   Boaters would send one of their crew over on a zodiac to order and pick up these vintage dinners, always served with Rosie’s secret tartar sauce.   Yes,  Earl worked there too, but everyone knew it as Rosies.  She always said she’d retire at 80, which she did (at which time she sold the business AND her trademark sauce). Today, she’s over 90 and just took up a walker. “I can go faster this way”, she said to our Catalina Island Food Tour gal, Desiree. 

4.  Food walking tour’s the latest greatest thing!
Yes, Catalina Island's  food is delicious – steak and coconut shrimp samples at Steves, a thin-crust veggie pie that you’d think came out of Naples Italy at the Arcade, and the hands-down best garlic green beans at the vintage Mr Nings Chinese Garden.  (after the Rosie story, I thought it was fitting that here at Chinese Garden, it’s MRS Ning who does all the running around while Mr Ning gets the credit)

5.  Where’re 3 Palms anyway? 
And speaking of the arcade, where exactly are Catalina Island's  3 palms?   The new arcade wanted a name drawn from island lore, so it picked 3 Palms.   It turns out, though, that only old-timers of Catalina  island know the meaning of this name, since – no surprise – the palms no longer exist.  Tale has it that these 3 iconic palms had waved for longer than anyone could remember on the southern cliffs above Catalina Island's Avalon harbor.   It was a locals’ meeting place (as in, let’s meet a 3 palms at 5) and a phrase sprinkled inseparably into the local history.  
But in the early's 70's,  3 palms were chopped down by the mayor’s son, as a prank on his father.    Today, it’s only 3 stumps, not 3 palms.
My sister and I did the math – this errant 18 year old would now be over 50.   Think he might make restitution to Catalina Island and replant? 

6.  Not a houseboat, but a boathouse!
Story goes that the Banning brothers had boats but when they were no longer needed for commerce on Catalina Island,  the brothers simply turned them into a house.  In fact, this house is a melding of 2 separate boats. 

7.  Navy housing
In WW II, the US Navy took over Catalina Island, and the island was closed for visitors.   Since the only people allowed on the island were residents, many longtime visitors simply bought their own bungalow.   Navy be damned!   Annual vacations  to Catalina Island rule! 
8.  A queue for a Car
There’s a 10-year waitlist for car ownership on Catalina Island.  That's why today's new parents apply for a car when they get their newborn a social security number.  And that's also why the streets on Catalina Island look like this: 

9.  Buffalo on Catalina Island are movie stars.
Zane Grey's hollywood classic, the Vanishing American, imported buffalo to Catalina Island in 1925 and, by the time production finished, was too "in the red" to ship them off.  You might think that today's buffalo burgers were a solution to that problem but, no, they're imported too.   The solution was bison birth control! 

10. Catalina Island's light is fake. 
Yes, it's true.  The only lighthouse on Catalina Island is a decorative feature of a popular seafood joint. 

Want a unique vacation, doing things that no one else is doing?  

Friday, June 14, 2013

Kayaking the Sea Caves: family lore on Santa Cruz

Where is Santa Cruz?   It's one of  the many islands of Channel Islands National Park, off the southern coast of California. 

Very unlike Catalina,  Santa Cruz is completely rustic.  That means that you have to bring your water and food -- and kayak guides! -- with you when you go there.  But it's worth it!

Here's the story of how my family bonded in the sea caves of Santa Cruz, in the summer of 2002...

We had arrived on Santa Cruz the day before, via national park ferry from Ventura.   After 20-miles on the ferry, we then had to cart all our gear for this rustic adventure 1/2-mile inland to our campsite in a grove of giant eucalyptus trees (see below for fun Santa Cruz fact!)  

We returned to the beach to snorkel -- normal creatures, abnormally crystal water! --  and after a camp dinner of noodles and chicken,  hiked over this scrubby, barren, Santa Cruz landscape to a western cliff, to watch sunset.

"Island Packers" met us on the beach the next morning.  Outfitted with helmet, vests, and paddles, in our sit-upon kayaks,  our guide led us out across the glassy green water of Santa Cruz' Prisoner's Harbor.


Santa Cruz' shoreline is riddled with hundreds of seacaves.  One unforgettable cave held the Green Room:  you kayak into this dark cave mouth and through a narrow, dark tunnel.  Then a room

suddenly opens up with sunlight streaming down into the sea from an opening overhead, the reflection creating a vivid green glow to the entire "room".   I think this was in Sea Stack Cave!

Later we paddled west, around the point, to Surging T Cave and Little Blowhole Cave.  The guide had to time our entry by the waves, since only between sets could you paddle through the opening without the surge bumping you up on the cave ceiling.

I would NOT recommend this outing without a guide who's not only a kayak expert, but who also has intimate knowledge of these caves.

One cave that we didn't make it to is Painted Cave, one of the largest and deepest sea caves in the world.  It's found on the northwest coastline of Santa Cruz. Named because of its colorful rock types, lichens, and algae, Painted Cave is nearly a quarter mile long and 100 feet wide, with an entrance ceiling of 160 feet and a waterfall over the entrance in the spring.

Other things to do on Santa Cruz?
There are pristine tide pools along its 77-mile craggy coastline,
picnic tables at Scorpion Anchorage, 
guided interpretative hikes at Prisoner's Cove,
and boundless independent hiking -- from flat signed trails to rugged mountainous paths through the Montana area --  anywhere on the eastern 1/2 of Santa Cruz owned by the national park.   Here's a full map!
Another funny tidbit about Santa Cruz?   
The eucalyptus trees were imported here from South America where their hard wood was highly valued for building and shipping.   However, that's SOUTH of the equator and, on Santa Cruz in the northern hemisphere, the fibers of the tree grew and twisted in the opposite direction (think toilet flushing or bats circling out of a cave...), making the wood worthless!  Still, the shade of their huge umbrella limbs was divine on this arid island and their scent was magical-- you felt like you were sleeping in a spa!


NOTE FROM MELANIE at  TOUGH LOVE TRAVEL...
Santa Cruz in the Channel Islands remains one of my most unforgettable adventures.  
I'd love to set you up on your own summer adventure!  
I offer free, 20-minute calls to talk it over!