notes-places-bayArea

parks:

skyline road (a road, not a park): beautiful fog! also, a lookout called "cloud's rest" in which, at sunset, you can see the horizon for maybe 180 degrees around you. It's like a rainbow halo.

near skyline:

los trancos: seems more beautiful than monte bello to me. Only had a little bit of time (I had to get back soon), running through it, looking for a good place to see the sunset (didn't find one). Green, not "lush" but lots of green plants surrounding you.

purisima creek: http://www.openspace.org/preserves/pr_purisima.asp redwood forest. quiet, big open forest, very contemplative and deep. "

i forgot the name of one of the good ones -- i think it's wunderlich. goes in between the main road and skyline. also lots of redwoods, quiet, big open forest, contemplative and deep, but mb not as much as purisima. i think this is http://www.bahiker.com/southbayhikes/wunderlich.html

monte bello:

Very "california", dry hills with yellow grass-like or grain-like plants. Lots of reptiles running around the path. I walked down to the stream, and then returned. There is a place near the trail that is kind of a marsh choked by reeds. A sign explains that eventually it will be dry land and eventually even turn into a forest.

The first part of the park overlooks a small valley. You can see the fog spilling in at sunset!

rancho san antonio: the "farm" that me and katherine went to. Lots of deer and a pack of turkeys. Different walks with different feels. An area with big trees, a trail at the bottom of hills, a walk over the tops of grassy hills.

find the "midpeninsula regional open space district" http://www.openspace.org/preserves/preserve_locator.html

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> Having never stepped foot in the state, I never really new where the various cities were related to one another.

Here's a summary:

From northmost to southmost:

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Other comments on CA:

Skiing: Ski addicts do exist in the Bay Area and I have a friend who goes to the Tahoe area almost every weekend during ski season, often on single day trips. So although it seems like a long way to me, to you ski addicts I think the distance is manageable.

Lots of rock climbers, too.

Cars:

	Southern CA town/city layouts force everyone to have a car (or be veryinconvenienced). The roads in CA are bigger and better designed than in the East, with few tolls (although most of CA doesn't have numbered highway exits yet). In the places I've been, traffic on highways is almost nonexistent except at rush hour.

City Names:

Lots of town names start with "San" or "Santa". So if you move there you'd better get used to it and not confuse all the "San"s like I do.

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