Extras

California Coastal Redwoods Guide for the Avenue of the Giants

California Coastal Redwoods Guide for the Avenue of the Giants

If you haven’t found the perfect California Coastal Redwoods guide and especially a map yet, let me attempt to tell you a few things we wish we knew before our trip that we know now.

First off, the Redwoods were glorious and trouncing about, we saw many wonderful things.  But I couldn’t find the classic tourist pamphlet online before our trip to better plan, but found one in our first hotel.  So you can prepare better, here you go, the full pamphlet map with highlights, roads, restaurants, and attractions.

The main thing to note is that the majority of the Redwood items of interest are along Highway 101.  There is a road that rides along highway 101 called the Avenue of the Giants.  Thats a showstopper road.  Everything you see on it will be amazing.  There are lots of little spots to pull off to either hop out and explore or to let faster cars pass you.  From the South, the show seems to start at Leggett.  We only went as far north as Redcrest.  By the way, the Eternal Tree House appears to be dead. 

The Chandelier Drive Through Tree in Leggett was wonderful.  Its still thriving at 2400 years old.  Our rented Chrysler Pacifica Minivan slipped through with the mirrors tucked in with no more than millimeters of clearance on both sides…so it was a tight fit.  You pay 15$ per car to enter the grounds, and the entrance road takes you straight to the drive through tree.  In mid June, 2023, we waited for 5 cars and it was out turn.  Most people drove through, got their front doors past the tree, a passenger hopped out, ran in front and took their picture.

Other highlights were the One Log House that was on the side of the road in the same parking lot as the Grandfather Tree.  You can go in to the shop to get a code for 2$ in 2023 to unlock and walk into the house.  It was worth 2$ for our group of 6 to see it.  No crowd.  The Shop to get the code is also a big Weed Dispensary, so it stunk pretty skunk in there. 

Grandfather tree is awesome at 1800 years old.  It has a hobbit hole in the back that our kids quickly walked into. 

Something to note about the roads…  Highway 101 is a pretty good road that you can keep some pretty good speed on.  But most other roads, twist and turn, dodge and weave.  On those roads, you’ll see speed limit signs that exceed what most people can accomplish.  Since GPS apps like google maps use the posted speed limit to tell you your eta, you may find it takes up to 2 times the GPS estimate to get somewhere.  If the road says 55mph, but you can only average 30, then you’ll take twice as long roughly.  So account for that.

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Eco Wrap – A push for greening up fast food a smidge

Eco Wrap – A push for greening up fast food a smidge

If you have dined-in at a fast food restaurant at some point in your life, you have likely noticed that everything you order comes individually wrapped up and placed on your tray just the same way as it would if it was ordered at the drive through.  By this I mean, your burger/chicken sandwich is in a paper wrap or cardboard box, your fries are in a cardboard caddy, your nuggets are in paper or cardboard, your cookie is even in a tissue.   And if you are like me, the first thing you do is open up the sandwich, unfurl its wrapper, dump the fries/nuggets on to join the sandwich, and start your meal.

The proposal is simple: Have an OPTION at fastfood joints to request Eco Wrapping for Dine-in customers where the food is minimally packaged.  For instance, 1 sheet can be placed on the tray, the burger, fries, and chicken, cookie, whatever, can be placed directly on that, and you will immediately start to reduce waste.

ComparisonWrapped

*Despite the graphics, the initial proposal is not to adopt glassware or silverware for dine-in customers, but at the initial onset, to at least reduce all the little cardboard and paper containers that food comes in. Continue reading →

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Is crawling style Hereditary?

Is crawling style Hereditary?

The basic question: Is crawling style hereditary?  For instance, my wife crawled “Normal” and I used the seated scooching alternative style.  Our first born was nearing the crawling stage and we just assumed she would crawl “normal”.  But alas, our daughter crawls with a seated scooch like her dear pop.  So, did you and your baby crawl the same?

Of course if the baby’s parents crawled differently than eachother as children, then perhaps the baby took after only one parent or forged a new path entirely.

 

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