Sunday, September 16, 2012

What I did with my (2012) summer vacation (n. 1)

It's irresistible, the repeated elementary school habit too strong, so here's my "What I did with my summer vacation" in a photographic nutshell (so don't panic...I'm not going to bore you with hours of shots of people you don't know, or notes about the new words in English I picked up for my students...see, if you're learning English as a second language, don't worry if you have to keep your ears open to learn new vocab...language changes, and so we native speakers have to, too!)....More......

First off...I'm getting too old for this.

The flight from Milan to San Diego, California, was--door to door--about 28 hours long.

I was so exhausted by the time I got to my aunt's house (thanks sooo much to all the friends and family, who put me up a few days here, a few days there, so I could go) that I could barely pour myself out of the car, up the walk and handful of stairs, through the house and into the guest bedroom. Surprisingly, I had almost no trouble with jet lag, probably because I arrived soooo exhausted a bit before midnight that I was able to get into the local waking-sleeping rhythm easily.

For the next couple of days, I spent most of the time just hanging out with friends and family (this, you'll see, was the leit motif of the entire trip, since I hadn't been back in soooo long), so no details interesting to the uninvolved there. Ain't I thoughtful?!

Did arrange to meet some other friends halfway between L.A. and San Diego at delightful San Juan Capistrano, easily and comfortably reached with the Amtrak train from the old Santa Fe station in downtown San Diego (don't get confused...there is another train station in the historic part of downtown that preserves some Spanish-era buildings, also worth visiting). Fear not! Does the morning look dreary and cloudy? This is typical of southern California coastal areas in the summer. By noonish it was all burning off, and we had lovely weather for the rest of the day. Helps to keep things from getting too darn hot.

The train station is on the SDMTS red trolley line, though to be honest, good public transportation is pretty scarce in Southern California, where the areas are so spread out. Visitors and locals alike pretty much have to rely on driving cars, though efforts at improving the systems are being made.

The station is a historic building (now that I live in Italy, I have to confess, it makes me laugh a bit when buildings from the 19th century are called "historic," but it's all in one's point-of-reference, isn't it?), and is in the typical "Mission Style" of architecture, with lovely fittings, including beautiful wall tiles. (Sadly, how times have changed. Before the Twin Towers terrorist attack no one would have thought twice about someone taking pictures in and around public buildings, but while I was wiling away the time before my train's departure, a very nice guard tensely sauntered over, and pretended to chat with me to find out just what the heck I was doing and who I was. After he was reassured that I was just a tourist taking shots of the pretty bits of the building for innocent reasons, he left me with a kind goodbye.)

What's there to see and do in San Juan Capistrano? Our visit was dedicated to hugs, chatting, eating lunch, a visit to the old Jesuit mission...

...a view of the monastery's central courtyard from under the porch...

...inside the monk's chapel, still a working church...

...what's left of the cathedral, brought down by an earthquake not too many years after it had been built (what rotten luck)...

...and a refreshing soda pop on the cute wooden porch of the little Hidden Coffee Shop in an old sideboard house just on the opposite side of the train tracks from the downtown historic center and the mission. Also on the other side of the tracks from downtown is a fun and tasty restaurant, the Ramos House Cafè, in a reconverted typical low wooden house of the area down a shabby-chic small road lined with the pepper trees I remember so fondly from my So Cal childhood.

Well worth a day.

These pictures were shot for your personal, non-commercial fun. Enjoy!

4 comments:

Margaret said...

The flight sounds dreadful and exhausting, but it looks like you had a good time.

Dentist In San Juan Capistrano said...
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Star said...

The dentist was in San Diego...and was affordable only because all there was to do was take a peek, rinse, and glue the existing cap back on....

Star said...

Lots of other stuff to do in San Diego, itself: Sea World, Mission Beach, the Zoo, Seaport Village, the nearby gaslight district and the harbor attractions, the symphony, etc., but my favorite is Balboa Park, full of such fascinating and different things to see and do, including a world-class art museum, a beautiful arboretum and an open-air organ (one of my favorite childhood memories). Here's the Facebook page address -- https://www.facebook.com/BalboaPark?ref=stream -- and the web address -- http://www.balboapark.org/ -- Enjoy!

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