Monday, July 11, 2016

CA Road trip II:: Morro Rock, Elephant Seal Rookery, Ragged Point, Hearst Castle, San Simeon


Morro Bay/ Morro Rock:


From 198 W we hit 41 S and reached Morro Bay by evening. Morro rock is a 581-foot (177 m) volcanic plug located at the entrance to Morro Bay Harbor. We saw it from the bay area 



and then drove on the causeway connecting it to the mainland. Pretty good.


CA Highway 1

We hit hwy 1 from there and drove to San Simeon. Our hotel Day’s Inn is just a block inside and we checked in and called it a day.



Hearst Castle, San Simeon


When we were planning our trip we knew Hearst Castle is a highlight on this HWY1 drive and it needs advance reservation for its tour slots. We had not wanted to commit to a time and so did not reserve online. When we checked around a week before the trip only 11am onward slots were available for the Grand Rooms tour. We still did not reserve.

We decided we’ll drive up and see if we can buy tickets 1st thing in the morning or drop the visit. We were ready by 7am but the routine Californian fog that envelops the shoreline in summer was very much on. We relaxed and went up to Hearst Castle by 8.45. The ticket counters were open and 12.45 slot was the earliest available for the Grand Rooms tour. We decided to buy it, look around a bit, go on our coastal drive and come back in time for our tour.



We checked out the exhibits and the gift shop. 

The exhibits were great. 





Even the gift shop was pretty good; there were very good reproductions of classic statues we have seen in top museums Paris Louvre’s Venus de Milo, Winged Victory, Abduction of Prosperina we had seen in the loggia in Florence … we loved browsing there. 

We tried to buy Three Graces statue magnet but the counter person was not available. We started off on our hwy1 drive.


Elephant Seal Rookery


1st stop was the Elephant Seal Rookery near the light house. Plenty of elephant seals lounging around the beach and nice signboard with info as usual. 



Enjoyed watching baby elephant seals and mothers lying in the sand and frolicking in the water. 




Then we drove on.

Ragged Point


Next was the Ragged point view. We parked and walked in. It’s a lovely landscape with colorful flowers and a short walk with great views of the coast line and hills around with hwy 1 snaking its way. 





The oaks with huge branches looked great too. 


We then drove onward enjoying the switchbacks and the glimpses of the sea. At around 11.15, we turned back. This gave us the chance to drive on the side closer to the shoreline. We enjoyed the different perspective and reached the castle.

Hearst Castle, Again


We had our picnic lunch and then reached the visitor center. 


We were just in time for our bus ride up the hill. It’s a 5 mile drive up sloping roads and there are Barbary sheep  (goat antelope) and cows grazing on the slopes.   



Hearst Castle is a group of mansions designed by architect Julia Morgan, between 1919 and 1947 for newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst on a huge estate "La Cuesta Encantada" ("The Enchanted Hill"), but usually called "the ranch". 

The estate is atop a hill of the Santa Lucia Range at an altitude of 1,600 feet (490 m).

Hearst Castle was built on Rancho Piedra Blanca that William Randolph Hearst's father originally purchased in 1865. The younger Hearst grew fond of this site over many childhood family camping trips. He inherited the ranch, which had grown to 250,000 acres (1,012 sq km) and 14 miles (23 km) of coastline, from his mother Phoebe Hearst in 1919. Although the large ranch already had a Victorian mansion, the location selected for Hearst Castle was undeveloped, atop a steep hill whose ascent was a dirt path accessible only by foot or on horseback over 5 miles (8 km) of cutbacks

Morgan, an accomplished civil engineer, devised a gravity-based water delivery system that transports water from artesian wells on the slopes of Pine Mountain, a 3,500-foot (1,100 m) high peak 7 miles (11 km) east of Hearst Castle, to a reservoir on Rocky Butte, a 2,000-foot (610 m) knoll less than a mile southeast from Hearst Castle.


This is the oldest artifact...


The estate is a mixture of historic architectural styles that its owner admired in his travels around Europe

Hearst was a prolific buyer who did not purchase art and antiques to furnish his home; he built his home to display his art collection! 



This led to incongruous elements, such as the private cinema, whose walls were lined with shelves of rare books. 

The floor plan of the Main Building is chaotic due to his habit of buying centuries-old ceilings, which dictated the proportions and decor of various rooms.





Hearst Castle featured 56 bedrooms, 61 bathrooms, 19 sitting rooms, 127 acres of gardens, indoor and outdoor swimming pools, tennis courts, a movie theater, an airfield, and the world's largest private zoo. Zebras and other exotic animals still roam the grounds.

Casa Grande, the "castle", is 60,645 square feet (5,634 m²); 


The Spanish style guest houses on the property are: 
Casa del Mar (House by the sea): 5,875 sq feet (546 m²); 
Casa del Monte (House by the mountain): 2,291 sq feet (213 m²); 
Casa del Sol (House by the sun): 2,604 sq feet (242 m²)




One highlight of the estate is the outdoor Neptune Pool, located near the edge of the hilltop, which offers an expansive vista of the mountains, ocean and the main house. 


The Neptune Pool patio features an ancient Roman temple front, transported wholesale from Europe and reconstructed at the site.




Our docent gave us a 60 minute tour of 4 rooms, the Assembly room, refectory (named after monk’s dining room), Billiard room and the private theater. 

This is the Assembly




This is the Refectory




This is the Billiard room.



Celebrities from Hollywood and politics were frequent visitors here. With all the religious tapestries and paintings, these rooms emanate an atmosphere of piety... wonder how a party mood was created in such an environment! As our docent wryly commented... With all the Saints from the ceiling looking down, what conversation of the Hollywood elite spun around!! 

There was so much info given by the docent that if we stood around hearing him, we could hardly see anything let alone take pics. when he was through with his account, we had to move to the next room. The number of people in each group is high and people fill all the space in the room. We had to give up listening to him and we moved around taking pics and observing on our own. When the group moved to the next room, we took hurried pics of the empty room! 

Not the best of experience after shelling out $25 for a tour of 4 rooms... anyways it's what it is! I had seen reviews and knew about this ...so it's fine.

We exited passing through the indoor Roman pool. 


It was an interesting experience over all and the views were awesome from any nook or corner.




The Three Graces here...and a sarcophagus



We had some food and exited the estate at 3.30 to continue our hwy 1 drive.

We reached Monterey and then hit hwy 101 to reach San Francisco. We would have loved to see the small towns on hwy 1 and visit the Monterey aquarium but we did not have the luxury of time! 

We drove on. The setting sun was directly in our eyes as we drove the last few miles in!

Hostels International San Francisco Downtown


We reached our Hostels International San Francisco Downtown and checked in by 8.30 pm.


We parked our car in the garage just opposite for $22 overnight parking.

We had earlier planned to go to the pier by public transport and watch the July 4 fireworks. It looked a little muggy and we decided to give it a miss. We turned in as we wanted to leave early for our flight back home.

July 5, 2016:


We had our flight back on Frontier airlines was scheduled at 10.30 am. Though the airport is just 12 miles away on hwy101, we had read that the busy weekday morning traffic would cause delays.

We left the hotel by 7am and drove on to the airport. There are clear signs to car rental returns… we had to take the San Bruno exit and not the regular airport exit further on. We returned the car, complained that they had downgraded us to compact when we had booked a sedan. The engine had been noisy and struggling to climb up hills and it was too small. The lady was patronizing and brushed off that all such cars are included in that category.


We took the skytrain and reached our terminal 1. Like earlier we had one carryon bag shared between the two of us apart from the free personal item. The person with bought carryon bag gets zone 1 boarding but they allowed both of us to board zone 1. It was an uneventful flight back to Houston.

We arrived at 4.30PM Houston time. So a whole day had gone by in transit for a domestic trip but we did not care.

We were very happy with the highlights we had managed to enjoy during a busy weekend and would definitely return to savor all the other delights of this lovely state of California     

Our videos:


Here’s the link for our videos. As usual there is music added and some frames are captioned. I'll add a couple more when they are ready

covers Hearst castle

covers Hwy 1 Morro rock, Elephant seal rookery, Ragged Point

http://adventuretrav.blogspot.com/2016/07/spain-consists-of-17-independent.html
is the next post that covers our vacation in Spain


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