trainman74
Conductor
Yes, Interstate 70. (It was quite an engineering feat to get it into that canyon!)Interstate? running opposite side of the river to the rail track
Yes, Interstate 70. (It was quite an engineering feat to get it into that canyon!)Interstate? running opposite side of the river to the rail track
More good stuff Jaime! See yall Friday morning in Austin! Hope the Sunset/Eagle trip is a blast!
Hardly recognised him, no bow tie...Having shared a room with Bob at the San Francisco "gathering", I can confirm his description.
Ed.
Thanks Ed, things take a turn for the 'different' later but still adventuresA great adventure you are both having, I am very jealous!
A fan of Steinbeck myself, I enjoyed "Travels with Charley" very much. An important book chronicling the fast changing USA of the day. I was not aware of the "book burning" episode, but any whiff of social conscience in America was taken as being an enemy of the state... How familiar these days
I know one anti Steinbeck AU member who will be spitting on my post if she sees it... Hello Alice, long time no hear from you...!
Rocinante may have been a reliable steed for Steinbeck, but I don't feel he liked being uncomfortable too much... This item from 1967:
https://www.popsci.com/article/diy/john-steinbeck-why-camping-birds
A few years back I drove from SLO up the coast highway to Monterey, a great day out.
Keep on keeping on!
Ed.
I am at home in Nottingham, only now getting around to writing up my Indian trip from last October 2017. Fortunately, I made notes at the time... my memory cells are not too sharp these days.Where are you now Ed, I'm confused?
Thanks ma'amI love this part of your trip--water, boats, a precious little sea otter, and lots of seals (and sea lions? I think perhaps the harem with the black male are sea lions, not seals? That's if I remember the sea lion show at Mystic Aquarium correctly, where they explained how to tell them apart, but I've forgotten the details by now--longer flippers, I think).
I do notice there is a conspicuous absence of any details of your meeting with our own Bob D.--hope you had a good time and that he did not lead you astray into any mischief down there in wild Texas!
Thanks for the sea lion info and for taking the trouble to check it.You're welcome, v v.
I just looked them up, and, according to our National Ocean Service, some differences are that sea lions have larger flippers and visible ear flaps, and seals have small flippers and lack visible ear flaps. So I think the group picture is of sea lions, and the later individual pictures are the harbor seals. And, of course, the sea otter is unique unto itself!
My sense of geography is quite vague, and I got mixed up with the message from Jim-Bob coming in the middle of your California travelogue--I was thinking you had gone back to California after seeing him!
Also, now that I've remembered where you were going, how did you like the Meteor (aside from the bumpy ride for a while)?
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