Welcome

I only expect my travel companions (and me, Heather) to read this blog. If you have stumbled upon this missive, welcome.

We, The One Tank Gang, are a group of friends. Yes, money is tight and gas prices are high. CNN's "One Tank Trips in Five States" inspired us to gather our resources, pack a picnic lunch, climb into one of our automobiles and get the h-e-double-hockey sticks out of town now and again.


Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Naw’Leens or bust

We are heading to New Orleans.

While not strictly within the One Tank guidelines (way more than one tank of gas to get there!), we shall apply one tank rules there.

P.S. I have lovely pictures of  San Diego and our post Halloween dinner. I will get to post those soon…

Now, if I can just get everything in one carry on….

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Olivas Adobe, Ventura

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Date: Saturday, October 8, 2011

Starting Point: Arcadia, California

Destination: Olivas Adobe Ventura, California

Routes taken: CA-134, CA-210 and US-101

Total Miles:  150 miles (round trip)

Attendees:  Jeanette, DarDar and Heather

 

The Olivas Adobe, located in Ventura, California, is an adobe built in 1841 by Raymundo Olivas. Olivas received, in recognition of his service at the Presidio of Santa Barbara, approximately 2,250 acres (9 km2) as part of land grant from Governor Juan Bautista Alvarado in 1841, which he named Rancho San Miguel. The land had originally been part of Mission San Buenaventura, but was appropriated during the secularization of the missions. (Excerpt from Wikipedia.)

adobe-map thenroad map olivas now

 

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To keep costs down, we opted for a picnic lunch on the beautiful grounds of Olivas. Little did we realize that Olivas was the place of choice for every wedding photographer between Ventura and Ojai. We were surrounded by wedding after wedding after Quinceañera after Quinceañera.

 

 

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DSCN1161_smDocent,  Ross Goodman,  and staff, Lola Lynch, regaled us fascinating adobe history. Here a few tidbits that we  learned:      *This is the premier site of California’s  Rancho period of history.  *As a couple, Raymundo and Theordora had 21 children who all lived.   *The Rancho survived during the gold rush when the Olivas family diversified and sold cattle to the miners.     *Max Fleischmann, the  yeast king, bought the adobe and restored it. He turned it over to the City of Ventura.

 

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One Tank Gang (L-R)

Jeanette, DarDar and Heather

We missed you Anthony and Jenny.

PS The world’s oldest flowering fuchsia is pictured over Jeannette’s right shoulder.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

RIP TomTom

Here lies my nine day old TomTom GPS/SatNav.  Today it suffered a nervous breakdown (in other words, the hard drive crashed and wiped out all the maps, see no maps).
gps
Really, the trip to LAX was  not that big of deal. Really!
LAX2

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Stu 2 Linda Vista Hospital, Los Angeles Aug 6, 2011

Stu 2 Conference at haunted Linda Vista Hospital, Los Angeles

What Stu 2 was:
·         Fun.
·         Full of personalities.
·         Interesting.
·         In an awesome active setting.
·         Worth trying again, providing you heed the items below.




What Stu was not:
·         Organized: We received seven different answers from Stu “Staff” to the same question…all of them incorrect. The “Wayne Poe Theater” was set up in a place that could not be accessed (with the threat of being kicked out of the event) due to filming.
·         Professional: Ticket sales were kept in a coffee can. Directional signs (e.g. “Speakers”) were ripped out of a notebook and written with a black sharpie pen.
·         Adequately stocked: Few bathrooms (the few that we had were cut off due to filming), no toilet paper, no towels, and no food vendors. (They did flag down a roach coach and an ice cream truck.)
·         Clean: See note on toilet paper above. We got in the car and drove to Starbucks.



Linda Vista Hospital is an awesome investigation location. Across the street is apparently Quinceañera central.

The One Tank Gang

Monday, July 25, 2011

Quick post to test

Just a quick post to practice posting. Mom and I ran to Kean  in Newport Beach to test the new coffee home of Martin Deidrich. The coffee is great!
The presentation was beautiful.
Big thumbs up. Highly recommended.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Old Town San Diego

Date: Saturday, July 16, 2011
Starting Point: San Bernardino County, California
Destination: Old Town San Diego, California
Routes taken: CA-60, CA-57, Interstate-5
Total Miles:  261 miles (round trip)
Attendees: Anthony, Jenny, DarDar and Heather

Following the spirit of Legend Tripping and avoiding Carmageddon we headed south to Old Town San Diego. We chose to take the scenic coast route (I-5) over the barren desert route (I-15).




Whaley House in Old Town San Diego offers history, romance, mystery and ghosts. According to the Travel Channel's show America's Most Haunted, out of all the haunted houses in the United States, the Whaley House is the number one most haunted. Thomas Whaley built the house on land that was partially once a cemetery. The Whaley House has since been the home of dozens, if not hundreds, of ghost sightings.  This is a fact the Whaley docents and staff are most proud of and happy to discuss.



 “To visit the Whaley House today is to sweep back time like a curtain, leaving the visitor standing on the threshold of the 1850s -- the age of stagecoaches and crinolines - in what for years was the only ‘grand mansion’ in a dusty little frontier town” . (The Journal of San Diego History , SAN DIEGO HISTORICAL SOCIETY QUARTERLY, April 1960, Volume 6, Number 2 , SPECIAL ISSUE)

(The Whaley Family)


In a series of photos taken between 4:11pm and 4:12pm in the Whaley House courtroom, we had one photo with an anomaly. A smoky, hazy anomaly hovers at the judge’s seat. Is this the ghost of a former judge coming to say hello? Is it a reflection from a passing car on the street? We sent the photo to a paranormal group local to Whaley to rule reflections and other naturally occurring phenomenon. Jury is still out. (Pun intended.)



Was it Murder or Suicide?
Did the Violet Whaley, divorcée and daughter of the Whaley patriarch, commit suicide? Or could her parents no longer face the humiliation of having a divorced daughter? We debated either side. Thank goodness for smart phones! We had all versions of the story at our finger tips. When we left the site we were leaning toward the “save face” explanation.

 (Left to right: Heather DarDar and Jenny)


Disturbing, yet interesting:
We wandered down the road to the El Campo Santo Cemetery (California State Historical Site #68). According to Weird California  website, El Campo cemetery was  founded in 1849. In 1889 the cemetery was divided for a street car line. Parts were later paved over in 1942 becoming San Diego Avenue. It is reported that cars parked on the street would often have problems starting and their car alarms would often go off. In order to appease the spirits beneath the street, special marks have been placed in the pavement to show where the original graves were. If you visit look for them, they are little metal circles that simply state "GRAVE" on them. Yes. These graves are still under the sidewalk and San Diego Avenue. CREEPY.



DarDar may just have found home! 

(Left to right: Jenny peeking out, Heather and DarDar)



We gained one participant and lost one participant in the late afternoon. Just before dinner we met up with our friend, Andi and lost our friend, Jenny. We found Jenny in the wine bar. One look at the cowboy bartender and we knew why Jenny disappeared. All throughout dinner we took turns on reconnaissance to check on Jenny (and—ok-- to get a look at the bartender).

(Left to right: Bartender, Anthony, new friend, Ana, and Jenny)



Fabulous day!




Lessons learned:
  • Don’t take still pictures with a video camera.
  • Take photos of the gorgeous scenery along the drive. Oops. We were too busy talking.
  • Leave extra time for parking. Parking at Old Town was nuts!
  • Don’t Facebook your activities. The petty, juvenile, dramatic fallout is not worth it.
  • Get your margaritas blended, not on the rocks.
  • Beware of blue eyed, cowboy bartenders. Enough said.

Next stop:
UFO watching someplace in the Southern California desert. Or maybe the mountains. We are not sure yet. Wherever it is, it will involve lounge chairs, music and a six pack or two.


Other One Tank Links:

CNN Travel’s “One Tank Trips in Five States”

Southern California’s KTLA

Florida’s Fox One Tank Trips

Michigan’s ABC Channel 13

And for your food lovers, Michigan’s Foodie Tours

The Kentucky office of tourism offers this

Indiana’s One Tank Getaways
Well organized site

Ohio

Pennsylvania
http://www.wfmz.com/onetanktrip/index.html