We just spent almost 12 days on our trip to Oregon recently to sell our Mixed Metal Jewels at the Salem Art Fair & Festival and enjoy spending time on the beautiful Oregon coast after the fair. We are happy to report that the fair was very successful and enjoyable for us.
We are happy to have entered the semi-retired phase of our jewelry making career. One can drive from our home in Ft. Bragg, CA to Salem, Oregon in 9 or 10 hours but we took three days and made stops along the way. One of the most interesting stops was at a facility called the Cascades Raptor Center in the southern part of Eugene, Oregon where injured or abandoned birds of prey of a variety of species are taken care of. The top priority is to try to get the bird to a state where it can be released back into the wild with a hope of survival. They have a hospital facility where the focus is on healing and privacy for the birds and visitors are not allowed.
Many birds that they take in though, for a variety of reasons, physical and psychological, would have a very small chance of surviving in the wild. These are in aviaries and can be viewed by visitors to the center. At any given time there are 55 to 65 raptors that can be seen, owls, hawks, eagles, vultures, falcons, kites, ospreys and others. It was a special experience to be able to see these magnificent creatures up close and to be able to take pictures. There are staff and volunteers who act as handlers for some of the birds and bring them outside to exercise and to allow people to see them close up and tell visitors about their lives and stories. I really enjoyed seeing an osprey up close, they fly above our house sometimes here on the California coast and I sometimes see them flying in from the ocean with a fish in their claws on the way to their nests in river canyons. I learned a lot about them that I didn't know, that they actually dive into the water to catch fish for example and that they have some of the sharpest claws in the world of birds. I also learned that eagles often follow them and take the fish that they have caught. Eagles can't dive in the water, they can only catch fish on the surface (or steal them from the successful osprey).
The website for the center is CASCADE RAPTOR CENTER
It is well worth a visit. Easy to find and a small admission charge. Parking may sometimes be a little of a problem but not an insurmountable one.
Thursday, July 28, 2016
Sunday, April 17, 2016
Trip to Anza Borrego State Park
In mid March we took a break from the rain here on the Mendocino Coast and traveled down south to Anza Borrego state park south of the Palm Springs area. We've been there before when we used to do a March Art Fair in La Quinta near Palm Springs and we always enjoyed our time there. On our trip south it rained, often intensely, and a lot all the way until we reached the Santa Barbara area. Being in that area brought back memories as we lived in the Ventura/Ojai area for a number of years 40 years ago.
The first day in Anza Borrego was a little bit of a shock since it was 30 degrees warmer there than at home. We hiked up canyons and across hills each day of our stay and enjoyed the cactus and wild flowers in great profusion. We had recently purchased a new set of binoculars that in addition to letting us see big horn sheep up on the mountain tops were able to focus close so that we could stand up and look at flowers and insects with them and it was like looking at them with a very high powered magnifying glass. We could actually see
them better than we could see them if we got on our knees and got our eyes close to them. It was exciting. We ran into a great swarm of caterpillars in one area, thousands of them, eating plants and flowers with great gusto. Every few years this seems to happen, sometimes locals said there are so many on the highways that the roads become slippery and dangerous after many have been run over and the surface becomes slimy. Although we didn't see them, we heard tales of a specie of hawk that feed on the caterpillars in great numbers.
To the right are some of the fascinating welded steel sculptures scattered in the desert around the town of Borrego Springs created by Ricardo Breceda. The amount of work that have gone into some of them is amazing. I always love rust.
To see more of his work go to his WEBSITE
A couple of times in the last year we have found really sweet places to stay on our travels through AirBnB. Just outside Borrego Springs we stayed in this great little house with everything we needed to be comfortable, jack rabbits and humming birds in the yard and less than the cost of any of the local motels.
The first day in Anza Borrego was a little bit of a shock since it was 30 degrees warmer there than at home. We hiked up canyons and across hills each day of our stay and enjoyed the cactus and wild flowers in great profusion. We had recently purchased a new set of binoculars that in addition to letting us see big horn sheep up on the mountain tops were able to focus close so that we could stand up and look at flowers and insects with them and it was like looking at them with a very high powered magnifying glass. We could actually see
them better than we could see them if we got on our knees and got our eyes close to them. It was exciting. We ran into a great swarm of caterpillars in one area, thousands of them, eating plants and flowers with great gusto. Every few years this seems to happen, sometimes locals said there are so many on the highways that the roads become slippery and dangerous after many have been run over and the surface becomes slimy. Although we didn't see them, we heard tales of a specie of hawk that feed on the caterpillars in great numbers.
To the right are some of the fascinating welded steel sculptures scattered in the desert around the town of Borrego Springs created by Ricardo Breceda. The amount of work that have gone into some of them is amazing. I always love rust.
To see more of his work go to his WEBSITE
A couple of times in the last year we have found really sweet places to stay on our travels through AirBnB. Just outside Borrego Springs we stayed in this great little house with everything we needed to be comfortable, jack rabbits and humming birds in the yard and less than the cost of any of the local motels.
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