Savoring the holiday weekend in SoCal

pier
I did an interview this week with LAist Editor Zach Behrens, who asked about SoCal getaways for the holiday weekend and my new project, the Seal Beach Daily website.

On long weekends I like to escape up the coast or plan a kickback retreat to the desert. But this tumultuous season of fires, storms and economic meltdowns feels like a good time to stick closer to home. So I suggested a handful of day trips. Among them: the California landscape exhibit at the Long Beach Museum of Art. Orange County’s timeless Crystal Cove. Southern California’s other Wine Country. Bargain hunting in LA’s Fashion District.

Browse the entire LAist interview here.

More buzz: Check out Shelby Grad’s nice take today on the LAist interview at the LAT’s LA Now blog. Michelle Vranizan Rafter also writes about Seal Beach Daily at the excellent Word Count website.

**Photo of the Seal Beach Pier by Kate Cohen/Seal Beach Daily

Tunes that take you there and other travel stories

I just added a link over in the navigation bar (right) to my Google Travel Reader page. It’s a daily collection of hand-picked travel stories about California and other newsy items for travelers.

Today’s offerings, for example, include a link to National Geographic’s Intelligent Traveler blog,
which features a monthly playlist of tunes to take along on the road. The current destinations is East Africa. You also find suggested soundtracks for trips to Hawaii, Paris, Italy, New Orleans, Miami, and, of course, Southern California. Browse the playlists here. And check out the other travel stories in today’s Reader here.

Elsewhere: WorldHum compiles a list of 13 Great Travel Horror Movies.

Eco adventures: Virginia Hayes, curator of the Living Collection at Santa Barbara’s wondrous Lotusland botanical gardens, has just released a new book, The Gourmet Garden.

LA Noir weekends: Take in a slice of LA’s seamy history on the “Real Black Dahlia” tour this Saturday or the “The Birth of Noir: James M. Cain’s Southern California Nightmare” on Nov. 8. Esotouric.

Another downtown day trip: J. Michael Walker’s All the Saints of the City of the Angels exhibit opens this weekend at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in LA. “After exhibiting “All the Saints” at the Autry Museum for seven months, I am delighted and honored to be able to present this project in the intriguing (and challenging) environment of Downtown Los Angeles’ austere new cathedral,” the author and painter says.

Playing hooky in Laguna Beach

As Southern California’s Indian summer blazes on, now is an ideal time for Laguna Beach getaway. Perched midway between LA and San Diego, Laguna is one of SoCal’s most picturesque beach towns, a lush tangle of palms and runaway bougainvillea snaking across stucco walls and tiled roofs along Pacific Coast Highway.

Tourists and SoCal revelers overrun the city during summer (and on holiday weekends throughout the year) when traffic crawls, parking is impossible, and the sidewalks downtown disappear beneath the crush of more people than they were ever meant to hold. During fall, though, Laguna exhales. It’s the time of year the locals love best, when this Orange County beach town of 24,000 goes back to being a welcoming Shangri-la again. On weekdays, the beach sits tantalizingly empty.

For starters, check out the waves at Thalia Street, an easy-to-miss cul de sac where a curving set of steps leads to the sand below. It’s a sweet spot: Locals come to here to surf and skim-board. The downside: there’s no parking lot, so you’ll have to hunt for a spot on a nearby street.

If you’re feeling energetic, set out for walk along the beach. Or head to Laguna Canyon Road and hike through the inland wilds of Laguna Coast Wilderness Park. Or grab a triple latte and hit the sidewalks to sample Laguna’s art galleries and one-of-kind boutiques. There’s a slew of shops and restaurants clustered downtown, close to Main Beach and its famous basketball courts on the sand. But don’t stop there. Many of Laguna’s treasures are scattered farther south along Coast Highway, away from the touristy hub.

In the 1200 block of Coast Highway, for instance, you’ll find a wonderfully eclectic mix at the Old Pottery Place, including delicious world cuisine and an outdoor patio at Sapphire; gourmet picnic fixings at the adjacent Sapphire pantry; and the friendly Laguna Beach Books. Across the street, the Rooftop Lounge at the La Casa Del Camino serves up mojitos and prime views of the coastline.

If you’re up for a splurge, book a room — or just make lunch reservations — at the Surf and Sand Hotel, a landmark resort carved into the side of an oceanfront cliff. The waves are so close, so intense, that the sound of pounding surf seems to follows you everywhere at the Surf and Sand.

For dinner: Treat yourself to Eva’s, a delectable Carribbean kitchen in a South Laguna cottage. The restaurant is a riot of color — lime green walls, orange ceiling, small pink lights twinkling in the palms — and softly lit by the sea of candles that line the dining room. So warm. So fun.

Before you go: Request a Visitor’s Guide from the Laguna Beach Visitors Bureau. This slim (free) volume tucks easily into a pocket.

Don’t forget: Bring a pocketful of quarters. Laguna Beach has meters all over town and you’ll need change to park.

P.S. Here’s a map.

Finding your way around literary California

Good news: CaliforniaAuthors.com has teamed up with BookTour.com to make it easy to find literary events – and your favorite writers — around the corner and around the state. As Kevin Smokler notes at the BookTour blog:

Yes, We love being in California, which its great weather, better food and governor who used to pose in a speedo. So we’re thrilled to announce today that our event data will now be syndicated at CaliforniaAuthors.com, the thoughtful chronicler of all things literary and left coast. Just click “event search” in their main navigation and get sent here. Then search by zip code, mileage and time. Take your pick.

CA’s Kate Cohen made the whole thing way too dang easy for her users. And for us. California Authors also features a directory of authors based in the Golden State, libraries of west coast bookstores and publishers and a nice little collection of excerpts from books by California authors.

Read more here.

Playing tourist in Hollywood, er, Culver City

My nine-year-old son has been clamoring to see Wheel of Fortune ever since his older sister got to schmooze with Vanna White a couple summers ago – and came home with cash that the show’s announcer handed out in between shows.

Well, this year Eben is old enough to go (the Wheel is one of the few shows that admits kids younger than twelve) and I scored some tickets after stalking a handy site called TVTix.com for several months.

A week ago I set out on the 405 with Eben and three buddies after they solemnly promised not to shout out letters and get us thrown out of the show. The boys buzzed with excitement as we arrived at Sony Studios in Culver City and learned that Spiderman had been filmed there, American Gladiators was born there, and Adam Sandler often zips around the lot in a souped up golf cart.

Once we finally were ushered into the Wheel of Fortune sanctum, the boys got caught up in the behind-the-scenes action: jittery contestants practicing on the big wheel just before the show, guys in black shirts hoisting cards ordering us to clap or “SHHHHH,” Pat Sajak filming blooper reels promos during breaks, Vanna emerging in a string of shimmering gowns, and, best of all, staffers handing out dollar bills and freebies in between shows.

The boys didn’t win any cash, but they did wangle some front row seats by the second taping. During the third and final show, the studio erupted as a computer-programmer contestant vanquished the bonus round puzzle AND picked the elusive $100,000 envelope, too. Confetti burst from the ceiling. The contestant danced with joy. And the boys hollered and clapped and mugged for the camera from their prized front row seats, right in the heart of game show heaven.

The verdict on the way home: The boys decided the Wheel of Fortune set was smaller than expected, and the stop-and-start action seemed kinda fake and yet somehow very, very cool.

Buy Me Some Sushi and Baby Back Ribs


Now this is a great idea for a travel story: New York Times writer Peter Meehan eats his way through twelve major league baseball parks and critiques the chow. West Coast stops include Dodger Stadium (he praises the pastrami heroes, but disses the Dodger Dogs) and San Francisco’s AT&T Park (the “leading example of upscale food”).

Meehan’s taste of the Bay: “By the seventh-inning stretch, I had sampled a peppery clam chowder served in a bread bowl dotted through with tender bits of clam; a fried catfish sandwich in a crisp, Cajun-accented crust; and a homey bowl of jerk chicken over rice, with a healthy dash of jalapeño hot sauce. “

You’ll want to devour the entire story here. And then add your two cents here.

Looking for discounted baseball tickets this summer? Check out the Goldstar website.

Catalina’s newest attraction

Here’s a frame grab from a video of a sweet newborn filly, the first horse born on Catalina Island in seventeen years.

Excerpt: Take this drive and love it


Author and world traveler Pico Iyer has it just right: You’ve got to head to the hills when you’re roaming Central California. These are the same magical hills where the Queen of England’s horse whisperer built his ranch and the dethroned King of Pop created his Neverland. Where the world’s best bicyclist brought his team each winter to train for the Tour de France. Where Davy Crockett traded in his coonskin cap for a vineyard and country inn. Where two middle-aged guys named Miles and Jack careened Sideways onscreen chasing women, swilling pinot noir, and transforming a string of bucolic towns into tourist hubs.

Cowboys and celebrities, retirees and wine growers, oenophiles and ostriches; they all coexist peacefully in this corner of Santa Barbara County, a world of sprawling ranches and rolling hillsides quilted with vineyards and surrounded by the Santa Ynez and San Rafael mountains.

In Great Escapes: Southern California, I explore the Santa Ynez Valley in a chapter called “Take This Drive and Love It.”

“The beauty of driving through the mountains behind Santa Barbara is that it’s a perfect place and way for getting lost,” says Iyer, who grew up in Santa Barbara and shares a first-person passage in the chapter. “And whatever you stumble into will have the feeling of a rare discovery that not so many people know about.”

You can easily drive from one country town to the next along a pair of country roads (CA 154 and 246) that ramble across the valley and crisscross near Santa Ynez. The 2004 movie Sideways put Central California’s wine country on the map of popular interest after so many years in the shadow of Napa and Sonoma.

Less well known is that the Santa Ynez Valley also is an equestrian paradise, even though Seabiscuit, an Academy Award nominee in 2005, was filmed here, too. From Kentucky Derby winners to dainty miniature show horses, more than 30 equine breeds thrive on the valley’s ranches and family farms. As Gigi Meyer noted in The New York Times, “It’s hard to say which valley town is the horsiest.”

Or which of the valley’s many wineries is the tastiest.

Those are questions you’ll want to ponder for yourself as you wind your way north from Santa Barbara along Highway 154 on one of the prettiest drives Southern California has to offer.

Goodbye Travel Rut — My New Book is Here

When my husband and I plotted a monthlong trip to Europe, I spent weeks researching every detail. I amassed a bedside mountain of travel books. I quizzed friends about their adventures in the French countryside, scoured travel websites, and rented movies set in our intended destinations (I watched American Dreamer so many times I felt like a regular at Paris’ swanky Hôtel de Crillon). By the time we left, we had an adventurous, offbeat itinerary filled with cool new restaurants to try and treks to out-of-the-way corners I’d missed on previous trips abroad.

But for getaways close to home, I’ve always tended to go for the easy and familiar. Over and over. It’s just so effortless to say, let’s go to Palm Springs, which invariably means checking into the same desert resort my family always visits, with its comfortable, airy rooms and twisting water slide that keeps the kids entertained. Enjoyable, yes. But after the umpteenth trip, hardly exciting.

Then last year I was asked to write a travel book of great weekend getaways in Southern California.

Goodbye travel rut.

Suddenly I began looking at Southern California through fresh eyes. A travel writer’s eyes. Nearly every week I went someplace different: Date nights. Day trips. Weekend treks to my favorite spots and to places I’d always meant to visit, like Cold Springs Tavern near Santa Barbara.

My husband and two children often came along and they had a blast kayaking, horseback riding, swimming, snorkeling, hand-feeding emus, and roaming luscious nature spots from San Diego to the Central Coast. Other times I set out on the road (or train) alone with California writers such as Raymond Chandler, Joan Didion, Kem Nunn, Gidget, and the Steinbecks (John and son Thomas) as my guides.

I sampled my way through two wine countries, played blackjack in the afternoon, cooked alongside a great chef, savored amazing farmers’ markets and ethnic groceries all over, swam with schools of bright, teeming fish, and strapped on water-skis for the first time in years.

I recently wrote about five of my favorite SoCal road trips for the Los Angeles Times and I wanted to share these quick getaways as summer approaches. The story, and this handy Google map, offer a taste of the adventures in my new book, Great Escapes: Southern California, which is being released on Monday.

Booked in Westwood

Next weekend is the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books, a sprawling outdoor affair that regularly draws 100,000 book lovers to the UCLA campus every spring. (Who says people in LA don’t read?!)

The festival is great fun. You’ll see throngs of people lined up in the sunshine outside lecture halls, waiting — and obviously excited — to join conversations about current events, current fiction, and the latest offerings from sci-fi masters and chick-lit queens. Poets give impassioned readings under the big tent outside Powell Library. Open-air stages feature celebrated chefs and celebrities touting their children’s books. I love to browse the dozens of booksellers, publishers, museums, non-profit foundations, and retailers who set up shop along UCLA’s grassy plazas.

More than 400 authors appear on Saturday and Sunday (tickets to daytime events are free), so you’ll find plenty of great choices. A festival map is here.

I’ll be at the Festival of Books on Sunday, April 27, signing copies of My California: Journeys by Great Writers from 1 to 2 pm with Edward Humes and Veronique de Turenne. Please be sure to stop by the Angel City Press Booth (#332, near Royce Hall) and say hello.