Blogstream   -   Create a Blog!   -   Login Chat   -   Options   -   Clean   -   Flag   -   Family Filter: Off   -   Recent   -   Rndm >>    

Blogstream  >  Travel  >  Blog  >  Page #32
 
On the Road Again


 Ghost Stories in Old Town
 

My mother was interested in ancient Rome. I have no idea why. One interesting factoid she gave me was that the streets were absolutely deserted during mid-day because everyone went home for mid-day meal and nap. The streets were so deserted that a ghost story was set in Rome at noon.

Could have been Old Town Eureka at 7:30pm on Labor Day. There usually aren't many people, but tonight made "aren't many people" look like a mob. I went to the Ritz, the Ritz was closed. I went to Mazotti's, Mazotti's was closed. First time that ever happened to me. So I went to the Waterfront Cafe, and it was open. I had to sit at the bar for about 15 minutes waiting for a table. I asked for a glass of Petit Sirah, from their menu. The younger waitress said "sure" and started looking around. Then the older waitress (manager) came and viewed a couple of bottles and said "nothing doing, we don't have it." I remember that one from Yreka's Purple Plum and I'm pretty sure it means "We're not opening a bottle so you can order a glass." So, I had the house red, which was a good Cabernet and came in a generous serving in a large glass. After a while I got a window table and ordered the pork loin dinner. Then an odd vehicle showed up outside. It was a salmon of sorts, probably left over from the Kinetic Sculputure Race - looked neat. Tried to photograph it but it was dark and I don't think I got it. The salad was mundane, the pork loin quite good. I don't know what happened to the applesauce, but there were apple slices and a baked potato, and a second glass of house red. Nice dinner. $34 with tip.

PS They've rebuild the buildings on the waterfront at this locale which burned a few months ago. They are waterfront Condos. Is there a Condo Liberation Front active here?
Posted by ED at 12:28 AM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Sunshine in Shelter Cove
 

Once, before the US Supreme Court restored freedom of speech to lawyers, we couldn't advertise. Lawyers had to join all sorts of organizations and hang out hoping someone would notice that there was a lawyer around. Those days are gone, thankfully. I mean, where could a criminal defense lawyer hang out? Jail?

Still there are organizations worthy of support and Southern Humboldt Hospice is one of them. They do an annual fund-raiser salmon feast in Shelter Cove. Last time we went it was chilly, overcast and windy. This time, bright sunshine the whole afternoon. The feast is held on a field in the Shelter Cove airport flight path, and is most unphotogenic. The crowd however was enormous, the food line long, but the food well worth the wait. The Flaming Chef's prepare the salmon (and some blackened albacore) and amongst them is my legal mentor, Ron Sinoway. We got a brief chance to talk. He's happy, doing well, and had to cook. I see lots of people that I've known in one way or another in the past 25 years at these feasts, catch up a bit and whirl away in to the crowd. It was fun, as the poet said, "the music's hot, the drinks are cold" and, he might have added, the food delicious. We took the dog down to see the Pacific Ocean. She tried to drink it, but gave up on that idea. Otherwise she seemed glad to hang out with us, but unimpressed by the ocean. Tried to photograph the seals but it didn't work very well.
Posted by ED at 3:44 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Off the Net in Redding
 

Suddenly my Redding case sprang to life, and Sunday I had to rush over there to make Monday morning court dates. I usually stay at the Best Western that is not the Hilltop, but when I went to the BW website, guess what? There no longer is a BW that is not the Hilltop. What's wrong with the Hilltop? Wrong location for me, and really expensive (like $120 a night). So I mess around with Orbitz or something similar and end up at the Travel Lodge. It turns out to be right next to the ex-BW which is now a Rodeway Inn. The TL boasts wi-fi. I check in, turn on, and tune in to the web. For about 5 minutes, then the Airport signal which indicates wi-fi strength goes off and my computer says I am not connected to the internet. After a few minutes it's back. This happens a few times, then it just quits.

I commented on this at the desk when I checked out. I said I have a major trial coming up, I need reliable internet, and I'm going to have to book into a different motel for 3 weeks. They said the guy is coming out to fix this this very afternoon, we're moving the motel business computers off the wi-fi setup and everything will be better. Maybe, but as President Bush said, "Fool me once, um...... " The wi-fi at the Yreka Miners Inn, a BW, is also very flakey except in the hardwired rooms - of which the TL has none.

Ate lunch at a little Chinese place in a strip mall which my client likes. It was fine. Nice green tea icecream - a fave. You can get it in Eureka's old-town at the icecream store, too. Its best if a bit bitter, sweetened up for American tastes its not so hot.

PS: This is a 6 defendant case, so no surprise that 3 of the 7 lawyers (one defendant has two) came up with motions to continue the trial. It was to start next week, but now, not until January. I like trials, but I hate starting them.
Posted by ED at 2:28 AM - 2 Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Wreck on the Highway, Estelle's farewell from KMUD.
 

I've got a 10 am Garberville court call Friday morning, but we get a call from my sweetie's son, the punk rock star. At the club someone stole all his id and credit cards. His girlfriend is in a panic here trying to cancel cards etc. I'm late getting away. But I get to court before the session is over and take care of business.

Then its 101 to Ukiah. Only right out of Willits 101 south stops moving. I call the court and tell them my 1:30 may have to be postponed. Nothing moves. I call the court and tell them my 2pm is in trouble. Nothing moves. I call Caltrans. Everything is fine they say. I call KZYX. There's a tractor trailer wrecked on the downslope and no one knows when the road will reopen. Does that stop me. Ha. I have a Thomas guide and it shows there is a backroad way to Ukiah from Willits, so I pull out of the traffic jam and take it. Everything is relatively fine - ie two lane paved roads - until I get to Tomki Rd (or something like that). It starts as gravel but quickly starts running across a streambed repeatedly. Some of those crossings are pretty steep and sure enough a part falls off the car on one of the more extreme ones. I don't know what it is but the car runs without it, so it goes in the trunk and I keep moving. Eventually the road gets paved again and after a while I show up in Ukiah. My 1:30 was a technical appearance, no clients needed, and it was postponed. My 2pm however involved a client who came up from the Southland and its a long trip for him. I get into court by 3 and he's the last case and so we do it - only the probation report is defective according to everyone, so we decide he'll go talk with them again and postpone the hearing for a month.

By the time I'm driving back and nearing Garberville I hear Estelle on the KMUD news. Its her last night, and I'll be in Garberville about 6:25. The news is over at 6:30, so I think I'll drive by in case no one else is there, so that when she comes out of the newsroom for the last time she'll see a fan, get a hug, and not feel so bad about leaving. As I pull into the lot I see that I'm not the only one who has thought of this. There are about 60 people there, with a table of food and a table of wine, bouquets of flowers, everything but banners. When Estelle emerges with Kathleen's hands over her eyes, we all yell "Surprise!" and it was. I got great photos, but you know..... no way to post them.

Culinary note: the cheese and tomato on bread things were great, and so was the wine.
Posted by ED at 2:49 AM - 1 Comment   Add a Comment  
 

 Klamath River Scenes
 

One thing I like about having cases in Yreka is that I get to drive Rt 96 up the Klamath river valley. In a time long ago I was a river guide for Whitewater Voyages and while guiding a group from the UC Extension I met my sweetheart. We got together after a while and we've been together ever since. The river trips run from Happy Camp to T-Bar and that section of the river brings back many memories for me each time I drive by it.

This trip I was returning from Yreka, so I entered the canyon of the Klamath at the eastern point where it intersects with the old highway out of Yreka. Its arid there but the river itself is full and the banks are lush which makes an impressive contrast with the dry mountains rising from it. The river is full now because it is a controlled release from upstream dams - without which it would be much higher in the winter and much lower now.

There are often fires in the mountains along the Klamath for some reason, and there are miles of burnt over forest on view. Some from this year, which killed but did not burn, quite a few trees - leaving others, mostly evergreens, standing amongst the death, green and vibrant with life. Down at the river I saw horses coming to the banks to drink. No time to stop and take a picture, I was on deadline for a meeting with a Deputy DA in Eureka, so I snapped a mental shot and kept driving. There were several gold mining outfits visible in the upper reaches of the drive. They are a kind of raft with a pump and filter on them, I think. I didn't see any rafters once I got to Happy Camp - the river is too tame east of Happy Camp, and too wild below T-Bar, for rafters. Ishi Pishi falls is supposed to be a class 5 - deadly.

Very little traffic - and a good thing as the road is two lanes and it curves around with the river for much of the time. There are a couple of the older bridges with the girder superstructure, and every now and then a small settlement with a store, or bar. I always wonder what it is like to be born into such a town, and then to spend your life there. So different from my life which has been unrooted in places - I've always traveled, - and moved quite a bit until we settled down in Alderpoint some 27 years ago. That is so astonishing. I have lived in Alderpoint longer than I've lived anywhere else in my life. Probably at least twice as long. But I am not "from" Alderpoint as are some of my neighbors whose families have been there 100 years. We see the same things but with very different eyes.
Posted by ED at 12:11 PM - 2 Comments   Add a Comment  
 
Pages:   1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62
   
  About Me
Author: ED
 
This blog is about...
I'm a lawyer who travels quite a bit in my work, and these are postings arising from that travel
 
My: Profile  Gallery  Guestbook 
 
Bookmark   History

  Blogstream Sponsors
Have you checked out the new Blogstream site,

Question Stream.com?

Many Blogstream members are there already! Quotes from members: "It's like blog lite!" -- "I like the instant gratification!" -- "Stop spectating, get in the game!"

If you have not joined in, you are really missing out!

Send Free
Just Saying Hi
Greeting Cards
at

Greeting Cards.com


Good Morning


  Recent Posts

  Blogs I Like

  Archives

9342 Visitors