Tuesday, September 27, 2016

Gold!

9.17.16


Columbia State Historic Park



Columbia is the coolest town!

Gold was discovered here in 1850, and by 1853, Columbia was one of the largest cities in California. 
As much as $150 million in gold was mined here. 

The town was dwindling until 1945 when it became a state park and restoration began. 
 It is a gem of living history we were excited to discover!



 

 Love this "sovereign remedy"!  I gotta get me some!


Going to the dentist is no fun, but aren't you thankful for advances in dentistry since the 1850's?!




This is the scale in the Wells Fargo office that was used to weigh all that gold!



 Bowling, anyone?


One of the greatest treasures we found in Columbia was the "Artificer's Exchange."
The proprietress is a former teacher who now has a new venue for sharing her knowledge,
and we LOVED learning from her!!

She taught us about the history of the town, the history of photography and its importance in the
Gold Rush, what the length of a lady's dress in the 1850's represented, how flax was made, and more.
She has AG dolls that she renames for girls who lived in Columbia, and she makes their historically accurate clothing.  She suggests making a family historical doll, complete with stories of the American Girls in our own family history.  What a great idea!

This is a tintype she showed us... We think it looks just like our friend Claire!  :)
Oh!  She also told us how to tell if the child in a photo from this era is a boy or a girl,
 when boys and girls both wore dresses, sometimes very frilly dresses...
 Do you know how to tell?


 After we saw our friend Claire, we saw this doctor with a great last name!  :)
...and here is his house...

 


 This was a representation of what the town looked like as it was going up...
Almost all of the original buildings were made of wood until they were destroyed by a fire in 1854.
The buildings were rebuilt with brick.

Getting water to the town was a major engineering feat,
important both for fire protection and for gold mining.
Unfortunately, the miners blew away much of the dirt and gravel,
exposing this limestone and destroying farms in the area.



 We experienced almost an hour of school at the school house.
That was plenty!  The teacher was really stern.
In the photo above, she was using my baby to explain how girls would be whipped on the legs...
so they could still do the housework when they got home.
Ellie received no actual whipping... Good thing!
With her papa bear & mama bear right there, I'd fear for that teacher...  ;)




After school, we got to play games,
and these sweet ladies gave us homemade sarsaparilla ice cream!


We loved living in the gold-rush era for a day!
Thank you, Columbia!

Jelly Bellies and Wine

9.11.16


Jelly Belly Factory and Beringer Vineyards

...a classy pairing indeed...





Yep.  This was our day. 

We began at the Jelly Belly Factory.  We were really impressed!  The tour of the factory is fascinating...although since we went on a Sunday, the workers had the day off, and we just looked at the non-moving machines and watched the videos.  Oh, and played the video games, of course.


We are those dorky people who watch every video and read every sign and experience everything that can be experienced... and since doing all of that while four other tours behind us passed us by just wasn't enough, we did it again on a weekday!  ...and since we ended up on the last tour of the day mostly watching people clean up, we went again!  Seriously... three times visiting the Jelly Belly factory.  By that time, we had gotten our fill of watching and learning every part of the process of making jelly beans.  

Can you guess who loved the whole experience the most?....


Jadan will write more - in detail, of course - about the Jelly Belly Factory, but this t-shirt pretty much explains the basic process...


...and here are some photos of the magic happening...





We even ran into our friend Ronald Reagan there!






We spent the afternoon driving through the Napa Valley...





...and landed at Beringer Vineyards to explore, play, learn a bit of the history of this oldest of Napa's continuously operating wineries (est. in 1876 and featured on Chopped!), and take some photos amidst the inspiring gardens.











All in all, a great day from jelly bean to bottled poetry...  ;)



Monday, September 26, 2016

San Francisco

9.10.16


A day in San Fran



Tim wanted to see some iconic San Francisco sights,
and the kids wanted a day at the beach.

So, we began the day driving around San Francisco,
driving by and getting horrible photos of the "must-see" places... ;)

 Coit Tower

 Lombard Street

This street was easy cheesy...
but Tim really enjoyed driving on the crazy steep hills
and freaking the rest of us out.


 Alcatraz!
Did you know that the word "Alcatraz" means "Pelican"?

...and Golden Gate Bridge!
As you can see, it was a pretty cloudy day.


But... not too cloudy and cold for crazy children who love to go to the beach!
We spent the afternoon freezing at Stinson Beach.
Some of us cared that we were freezing, and some of us didn't.  ;)













...and we finished up the afternoon with a few rounds of ping pong on this 
super cool stone ping pong table at a local park...