Week 278 - California Highway 1, Beach Cities - 12-11-2011
Southern California
Highway 1 and Beach Cities
Coast Highway, Pacific Coast Highway (PCH), Shoreline Highway
and Cabrillo Highway are all names for parts of California
Highway 1.
This historic highway between
San Luis Obispo and Big Sur is a National Scenic Byway and is known
as one of the top 10 beautiful drives in America. We have twice
traveled in the Mothership from San Luis to San Francisco and a few
other times in our previous life as "car drivers".
Highway 1 goes from Mexico in the south to Leggett in Northern
California. The section from the Mexican border to San Clemente
runs concurrent with Interstate 5. Our drive this week, shown in
red, started in Oceanside and ended in Morro Bay. The black section
from Sausalito to Leggett will be a future trip and travelogue.
These two photos are from the central, green section on the above
map and are documented in Week 96: http://bigrigbible.com/WeeklyTravelogues/week096.php.
These are the images that most would think of when you mention
California Highway 1. We are ready to see what the southern section
has in store.
Day One: 1) As you can see, Mandy was excited about driving
through the Southern California beach cities. Leaving Oceanside we
passed by Camp Pendleton and the nuclear power plant at San Onofre.
Leaving Interstate 5, we began our Coast Highway trip at Dana
Point. As we are used to seeing the Pacific Ocean when on the
Central Coast section of Highway 1 and we ready to find what views
are like on this trip. All you see in Dana Point is a lovely city,
but not the beach.
Get sick in Laguna Beach and recover in this room at Mission
Hospital and your view will be great!
Your views in Newport Beach are expensive; like the Ferrari and
Maserati dealer, the bay, Fashion Island shopping mall, beautiful
homes and pricey hotels. There is an RV Park, Newport Dunes
Waterfront Resort. It is an older park, so many sites are small.
The only sites that we fit into are $93 per night in the winter and
$225 in the summer. Did we mention pricey?
Next up is Huntington Beach. We have stayed at three RV parks along
this beach. They are 1) Huntington-By-The-Sea; pricey and not by the
sea but on the east side of the highway, 2) Bolsa Chica State Park;
nice with electric and water and on the beach side and our favorite
3) Huntington Beach Sunset Vista City Park; right on the beach,
electric, water and a short walk to restaurants.
The city of Sunset Beach with a view of the harbor, but not the
beach.
Seal Beach had ocean views but we did not see any accessible beach.
Long Beach, known for the ports and cargo docks. Long Beach is a
large city and the highway turns inland for the full length. Very
Long, not so Beach.
1) Redondo Beach King Harbor sign, but no sign of the beach from the
road. 2) Manhattan Beach, all city, no beach.
1) LAX in Inglewood. You can see the water when you fly out! 2)
Marina Del Rey. We know from experience that there are some very
nice harbor areas and restaurants, but you won't see the ocean from
Highway 1.
By the time we got back to the beach in Santa Monica it was almost
dark. This photo just proves how much we need a new camera that can
take low-light photos. So our first day was complete. We made our
goal of reaching Malibu Beach RV Park. We traveled from Oceanside to Malibu, 112 miles
at 22.5 miles per hour. One of
our traveling rules is "we never pay for an RV park after dark". However, we had to break the rule as our previous research had shown
us that this is the only park in the area; no Walmarts, no Elks, no
boondocking, so we paid.
The next day we woke up in beautiful Malibu and the views were worth
the price (once!).
For $75.00 you get a full hookup level site with a view. It would
have been nice to face the ocean but then the hookups could not be
used. If the park were built today, they would certainly build it
with ocean view sites.
Day Two: Back on Highway 1 to continue our trip to Morro
Bay. North of Malibu, we passed by several beaches, lots of day
parking and RV parking on the beach shown below.
Reaching Port Hueneme the road once again leaves the water and heads
into farm land.
From Hueneme you enter into Oxnard with all the offices, shops and
restaurants that you could want.
At this point Highway 1 and Highway 101 run concurrently for 69
miles with a few miles of separation at Rincon State Beaches.
Ventura has nice a harbor and access to the Channel Islands, but no
views from the road until you get to the north end of the city.
1) Rincon State Beach is just before you reach Seacliff. There are
128 RV sites right along the beach. You are only 30 to 50 feet from
the crashing waves that create natural "white noise" to help you
sleep or keep you up all night! 2) After you leave Rincon, the
highway rejoins 101. You head through Carpenteria and Santa Barbara
and then you ride along the ocean for 10 miles starting at El
Capitan State Beach.
At Gaviota you depart from the ocean until you reach Oceano. 1)
Here is the tunnel from the movie "The Graduate" where Dustin
Hoffman raced through this tunnel on his way to Santa Barbara.
However, you only head through the tunnel leaving the city, but
that's Hollywood. 2) Mandy has managed to stay enthusiastic about
the trip.
While the beach is gone, you have the peace and quiet of country
roads on the way to Lompoc.
1) North of Lompoc is Vandenberg Air Force Base, where Pete's mom
worked for 33 years. Virginia started as a secretary and retired as
an Air Force Contract Administrator. 2) Farmland just before
reaching Orcutt, CA.
Day Three: As we head from Orcutt to Guadalupe, Mandy "suddenly rates this email GREAT!"
1) Guadalupe's Far Western Tavern where the Mattson family enjoyed
steak dinners a time or two. 2) The descent from Nipomo mesa
approaching Oceano.
1) At Oceano you are very close the beach, but the houses block your
views. 2) Likewise in Pismo Beach, but this time it is the many
shops and businesses.
1) Ahhh, Shell Beach and your ocean view is back. 2) Reaching San
Luis Obispo, we met up with Melissa. Melissa poses with Mandy and
Sam. Sam was Ellen's inspiration to adopt Mandy. Sam is a little
older, a little lighter and much taller from ground to ear top!
Day Four: The final leg of our Highway 1 trip. North of San
Luis Obispo we pass by Cerro Romauldo, one of the Seven Sisters volcanic peaks. While there are
really nine peaks, Seven Sisters has a nicer ring, don't you think?
Morro Rock is the first of the sisters and sits majestically next to
the Morro Bay Power Plant.
At Morro Bay we left Highway 1 for the last time and headed up
Highway 41 to Atascadero. As we end this journey, we are home for
the month of December. We're glad you could join us and we ask for
the Lord's blessing on your Christmas season.
Until next week or next year, love Pete, Ellen and Mandy
Photos from Dec 2011