Going to Palo Alto - Updated

62_Kiwi

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Late last year some of you gave me some great tips and inside info for my business trip to San Francisco. I followed up on many of your suggestions - and all of them were spot on! SF is a fantastic city!<br /><br />Well now I'm going back to California again. :) Another business trip, but this time to Palo Alto - Silicon Valley no less! (I see from the map that it's little south of SF).<br /><br />Do any of you know this place and if so, do you have any advice for what I should go and see on my free days?<br /><br />Thanking you in advance...
 

crab bait

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Feb 5, 2002
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Re: Going to Palo Alto - Updated

i was wonderin' when you were goin' to tell us about your SF trip to the usa..<br /><br />palo alto ,, is so close to sf that you do sf stuff.. <br /><br />pal al is a major college town .. neet town it's own right.. <br /><br />drive south to HALFMOON bay.. neet beach .!! an little farther south to santa cruiz.. really neet 'hippie' type town.. with a broadwalk with rides an stuff along the seacoast..
 

Rickfifty

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Re: Going to Palo Alto - Updated

Stay out of East Palo Alto. It's a crime-ridden hellhole on the other side of the 101 freeway. It's actually a different city, in a different county I believe. Just avoid it.<br /> Stanford University is in P.A. and has a beautiful campus. Take a drive over the coastal range on either HWY 92(Half Moon Bay) or HWY 84 and then drive south on HWY 1 to Santa Cruz and return by HWY 17. Great scenery. Or drive north on 1 towards SF and return via HWY 280. Either route could be done in a couple of hours, or spend all day. I'd go the Santa Cruz route and check out Capitola(next town) while your there.
 

18rabbit

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Re: Going to Palo Alto - Updated

For awhile, Palo Alto was home to a kid named Jim Morrison, the same Morrison that would grow up and front the Doors. P.A. is a town build on land leased from Stanford University. I doubt the university will ever get it back, but until the lease expires they are paying rent. Stanford Uni was founded by Leland Stanford, the builder of the western part of the transcontinental railroad. The gov’t was paying 3-times the price per mile of railroad that was built in the mountains. California has these gentle, sloping, foothills that Stanford claimed were mountains since they weren’t exactly flat. He prevailed. This allowed him to build more miles of railroad faster with Chinese labor at a phenomenal profit.<br /><br />It is worth walking the grounds of Stanford University. Check out the statue gardens, and several museums there.<br /><br />If you have a chance, on California Street in Palo Alto is a camera store called Keeble and Shuchat. The store has two parts, one for consumers on the North side/corner of the street, and one for professional photographers across the street next to Kinko’s copy center. Everyone in Palo Alto knows where this is. You want to go a couple doors down from the K&S pro photo store to a little hole in the wall, literally, both little and a hole in a wall. There is an old Chinese man there that makes only pot stickers. They are the best!!! I like the sweet pork buns the best but everything he makes is exceptionally good, served on a paper plate, and you get to drink Coka Cola out of the can. The shriveled up old lady wondering around in back is his ancient mother, if she is still with us. If he doesn’t talk to you when you go in, don’t worry. He understands English better than he speaks it.<br /><br />From P.A., San Francisco is 20-mins north, silicone valley is 20-mins south. Half Moon Bay is 20-miles (40-mins) west at the end of hiway 92. At the north end of the HMB harbor is where the restaurants are. Nice atmosphere. The party boats that leave out of HMB have access to fishing grounds that boats out of the SF Bay usually don’t have the time to go to. Just past the restaurants you will see a hill that overlooks the Pacific Ocean. Walk to the top of the hill. You will often see huge, I mean really huge waves rolling in. Those are the famous “mavericks” that only the best of the best surfers will attempt. This time of year you may see surfers there on the weekends trying to master what can be 40-ft’ers.<br /><br />Santa Cruz is 30-minutes south of silicon valley (Santa Clara/San Jose) at the end of hiway 17. As was mentioned, it is an extremely liberal town of stoned out hippies that refuse to accept that Jerry Garcia is dead. It is also near the epicenter of the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake that collapsed the Cypress Freeway 60-minutes away in Oakland. SC is a quaint little town, fun to walk around it. A decent fish sandwich can be had at the Crows Nest restaurant at the harbor.<br /><br />Just a few minutes north of Santa Cruz is Ana Nuevo State Reserve. Make reservation NOW! If you need help with it, let me know. This is the time of year when the elephant seals come from all over to breed. People are prohibited from accessing the beach while the elephant seals are here. It’s for your own safety. You will be taken on a walk thru the beach area with a guide-person that will keep everyone a safe distance from the enormous animals, but they can move and move fast over sand, kind of like Jabba the Hutt on speed. It’s a little un-nerving to walk among carnivores the size of a car, but they mostly just lay there looking at you, sizing you up as either a meal or something to be used to relieve their sexual frustration. I'm not sure which would be worse. Take you camera.<br /><br /> http://www.parks.ca.gov/default.asp?page_id=1111 <br /><br />If you have the time… Monterey Bay is 30-mins south of Santa Cruz along hiway 1. Monterey was originally settled by the Chinese that built Stanford’s railroad, but Italian fisherman moved in and chased the Chinese out. The Chinese moved south to what is now Carmel By The Sea (we call it just Carmel) and Point Lobos but the smell of their fish drying in the sun didn’t go over well with the Italians, so the Italians burned the Chinese out. Point Lobos is a wonderful seaside park to walk around in. If you want to snorkel, Whaler’s Cove is a phenomenal cold water playground. Diving is possible by requires advanced reservations, hard to get because Point Lobos is considered one of the best 5 places in the world for diving. <br /><br />From silicon valley to Monterey is a 90-min drive. It is a town you can spend a whole weekend in and not have enough time. The Packard family (as in Hewlett and Packard…HP, headquarters in Palo Alto) paid for the initial Monterey Bay Aquarium. It has since been expanded. It’s well worth the time to visit the aquarium. Carmel is in that area, too. It is one of my favorite towns to walk around in. Clint Eastwood’s house is there. Can’t miss it; it’s surrounded by 10-ft stone walls with gargoyles on top. Knock on the door and see if he’s home. <br /> :) <br /><br />When will you be here and how much free time will you have?
 

Bob in Calif.

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Re: Going to Palo Alto - Updated

62_Kiwi........<br /><br />I live only about 2 miles from Palo Alto and can answer about 99% of any questions you have about the area. I have lived here for many years, so naturally I can give you good(?) advice. :D <br /><br />E-mail me @....Rednekroad@aol.com....with any questions and when you will be in the area. <br /> <br />...Bob in Calif... (In the town of Woodside)
 

62_Kiwi

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Re: Going to Palo Alto - Updated

Thanks for all the info and feedback everyone :) <br /><br />Crab:<br />On second look at the map I guess you're right that it's pretty close to SF... and Ooops you're right that I never concluded my SF post - left it hanging there without a conclusion :eek: - sorry I'll do that soon. We have a "Half Moon Bay" in Auckland NZ, which is where my favourite boat ramp is; I'll have to check out your Half Moon Bay..it sounds good...and Santa Cruz<br /><br />HM:<br />Yes I've heard about SC - will need to go there.<br /><br />RickFifty:<br />Thanks for your advice ...and about the East - I guess there are areas like that all over the place - some in NZ too.. <br /><br />18R:<br />Wow, thanks, I appreciate all the info. I didn't realsise it was Jim Morrison's home town - that's cool...and HP and Stanford. I'll definitely be taking a printout of this thread with me. <br /><br />It's interesting that there's a California Street in PA...there was also one in downtown SF (walked it many times)...by chance is it the same street?<br /><br />I'm there for just under a week and at this stage I don't know how many free (non business) days I'll get, hopefully 2 or 3. It's the week that spans the end of Feb and start of March, Sunday to Sunday.<br /><br />Bob:<br />Will do soon - thanks. I didn't realise that PA is practically your home town. <br /><br />Thanks again for your input eveyone. As I found on my (previous) trip to SF, the local knowledge sure makes a difference. :)
 
Joined
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Re: Going to Palo Alto - Updated

quote: <br />It's interesting that there's a California Street in PA...there was also one in downtown SF (walked it many times)...by chance is it the same street?<br />Well if it is you had better get an aqualung. :D
 

62_Kiwi

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Re: Going to Palo Alto - Updated

Well I'm now here in the USA - Northern California - very close to Palo Alto - actually in a hotel in Los Altos which is close enough for my business meetings in P.A. over the next few days.<br /><br />Today I caught up with Bob in Calif, who kindly took me on a day tour of the Bay Area in his Dodge Van. It was a great tour and a very enjoyable day... plus I think I got to see some pieces of the real America that your average tourist might not normally see.<br /><br />The tour included;<br />Secluded houses of some very famous and rich people - including some of Bob's neighbours in Woodside (impressive stuff); Powerful surf beaches on the Pacific Coast; Redwood trees & forests; Half Moon Bay (the one that's not in NZ ;) ); Historical buildings; an old (haunted) Moonshine Distillery; a Redneck Pumpkin Farm (the genuine article - I loved it); a Redneck General Store - complete with a bar (we stopped for a whisky) - I've never seen so many pickup trucks, almost to the exclusion of any other type of vehicle... :D Alice's Restaurant (you can get anything you want...) <br /><br />We had lunch and a beer at Barabara's Fishtrap which is so popular that we had to go on a waiting list to get in - hardly suprprising, it was great. <br /><br />I see what you all mean about the redwood trees. They are amazing. The one shown below is called <br />"Methuselah" and is 1800 years old, 225 ft high and 14ft diameter at the base.<br /><br />
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<br /><br />Crab - I see what you mean about these big old trees - they have a presence that is hard to describe. <br /><br />
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<br /><br />The marina in the background is Pillar Point Harbor (notice I spelt that the American way) in Half Moon Bay.<br /><br />Bob - thank you again for the fabulous tour and a great day. <br /><br />Over the next few days, between business meetings I'll check out the township of Palo Alto and follow up on some of the other suggestions you all have given me.
 
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