19:30 looks exactly like the area I live in around the foothills in western WA. I am sooooo loving this road trip! Thank you so much for taking us along!
Thank you for this. I noted the beach at the bottom of the steep cliff where the campers were is a black sand beach. And that tree! Each of these videos of your trip have been great. Happy Birthday !
Wow too cool with the fog and deer beautiful for picture taking. Its always nice to travel outside your comfort zone. Wow those rocks in ocean are so neat. I love the trees as they cave the road like tunnels. I like the people that are free spiirits like that guy and just travel on their own. Thats awesome. Thanks for sharing very nice.❤
My daughter and I went to Fort Bragg 30 years ago. We went and met up with my friend and her kids. We went for the 4th of July salmon bbq that they held every year. Tickets have to be paid for in advance. I’m not sure if they started it again since the crud. We stayed in a quaint bed and breakfast that was run by a sweet couple. Very fun and nice. We had a blast. We went over to the skunk train for a ride. The whole tourist thing. I don’t remember the name of the bed and breakfast. Thanks for taking us along. Loved the Little River stay. Pretty.
2:15 The tsunami hazard zone begins right about where you are, because that's where the Mendocino Triple Junction lies -- the convergence of three tectonic plates at one point -- and to the north of there is the Juan de Fuca Plate, which has been the site of about 41 great earthquakes in the last 10,000 years. The last one occurred in 1700, involving the entire length of the Cascadia Subduction Zone from Cape Mendocino to the northern tip of Vancouver Island. As we saw in Japan, a 9.0 great earthquake is no bueno -- and a 9.0 is what's in our future at this location, along with the tsunamis that accompany an earthquake of this type.
I've only been up in that area once. I drove US-101 from Clear Lake to Crescent City, and then took US-199 from there to Grants Pass, OR. Gorgeous country through the Klamath Mountains but boy the roads are windy, narrow and slow. If you're in any kind of a hurry this is _not_ the route to take.
Love that part of California, been there countless times. Only disadvantage of living there is “the crud,” which is allergic mold you have because it’s always damp and foggy.
In March 1964, Crescent City was hit with a 70 foot tsunami as a result of the Good Friday earthquake in Alaska. It also had a lesser tsunami from the earthquake in Japan.
*Long history of tsunamis on West Coast,* some big ones, spaced a few centuries apart and 'due for one' anytime now. Cascadia fault runs under water a ways off the coast of far N. Cali thru Oregon, Washington and Vancouver Island, know for 9's on the Richter Scale. Because it's a *subduction fault* as apposed to a lateral slip fault, big *vertical displacements* happen, underwater that's BIG trouble, like in Japan over an over in recent millennia, creating the biggest earthquake type tsunamis possible. That means the biggest common tsunamis, only eclipsed by massive landslides and much more rare--cosmic impacts which may wash over entire medium size islands and hundreds of miles inland on continents, even over 1000ft plus high topographical features at times. (unfortunately Richter a logarithmic scale that throws folks off, going up one number is 10X the energy, otherwise we'd be talking about earthquakes from 10's to 10,000's say) Interesting aside: Japan has high water marker stone or ceramic reminders of prior tsunamis over the centuries, little monuments, but they tend to get overgrown and forgotten until such as the most recent one unfortunately.
thats not the lost coast if you go into the humbolt redwoods state park to town of honey dew to frendale. thats the lost coast. you drive for miles never pass anybody. right on ocean level
COOL VID. Good job. Old man grew up in the fog and hated it, I was raised in the dessert and find fog a bit exotic, on vacation vibes, except loath driving in it when thick. Think one get's sick of it after a while. Beautiful area, used to occasionally family short vacation to Fort Brag from Bishop as a kid, roast hotdogs on the beach and the rest. :D For those always asking why we don't exit Commifornia, THIS is why.
19:30 looks exactly like the area I live in around the foothills in western WA. I am sooooo loving this road trip! Thank you so much for taking us along!
Thank you for this. I noted the beach at the bottom of the steep cliff where the campers were is a black sand beach. And that tree! Each of these videos of your trip have been great.
Happy Birthday !
Wow too cool with the fog and deer beautiful for picture taking. Its always nice to travel outside your comfort zone. Wow those rocks in ocean are so neat. I love the trees as they cave the road like tunnels. I like the people that are free spiirits like that guy and just travel on their own. Thats awesome. Thanks for sharing very nice.❤
I Love California ❤🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 20:05
Awesome video of these sleepy coastal towns. I grew up in Southern California but never visited Northern California and the coastal towns.
Those giant redwood trees were awesome! Great trip.
My daughter and I went to Fort Bragg 30 years ago. We went and met up with my friend and her kids. We went for the 4th of July salmon bbq that they held every year. Tickets have to be paid for in advance. I’m not sure if they started it again since the crud.
We stayed in a quaint bed and breakfast that was run by a sweet couple. Very fun and nice.
We had a blast.
We went over to the skunk train for a ride. The whole tourist thing.
I don’t remember the name of the bed and breakfast.
Thanks for taking us along. Loved the Little River stay. Pretty.
2:15 The tsunami hazard zone begins right about where you are, because that's where the Mendocino Triple Junction lies -- the convergence of three tectonic plates at one point -- and to the north of there is the Juan de Fuca Plate, which has been the site of about 41 great earthquakes in the last 10,000 years. The last one occurred in 1700, involving the entire length of the Cascadia Subduction Zone from Cape Mendocino to the northern tip of Vancouver Island. As we saw in Japan, a 9.0 great earthquake is no bueno -- and a 9.0 is what's in our future at this location, along with the tsunamis that accompany an earthquake of this type.
Your comment complements mine, between 2 of us some schooling possible. 😊
Great road trip...now my wife wants to do it.
Been there a few times in the 60s. There is a train that runs from Ft. Bragg to Willits.
It’s called the skunk train!
Nothing forgotten about it.
That little town reminds me of an East Coast Town that I used to play in when I was very young. Now, it has mostly been reclaimed by the sea
That tree at end very impressive but one can walk thru groves of those in the area, 'spiritual' experience that.
I've only been up in that area once. I drove US-101 from Clear Lake to Crescent City, and then took US-199 from there to Grants Pass, OR. Gorgeous country through the Klamath Mountains but boy the roads are windy, narrow and slow. If you're in any kind of a hurry this is _not_ the route to take.
Love that part of California, been there countless times. Only disadvantage of living there is “the crud,” which is allergic mold you have because it’s always damp and foggy.
There are turkeys there too.yes stayed at an Air bb 5 years ago with at the time my teenage kids.
Westport, Ca. Wages Creek Beach. That was our party area back high school days.
In March 1964, Crescent City was hit with a 70 foot tsunami as a result of the Good Friday earthquake in Alaska. It also had a lesser tsunami from the earthquake in Japan.
Peg house Never don't stop
*Long history of tsunamis on West Coast,* some big ones, spaced a few centuries apart and 'due for one' anytime now.
Cascadia fault runs under water a ways off the coast of far N. Cali thru Oregon, Washington and Vancouver Island, know for 9's on the Richter Scale. Because it's a *subduction fault* as apposed to a lateral slip fault, big *vertical displacements* happen, underwater that's BIG trouble, like in Japan over an over in recent millennia, creating the biggest earthquake type tsunamis possible.
That means the biggest common tsunamis, only eclipsed by massive landslides and much more rare--cosmic impacts which may wash over entire medium size islands and hundreds of miles inland on continents, even over 1000ft plus high topographical features at times.
(unfortunately Richter a logarithmic scale that throws folks off, going up one number is 10X the energy, otherwise we'd be talking about earthquakes from 10's to 10,000's say)
Interesting aside: Japan has high water marker stone or ceramic reminders of prior tsunamis over the centuries, little monuments, but they tend to get overgrown and forgotten until such as the most recent one unfortunately.
thats not the lost coast if you go into the humbolt redwoods state park to town of honey dew to frendale. thats the lost coast. you drive for miles never pass anybody. right on ocean level
COOL VID. Good job.
Old man grew up in the fog and hated it, I was raised in the dessert and find fog a bit exotic, on vacation vibes, except loath driving in it when thick. Think one get's sick of it after a while.
Beautiful area, used to occasionally family short vacation to Fort Brag from Bishop as a kid, roast hotdogs on the beach and the rest. :D
For those always asking why we don't exit Commifornia, THIS is why.
Wha what whaattt , beach deer ? I didn't little surf 🏄♀️ boards on there sides !!!! Lol hang 10 buck