I've been there! There was an awesome beach cafe just east of Lagos (on that long strip that heads to Faro. They served grilled sardines the size of mackerel as many as you could eat. Delicious. With potatoes drained in garlic and olive oil. Way better than any of the restaurants in town but only a lunch-time affair IIRC. And you should drive out to the lighthouse at the SW tip of Portugal. Where Lagos was all gentle and sunny, the Western Coast was suddenly super windy and massive waves were pummelling the coast.
For those whoâve been noticing my blah blah about recent trips, hereâs what Iâm doing.
By flying from Vancouver instead of SFO, the cost of a round-the-world business class series of flights (Weâre doing 15), taking less than a year, per person, was $10K. Total.
It takes some planning and compromise, but not much. https://roundtheworld.staralli...
I've been there! There was an awesome beach cafe just east of Lagos (on that long strip that heads to Faro. They served grilled sardines the size of mackerel as many as you could eat. Delicious. With potatoes drained in garlic and olive oil. Way better than any of the restaurants in town but only a lunch-time affair IIRC. And you should drive out to the lighthouse at the SW tip of Portugal. Where Lagos was all gentle and sunny, the Western Coast was suddenly super windy and massive waves were pummelling the coast.
Yes.
They've been trying to open this line since the mid 80's when Southern Pacific quit.
It's always the same thing...
Investors dump money into it. Money gets spent on repairs. More damage happens because of landslides/ decline. Somebody runs off with the rest of the money.
The last endeavor was Mexico. Since this line runs through a small section in Tecate, Mexico. That government wanted to run freight though this Carizzo Gorge to access the main line in Yuma, Arizona. For 2 years they had to pay San Diego Metro $250,000 a year for a lease plus maintain the line. Mexico bailed last year.
So it sits vacant once again.
The railroad museum in Campo, California, which sits on this line, really wants to open an excursion train. But their funds are meager.
looks very cool. got that spooky end-of-civilization look to it.
Location: Really deep in the heart of South California Gender:
Posted:
Mar 25, 2024 - 9:24pm
haresfur wrote:
Beautiful!
Yes.
They've been trying to open this line since the mid 80's when Southern Pacific quit.
It's always the same thing...
Investors dump money into it. Money gets spent on repairs. More damage happens because of landslides/ decline. Somebody runs off with the rest of the money.
The last endeavor was Mexico. Since this line runs through a small section in Tecate, Mexico. That government wanted to run freight though this Carizzo Gorge to access the main line in Yuma, Arizona. For 2 years they had to pay San Diego Metro $250,000 a year for a lease plus maintain the line. Mexico bailed last year.
So it sits vacant once again.
The railroad museum in Campo, California, which sits on this line, really wants to open an excursion train. But their funds are meager.
We (7 of us) rode our mountain bikes up, then down the "Impossible Railroad" last Saturday.
Well... my granddaughter struggled the first 50 yards. So my son took their bikes back to the truck and walked instead of rode the whole way.
Surprisingly, they fell behind maybe a half mile on the way up to the Goat Canyon Trestle where we waited for them.
We pressed on to the big 1/4 mile long tunnel. Waited again and had lunch.
Coming back, we got back maybe an hour before them.
An epic trip for all involved.
Location: Really deep in the heart of South California Gender:
Posted:
Mar 25, 2024 - 7:12pm
We (7 of us) rode our mountain bikes up, then down the "Impossible Railroad" last Saturday.
Well... my granddaughter struggled the first 50 yards. So my son took their bikes back to the truck and walked instead of rode the whole way.
Surprisingly, they fell behind maybe a half mile on the way up to the Goat Canyon Trestle where we waited for them.
We pressed on to the big 1/4 mile long tunnel. Waited again and had lunch.
Coming back, we got back maybe an hour before them.
An epic trip for all involved.
I live pretty much "in town", not in "the country". The deer are all over the place though, especially this time of year. The developments have moved them out of what used to be wooded areas, so sometimes you see them running around supermarket parking lots and strip mall lots.
I live pretty much "in town", not in "the country". The deer are all over the place though, especially this time of year. The developments have moved them out of what used to be wooded areas, so sometimes you see them running around supermarket parking lots and strip mall lots.
Yeah, he does look pretty laid back. Itâs interesting to be able to see wildlife like that right out back near your house like that.
I live pretty much "in town", not in "the country". The deer are all over the place though, especially this time of year. The developments have moved them out of what used to be wooded areas, so sometimes you see them running around supermarket parking lots and strip mall lots.
It's odd how unconcerned he was about my being there. He just kinda nodded at me and went about his leaf-eating business. In the background is an overgrown, "unimproved" lot next door to me - the deer spend a lot of time in there.
Yeah, he does look pretty laid back. Itâs interesting to be able to see wildlife like that right out back near your house like that.
It's odd how unconcerned he was about my being there. He just kinda nodded at me and went about his leaf-eating business. In the background is an overgrown, "unimproved" lot next door to me - the deer spend a lot of time in there.