I wanted to stay in Mill Valley because this is where my mother lived, as a child. Thankfully, we were offered accommodation by the Mill Valley Inn, and glad to be there. Mill Valley has changed quite a bit since the mid-to-late 50's, when my mother lived there. It's an upscale town, now, and the Mill Valley Inn pretty much lives up to that standard.
It's a concrete building that spirals up around what could be a courtyard, but is instead the inn's parking garage. This is maybe not the most elegant view upon exiting a room, but open and interesting, and preferable to the small hallways of most hotels we've seen. The room we have is small, but beautifully decorated with old and/or distressed wooden furniture, amazingly high ceilings, and with gorgeous French doors opening to the town. MVI is the first place we've visited that does not have a Bible in the room. We like this.
Breakfast is all self-serve, but definitely better than the 3-star accommodations we've stayed at, with more and varied fruit options, average sweet/white breads, reasonably healthy cereals, and make-your-own waffles. Self-serve coffee and tea (a nice assortment!) are available, but so are various espresso and steamed-milk beverages, from the kitchen. An open wine-and-cheese reception is held every afternoon in the breakfast room, and I assume that the doors are opened to the patio in better weather (it's raining while we're there).
Although the inn as a whole is clean and quite comfortable, when we asked for a mattress or cot for the children, who were sleeping on the floor, we were given a very old, stained mattress with a sheet over it. This is by far not the worst thing we've seen in hotels on this trip, but not really up to the standard the Mill Valley Inn has set for itself. I am going to assume it was just a glitch.
On the whole, MVI is a lovely, calm, quiet place to stay, close enough to San Francisco without needing to be in the urban madness, and a good place to relax, if you can afford it. It's a great place for an afternoon bit of Asterix-reading:
Emily van Lidth de Jeude writes about her experiences as an unschooling parent, wilderness educator, and explorative learning consultant.
Tuesday, June 7, 2011
Sunday, June 5, 2011
Bad plants, good plants, and a healing crescent moon.
Today was our trip from Mendocino to Mill Valley. We harvested some eucalyptus before leaving the Mendocino area, and hung it around the ceiling of our car to decorate our ride! Although it smells great, eucalyptus is an invasive weed, wreaking havoc on various US wildernesses. Eucalyptus depletes groundwater needed for indigenous plants, takes over and changes habitats, thus vastly reducing habitat for many plants and animals, and can carry deadly spores. It seems to be everywhere in california, in the towns, in the parks, and in conservation areas, but thankfully it is not able to withstand our winters, and has not taken over up here, yet. But wait! ArborGen has now received federal permission to introduce vast quantities of its genetically modified eucalypti (designed to withstand cold climate) across the US south, in an "experiment". It seems taking over one latitude with invasive, destructive weeds isn't enough. There have been a few petitions out in an attempt to stop this insanity. Sign if you care: http://www.globaljusticeecology.org/petition.php |
Look up. Under, behind, around, and sometimes even above those Sequoias are Eucalyptus. Everywhere.
We drove south to Mill Valley, arriving just in time to see the moon reach its full-sickle brightness, and to take a post-car-sickness walk under its light. It's hard to see ecological devastation anywhere, especially in treasures like the redwood forests, but somehow the timlessness of the moon is reassuring. When humans are gone, and redwoods, and even ArborGen, the moon will look down on this place, crawling with some unfathomable assortment of super-hardy plants and animals, and keep on shining. We try to let the sadness we witness be a lesson but not a downer. Tomorrow we're going to try to find human love in San Francisco.
(I like my camera.) |
The Inn at Schoolhouse Creek
Lilies by the koi pond. |
Note the disappointment on the left. She returned the deed on her next turn. |
Outdoor amenities include a hot tub, hammocks, a giant chess set, and pooch-parking for guests whose companions would like to be close-by during meals. They feed the birds every morning during breakfast, for guests' entertainment. And breakfast was really great. It consisted of self-serve baked goods, toast, cereals, etc. and options for various delicious hot meals (omelets, french toast, pancakes, fritatta, etc.) from the kitchen. They also made an effort to cater to our children's allergies. Options to bring breakfast back to the cabin or for dinner, later, are also available.
We didn't have our dear Hazel with us to make use of the pooch parking, but we saw another dog waiting patiently there during one of our breakfasts. |
The Creekside Restaurant! |
Birds and a chipmunk having their breakfast. |
Breakfast time! |
Saturday, June 4, 2011
Mendocino
A bit tired from the grueling drive into Mendocino, yesterday and a MAMA interview today, we took a break to explore the sandstone and seashore of Mendocino. |
We stood on the giant rock formations, watching some seals playing below... |
...in the beds of multiple seaweeds, some of which were the first giant kelp we've seen yet. |
We explored the life on the rocks and in the tide-pools. |
Turquoise limpets, |
goose-neck barnacles, |
etc. |
Some other beachgoers had their cats with them. Some of the cats explored the beach; this one stayed home! |
Friday, June 3, 2011
Elk Meadows, Klamath
The Other Side of the Klamath: The Spit and Brush Dance Site
We went to see the Yurok Brush Dance Site on the way out to the spit. The Brush Dances normally happen in July, so the area is still quite overgrown with grass. |
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And of course this spit: the place for fishing, gathering, and community, is right next to the Brush Dance site. |
Oregos looks over at the spit from Woge's beach, across the river. |
Tal made a Mt. Rushmore-ish sculpture on the sand-bank. |
People were fishing for red-tailed perch, which swim in the trough just offshore. |
At other times, the spit is populated by birds and mammals. Today there was only a skeleton. |
ReQua, Klamath, Oregos, & Wogé
We spent two nights at the ReQua Inn on the Yurok Reservation at Klamath, just south of Crescent City.
Wogé used to be Reweti and Geneva's dog, but their first daughter TeMaia was allergic to him, so he went to live with Sweet Grandma, who lives in the house her grandfather built, near the water. After Wogé showed us around, introduced us to all his special games (chewing sticks, jumping on waves, barking at waves, etc.) he waited for us. When it was time for us to go, he led us back up the path. The neighbours' dogs barked at us, so he went and got them, somehow convinced them to stop barking, and brought them over to introduce to us. He sat patiently while they interrogated us. Then, as we were leaving, he stood by to watch, before heading back to his house.
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The mouth of the Klamath River, with the sand-spit visible on the left. (Click to see full-size.) |
Wogé took us down to the beach. |
See that rock at the end of the beach? We walked past her on the way down. |
She looks like a woman carrying a burden-basket. |
The spit across the water was populated by various fishers. |
We also saw our first up-close pelicans! |
They seemed to be the most personable birds we'd ever met! We didn't get much closer than this, but the way they stood around just looking at us was fascinating! |
Wogé used to be Reweti and Geneva's dog, but their first daughter TeMaia was allergic to him, so he went to live with Sweet Grandma, who lives in the house her grandfather built, near the water. After Wogé showed us around, introduced us to all his special games (chewing sticks, jumping on waves, barking at waves, etc.) he waited for us. When it was time for us to go, he led us back up the path. The neighbours' dogs barked at us, so he went and got them, somehow convinced them to stop barking, and brought them over to introduce to us. He sat patiently while they interrogated us. Then, as we were leaving, he stood by to watch, before heading back to his house.
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