People always say there pretty
much is not much of much to do in Sacramento! I took the opportunity when IAI (International Association of Identification)
California Regional Conference was held there. Tagged along with Wu-Liang, this
city was quite, pretty, great HOT weather, and relaxed me. It was all nature
around me... humming birds, April bugs, hawks, and I even crossed paths with a
turkey while I crossed the street one day.
27 April 2013
LAX, McDonalds, South West Air, Double Tree Hotel
Parked at Hilton, LAX as usual and the shuttle took forever
to come. Luckily, we pre-check-in South West Airline already and saved us lots
of time. Filled up our stomachs with McDonalds’ Filet-O-Fish. Boy, it is
expensive at the airport.
Double Tree Hotel is about 12 miles from the airport and
there are plenty of restaurants and shopping (near a mall) in the general
vicinity. Our room was very spacious and clean. They usually greet the guests
with warm chocolate cookies. Yummy.
28 April, 2013
Southern Railroad Excursion Train ride, Joe’s Crab Shack,
Railroad Museum, Thai Cottage Restaurant
Excursion train
ride was just ok. We spent a fortune (just kidding) to sit in the ‘Luxury Car’
to receive water and snack. The ride itself was about 30 minutes along the
Sacramento River.
The museum is very
well equipped with old train relics, engines, etc. There are vintage train
cars you can look in to, engines from different eras and lines, a reproduction
of an old telegraph station, a produce car, an engine you can actually get into
and sit in the seat, a mail car, a dining car with kitchen and examples of
various china and place-settings. The vintage sleeper car that actually moves
as though it is traveling, including sounds.
29 April, 2013
State Capitol, Kru Sushi, Sutter’s Fort Historic Park,
Great Wall Mongolian BBQ
The tour guide
gave us a great tour! We got to see the interior of the capitol, plus we saw
all of the past California state governors’ self portrait paintings except Arnold
Schwarzenegger's. We enjoyed the tour and always learned something new about
the people and culture of California. The California State Capitol houses
the Bicameral State Legislature, offices of the Executive Branch, a pretty
Rotunda area, interesting historical displays, and 70s-era office suites. The
California Senate Chamber seats its 40 members in a large chamber room
decorated in red, which is a reference to the British House of Lords (also the
upper house of a bicameral legislature). The Latin phrase "Senatoris est
civitatis libertatem tueri" [It is the duty of a Senator to protect the
liberty of the people] lines the cornice. A portrait of George Washington and
the State Seal hangs above. The California Assembly Chamber is located at the
opposite end of the building. Its green tones are based on those of the British
House of Commons (the lower house). Along the cornice appears a quotation
from Abraham Lincoln in Latin: "Legislatorum est justas leges condere (It
is the duty of legislators to pass just laws). We also walked under the
Rotunda, viewed the historic Governor's Office Suites, and wandered the ornate
hallways outside the Legislative Chambers. It's all fascinating stuff and
definitely worth a visit and for an intriguing civics experience.
Sutter’s Fort
was a great place to soak up the sun. Begun in 1839 by builder John Sutter, the
fort was a 19th century agricultural and trade colony and the first non-Native
American community in central California. It's famous for its association
with the Gold Rush and the Donner Party. Took a walk through the
well-maintained grounds here and experienced a well preserved piece of history,
brought to life again thanks to our state park system.
30 April, 2013
Arden Fair Mall
Since I got a free day of my own, just decided to take a stroll to the mall
across the street from our hotel. It has a nice atmosphere and you don't get
lost. There is a food court and food isn’t great though. I’m not a regular
shopper and accidentally stepped into a trap of Orogold store and bought myself
a so-called ‘deep peeling’ product to lighted up my sun spots, hopefully. Sigh!
1 May 2013
American River Forest, Aerospace Museum of California
Actually, it is a Bike Trail we decided to hit on such a
great day. And what a long long long trail! Other than that we saw so many
people biking this trail, it is also great to have long nice runs/walks as
well. It’s great for nature loving people and we enjoyed nice cool breeze along
the river bank. Relaxing morning!
Oh this museum was exceptionally awesome. With AAA discount, it was fairly
cheap entrance fee and plenty of stuff to look at, inside and out. I loved
learning the history of the airplanes and the videos they had of the Coast
Guard. Everyone was so helpful and had so much information to provide and the
pride they showed just talking to us. You can even learn how to fly virtually
with the simulator. I would easily recommend this as a cheapish, fun
afternoon. We easily burned 2 hours but could have easily stretched it if
climbing into one of those flight simulators.
2 May 2013
McDonalds, Governor’s Mansion, Zen Sushi, Horn Blower, Leland
Stanford Mansion State Historic Park, Elephant Bar and Grill
It’s the worst breakfast ever, such tiny Mc Muffin, at
McDonalds. What can you say, we are not regular fans!
Governor’s mansion is a beautiful Victorian Gothic mansion
and full of history. We took the guided tour to learn a lot about the
architecture and some California politics. Governor Ronald (and Nancy) Reagan
were the last to live there. It wasn't to their tastes and they moved
elsewhere, leaving it in 1967 to become a museum. The furnishings and the
carpets are well preserved.
Sacramento River’s 1- hour Cruise was kind of terrible
and boring. It just traveled down the river and back. The Sacramento Delta is
not as interesting as the Mississippi, but Sacramento is lucky to be at the
juncture of two rivers: the American River and the Sacramento River. Being
"River City", it takes advantage of the natural lay of the land - or
the WATERWAYS, as the case may be - to let local residents experience the
beauty of a riverboat cruise.
A Must see for history buffs! The Stanford mansion is a
wonderful piece of Sacramento and state history. A former Governor and
Sacramento business man Leland Stanford originally built for his family. Besides
home to Leland Stanford, it’s been long used as a home for children by the
Catholic Church; many furnishings were preserved by the church. All the carpets
and window dressings were faithfully reproduced. This is much more interesting,
attractive and larger than the Governor’s Mansion. We were glad to stumble upon
it.
I’ve got to mention the excellent crème brulee at Elephant
Grill. Definitely, we’ll come back again.
3 May 2013
Elephant
Bar and Grill, Noble Vegetarian
It’s another relaxing and lazy day for me. Practiced Tai-Chi
in the garden, read newspaper by the pool side, even hooked up iPad via hotel’s
Wi-Fi.
4 May 2013
Coco’s, Crocker Art Museum, Crepeville, SMF, South West
Air, LAX, Home
Finally, we had a decent breakfast at Coco’s, plus the real
coffee instead of hotel room’s coffee machine brewed coffee.
One hundred twenty-six years after Margaret Crocker, widow
of railroad magnate E. B. Crocker, established the first art museum west of the
Mississippi, a new, $100-million addition and renovation has tripled the
museum's space. The Classic/Contemporary addition by the architectural firm that
did the renovation of Manhattan's Guggenheim has propelled the museum back into
the ranks of major metropolitan art museums. They have great collection of California
art, Impressionist and modern. We had a wonderful docent who was willing to
spend 2.5 hours just for two of us.
With this newest terminal B that opened up in SMF airport, you
have to take a monorail to get to the actual departure gates. Inside,
the ceilings are sky high with tons of space all around and a gigantic red
rabbit monument as a centerpiece. The entire airport is very clean and well
maintained and the bathrooms all seemed well stocked. Of course, they do provide Wi-Fi!
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