Monday, February 21, 2022

THE MONARCHS ARE BACK: A Visit to the Coronado Butterfly Preserve, Goleta, CA

Monarch Butterflies. Coronado Butterfly Preserve, Goleta, CA

In early February, Art and I did a short trip to Santa Barbara, about two hours north of our home in Los Angeles. Art gave a talk at UC Santa Barbara, and while he was doing that, I visited the Coronado Butterfly Preserve in Goleta with friends who live locally. Luckily they knew just where to go--at the usual spot in Elwood Grove the butterflies were gone, but after following the path for another ten minutes or so, we found them–giant dark clusters hanging high in the eucalyptus trees and hundreds more butterflies fluttering in the sunlight. 


It was thrilling, especially since in recent years the monarchs seemed to have almost disappeared. No one can explain this year's resurgence but everyone is happy.  (Although the numbers are not what they once were–when millions of butterflies gathered at their winter homes along the West Coast–this year’s butterfly count is one hundred times more than last year.)
Pollinator display.

After parking our car at the end of the residential street near the entrance to the preserve (marked by a large sign), we walked up a small hill and past a meadow and a display explaining the role of butterflies as pollinators. 

Path into the eucalyptus grove.

From there we entered the forest, where eucalyptus trees more than one hundred feet tall reach to the sky. As we approached the Elwood Grove we looked up and saw a few butterflies high in the canopy, but no clusters in the trees. We continued on the path through the forest. Then suddenly, overhead, we spotted huge clumps of butterflies hanging from the high branches. 

Clumps of monarchs.

It was a warm afternoon and the air was filled with flapping wings as butterflies searched for food and mates. Down on the ground we had to be careful not to step on a pair in their mating embrace. (see top photo) After the butterflies disperse, the female monarch will lay her eggs on milkweed leaves and a new cycle of life will begin.
Monarchs flying among the branches.

Monarchs east of the Rockies spend the winter in Mexico; west of the Rockies they gather along the California coast, assembling in large clumps in pine and eucalyptus groves where they have access to fresh water and flowers to feed on. The preserve in Goleta is just one of many places where monarchs gather in California. Typically, they arrive in October and November and stay until mid-February and March.
Clifftop path.

After viewing the butterflies we went up onto the bluff for a walk with a spectacular view of the ocean and the beach below.
Soon the butterflies will disperse. I hope some of them will come to my yard in LA and feed on the milkweed I have planted in pots on my patio.

For an excellent article in the Los Angeles Times about monarchs and the people who study them, click HERE

For directions to and information about the Coronado Butterfly Preserve, click HERE

Note: For our visit to Santa Barbara, my husband and I stayed at the Upham Hotel, the oldest continuously operating hotel in Southern California, opening in 1871. We stayed in one of the cottages surrounding the interior garden. As one reviewer says, the property exudes Victorian charm without going overboard. I had a tasty dinner in the accompanying restaurant, Louie’s Bistro, eating outside on the side porch. The hotel is just two blocks from State Street in Santa Barbara’s downtown.

Sign at the beginning of the path into the butterfly preserve.

 

Monday, February 14, 2022

DISCOVERING COLORFUL PUBLIC ART ON THE STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO, Guest Post by Karen Minkowski

Mural in Balmy Alley, San Francisco, CA

I thank my friend Karen Minkowski, a frequent contributor to The Intrepid Tourist, for her report on some of the amazing public art in the neighborhood where she is currently staying in San Francisco. 

Balmy Alley mural

I’m spending a few months in San Francisco, while I wait for winter to end and Omicron to recede. Each day I wander the streets, enjoying the different ways in which residents create art for the public. Murals, especially in the Mission District, are among the most common displays, covering the walls of commercial establishments, apartment buildings and even the fronts of some single family homes.  


Balmy Alley mural and plants

The Mission's well-known murals of Balmy Alley, located in a lively Latino neighborhood with taquerias and street vendors, are especially beautiful.
Pride Mural. Marching across Golden Gate Bridge

This mural near the Castro District, a historically gay neighborhood and center of LGBTQ activism, celebrates Pride and Love on the iconic Golden Gate Bridge. 

Crosswalk, Castro District, San Francisco


A rainbow pedestrian crossing in the Castro adds unexpected beauty to an intersection.

San Francisco, 22nd Street

Walking in San Francisco involves climbing up and down its many hills. I’ve often climbed this block, on 22nd Street in the Noe District, listed as one of the ten steepest in the city (the stairs help!).

Wooden bench, Noe District

After climbing 22nd Street I head straight for this lovely chair, just two blocks away, to rest a few minutes. Sculpted from one piece of timber, the seat was placed by a thoughtful resident at the edge of the sidewalk, nestled into a hedge and presumably to be enjoyed by passersby like me

Sidewalk art--framed mosaic of natural materials.

A framed mosaic of lichen and other plant material complements the sidewalk plantings around it.

Sidewalk mandala of flower petals around a tree trunk.

I overheard that this beautiful mandala was assembled from the petals of old flowers from a florist’s shop.

Tiger peeking through the jungle, Church Street.

And one of my favorites, a jungly scene painted on the front wall of a home in a beautiful, but otherwise unadorned block in Noe Valley.

Mural, Balmy Alley

With my car in storage, it would take many more months to explore on foot more distant San Francisco neighborhoods, but I’m sure there is more beauty throughout this lovely city.
With Omicron receding it’s approaching that time to move on.

For more about the Balmy Alley murals, click HERE. The Balmy Alley murals are among the more than 1000 murals in San Francisco. For a sample of some of the other fascinating public art in the city, click HERE.