Out of Doors--California and
Oregon
Project Gutenberg's Out of Doors--California and Oregon, by J. A.
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Title: Out of Doors--California and Oregon
Author: J. A. Graves
Release Date: March 8, 2004 [EBook #11517]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK
CALIFORNIA AND OREGON ***
Produced by David A. Schwan
Out of Doors California and Oregon
By J. A. Graves
Profusely Illustrated
1912
Contents
A Motor Trip in San Diego's Back Country A Hunting Trip in the Long
Ago Professor Lo, Philosopher A Great Day's Sport on Warner's Ranch
Boyhood Days in Early California Last Quail Shoot of the Year 1911
An Auto Trip Through the Sierras
To the memory of my sons Selwyn Emmett Graves and Jackson A.
Graves, Jr. Both of whom were nature lovers, this book is lovingly
dedicated.
Illustrations
J. A. Graves Frontispiece Mount Pitt Cuyamaca Lake, Near Pine Hills
El Cajon Valley, San Diego County, from Schumann-Heink Point,
Grossmont In San Diego County San Diego Mountain Scene Fern
Brake, Palomar Mountain The Margarita Ranch House San Diego and
Coronado Islands from Grossmont Grade on Palomar Mountain Pelican
Bay, Klamath Lake On Klamath River Klamath Lake and Link River
Spring Creek Wood River, Oregon The Killican Williamson River
Scorpion Harbor, Santa Cruz Island Smugglers' Cove, San Clemente
Island Arch Rock, Santa Cruz Island Cueva Valdez, Santa Cruz Island
Lily Rock, Idyllwild The Entrance and Mission Arches, Glenwood
Mission Inn, Riverside Magnolia Avenue and Government Indian
School, Riverside Hemet Valley from Foothills on the South Ferris
Valley Grain Field Orange Groves Looking Southeast Across Hemet
Valley, California View from Serra Memorial Cross, Huntington Drive,
Rubuidoux Mountain, Riverside Some Barley Victoria Avenue,
Riverside A Rocky Stream Fern Brakes Four Feet in Height at Fine
Hills California White Oak Another View of Spring Creek Harvesting
in San Joaquin Valley Nevada Falls from Glacier Nevada Falls, Close
Range Point Upper Yosemite Yosemite Falls Cedar Creek at Fine Hills
Scene Near Fine Hills Lodge
A Motor Trip in San Diego's Back Country.
Come, you men and women automobilists, get off the paved streets of
Los Angeles and betake yourselves to the back country of San Diego
county, where you can enjoy automobile life to the utmost during the
summer. There drink in the pure air of the mountains, perfumed with
the breath of pines and cedars, the wild lilacs, the sweet-pea vines, and
a thousand aromatic shrubs and plants that render every hillside ever
green from base to summit. Lay aside the follies of social conditions,
and get back to nature, pure and unadorned, except with nature's
charms and graces.
To get in touch with these conditions, take your machines as best you
can over any of the miserable roads, or rather apologies for roads, until
you get out into the highway recently constructed from Basset to
Pomona. Run into Pomona to Gary avenue, turn to the right and follow
it to the Chino ranch; follow the winding roads, circling to the Chino
hills, to Rincon, then on, over fairly good roads, to Corona. Pass
through that city, then down the beautiful Temescal Canyon to Elsinore.
Move on through Murrietta to Temecula.
Three Routes.
Beyond Temecula three routes are open to you. By one of them you
keep to the left, over winding roads full of interest and beauty, through
a great oak grove at the eastern base of Mt. Palomar. Still proceeding
through a forest of scattering oaks, you presently reach Warner's ranch
through a gate. Be sure and close all gates opened by you. Only vandals
leave gates open when they should be closed.
Warner's ranch is a vast meadow, mostly level, but sloping from
northeast to southwest, with rolling hills and sunken valleys around its
eastern edge. A chain of mountains, steep and timber laden, almost
encircles the ranch. For a boundary mark on the northeastern side of the
ranch, are steep, rocky and forbidding looking mountains. Beyond them,
the desert. The ranch comprises some 57,000 acres, nearly all valley
land. It is well watered, filled with lakes, springs, meadows and
running streams, all draining to its lowest point, and forming the head
waters of the San Luis Rey River.
You follow the road by which you enter the ranch, to the left, and in a
few miles' travel you bring up at Warner's Hot Springs, a resort famed
for many years for the curative properties of its waters. The springs are
now in charge of Mr. and Mrs. Stanford, and
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