Hike Info:
Type:Car
Description:
April 15, 2025, Tuesday
When I got up at 6:30, I saw
there was an email from Rachel with her flight information. We
exchanged emails about our itineraries. Our schedule is to go to
Solvang today, enjoy the town. Then tomorrow go to the Ronald Reagan
Presidential Library. Rachel comes in at 4:30 tomorrow afternoon.
Then back to Fresno. That seems to be OK with Rachel.
I get several things done
until Sherri gets up around 9:30. I guess we will not be leaving at
9.
We actually hit the road about
11:10 with Sherri driving. We listen to a piece from the Holy
Post
about American
values.
The person being interviewed, Jonathan Rauch, is an atheist with a
Jewish background. He has found that even though he does not believe
in Christianity, he thinks that without a religious, and in this case
Christian, set of values that democracy would crumble. How our
democracy is built relies on the morals which believers held and
which infused society.
When we got to Kettleman City,
we stopped for a burger at
In-N-Out.
As we were finishing up our burgers, Sandi, a person whom I used to
work with came over to say hi. I do not think I have seen her in at
least 12 years. It is good to have seen her. I am amazed that she
recognized me. I believe Dorothy Sayers said something like, it is
something affirming (Sayers would not use this word) to be recognized
out of a crowd.
I take over driving and drive
to Solvang. Nothing exciting about that. Our hotel check-in is 4.
Even though it is 3:30, the hotel, the Royal
Copenhagen Inn,
is ready for us. The receptionist is friendly and makes things easy
for us. We have room 129-we happened to park right in front of it.
The room is clean and everything is good and we have a king bed.
After we take a rest, we go
for a walk around town-this is what Sherri enjoys, much more than I
do. So I followed her lead. She goes into a few shops and I am
content with reading outside of the shops. She did not buy anything,
but really enjoyed the experience. We also keep an eye for places to
eat. The German restaurant which Sherri likes is no longer there. So
we continue to wander until we run out of town to wander. As we pass
by a place called the Big
Bopper,
I make a comment that it smells just like Clarke’s in Mountain
View. That seals the deal. It is the second burger of the day-it is
not disappointing. We included a rare, for us, chocolate milkshake.
After eating, we headed back
to our room for the rest of the night. There is a Golden State
Warrior Play-In game on, so we watch that. The game ends around 10
and I go to bed by 10:30. The bed is comfortable. Would we stay here
again? Yes.
Oh, by the way, the Warriors
won, just barely.
April 16, 2025
 |
Inside the car wash |
I got up at 7:15 and took a
shower. Our breakfast is to be delivered, yes, you read that right,
delivered between 8 and 8:30. Mind you, it is a simple breakfast-a
pastry, yogurt and cold cereal. So it is nothing fancy. We had our
breakfast while we sat outside. A bit cool, but acceptable-that is
the weather. I walk to the post office and drop off some cards.
 |
Sherri and Reagans
|
We are ready to leave around
9:20. I am driving again. There is not too much to tell except that
we are grateful for the guidance which Google Maps gave. There is a
section which says get off of 101 and follow the PCH, which we do.
When we look up at 101, there must be construction as it is backed up
and almost completely stopped. We rejoin 101 seven miles later and go
to Oxnard.
Why Oxnard, you might ask
yourself? First there is a Costco
where we got gas. Then there is a Costco car wash which is Sherri’s
newest addiction. The car did need washing. Finally, there was a food
court. Sherri got a turkey Caesar salad and I got a turkey and
provolone sandwich. This is satisfying. Then it is back on the road.
It is only a half an hour to
the Ronald
Reagan Presidential Library.
We arrived at 12:30. Evidently, there is insufficient parking as
there is a line of cars about a mile down the entrance road. Plus it
is a pretty good hill going up. We started to walk it until we
recognized that a shuttle was coming down the hill to pick up people.
The driver is pretty friendly and gets to the library's entrance
within 10 minutes.
In November,
we went to the Nixon
Library
and got a membership there. We have been able to use it at the Carter
Library in Atlanta and now it gets us into the Reagan Library. We do
not have the time to see the special exhibit of the Dead Sea Scrolls
and the oldest Ten Commandments. We just walked right into the museum
part of the library. The first thing is a short video telling us
about Reagan, then a hologram of Reagan greets us before he needs to
go to a meeting.
We go through the first part
of the museum which tells about his life before becoming President.
This includes his parents and family in Illinois. This is where he
did not make the cut as a football player but did well in the
theater. Followed by broadcast on radio where he could be dramatic as
a sports announcer. This led him to some acting gigs. The Army would
not send him overseas during World War II because of being
near-sighted. But they used him in propaganda movies.
This led to his movies. And
movies lead him to lead the Actor’s Guild union. Here he learned
the art of negotiation. His time as the front person for General
Electric Theater
gave him face recognition. Also GE sent him around the nation to each
of its factories. So he got on the ground contact with ordinary
Americans.
While an early Democrat,he
felt more comfortable with Eisenhower, Nixon and Goldwater than the
Democratic candidates for President. He campaigned for the
Republicans and that got his name as a possible political candidate.
In 1966 he ran for governor of California and won. The exhibits talk
about what he is said to have done as governor. Note: there seemed to
be things which the Library gave him credit for which either preceded
him or happened after him. Such as the Big
Creek Project
happened either before his time as governor or after it, not during
it. It seemed to also say that a great expansion of solar power
happened during his time. Maybe it is because he was the first
governor that I was really aware of his actions. Do I have a
different perspective than what the Library gave? But one of the
things which I have seen as we have gone through the various
Presidential Libraries is to let them tell their own stories about
what they were trying to accomplish and what they did.
We then entered into where he
became President. Actually the room only has the first few months of
his Presidency. Andrea had heard a podcast which said to pay
particular attention to the movie reviews, his diary entries and
pictures of him feeding squirrels on the White House lawn. We only
saw diary entries. You can see them
online
as well.
Going out of this room, we
have time for one more thing: Air Force One. As we walked towards it,
we saw a mural talking about the Secret Service. It is interesting,
particularly since I read a book about the Secret Service in my OSHER
Book Club called Zero
Fail.
As we are leaving this area, Lisa C, a docent, talks with us. I am
not sure if she was Secret Service proper, but she had been part of
the forward team, doing the planning for events. Interesting tidbits.
Then we meet her as we walk to Air Force One and she fills us in on
the plane.

When you get into the plane,
your picture gets taken-with the hope of you buying it later on. We
observe the various compartments. We first get to look into the
cockpit area. Four seats in a very small area, crammed full of stuff.
I do not think I would ever fit. Traveling as President is much
better than anybody else on the plane. The President gets a cabin all
to himself with space to stretch out and hold meetings. The staff is
a bit better. You have an area where there is security and people can
work. Then beyond a secure door is where everyone else is. They are
not to pass by the door. This back compartment is not very luxurious,
more like the coach of a commercial airplane. Our friend Lisa talks
us through the areas, explaining them. She also notes that even with
these conditions, it is a privilege which very few people get to ride
in Air Force One.


You exit out the rear of the
plane and down some stairs. It is getting time to leave to pick up
Rachel, so we ask what would be the best way to exit. It is out a
door, up some stairs to the shuttle. The shuttle is the same drive
which brought us up. Then it is off to LAX, which sounds simple. But
this is Los Angeles and Highway 405. That means there is bumper to
bumper traffic all the way to the airport.
LAX is large with many
terminals. Also it is confusing. So we make a couple loops around the
departure areas, then another loop around the upper level for
arrivals. We then finally make it to the Cell Phone waiting area,
which is also crowded. Rachel has us wait only about 20 minutes
before she says she is at the departure. There we pick her up, more
accurately, she spots us and gets to our car.
Then it is off to Fresno. I
drive to Santa Clarita where we eat dinner at a sandwich shop called
the Urbane
Cafe-do
not think Subway, rather something a bit more sophisticated. Then
Rachel takes over driving back to Fresno. We get in about 10:15.
Shortly after arrival, it is time for me to go to bed.