It is August 2017 and we are back at Fig Guest House for the third time. We love this are of California. We are much more familiar with the area now and have discovered most of the better restaurants and wineries. Nest Sunday we fly back to soggy Naples, Florida.
Barbara and I are on a two-month trek to escape the heat and humidity of August and September in Naples, Florida. Ironically our first stop was a six-day visit to Las Vegas. Out for lunch on our first day in Vegas, I checked my weather.com APP; it was 102 degrees in Las Vegas and only 92 in Naples. Yet the “feels like temperature” was reversed for both locations. A quick read from us about Las Vegas – it is a good long weekend stop, but six days is a little too much.
We left our Las Vegas timeshare one day early to drive
to Lompoc, California for a visit to my daughter and her family. We had a very comfortable stay. Lompoc is near Vandenberg Air Force
Base and is subject to the Pacific Coast marine layer for its weather. You wake up
every morning with a layer of fog, not ground fog, but low cloud cover. It is cool and damp with temperatures
in the 50’s. Around ten thirty,
the cloud layer has passed and the temperature rises. By three o’clock it might be 74 degrees. There is always a breeze and golfing is
very pleasant. After three, the marine layer reappears and temperatures slowly
drop back into the fifties. A
drive “up the valley” is about twenty minutes and if you get to Santa Ynez or
Solvang, the afternoon temperatures are in the high 80’s. That’s enough about the climate.
We stayed in a very interesting cottage for the week (http://www.vrbo.com/402225). It is located about three quarters of a
mile north of downtown Los Olivos.
Keep in mind that Los Olivos is a town with zero traffic lights. Los
Olivos does have a couple of good restaurants and one inn. There is a tack store and a post office. What is does not lack are wine tasting
rooms. There are twenty-seven
tasting rooms spread over three streets.
Actually, we only visited one.
We are purist and prefer tasting rooms at the actual wineries. But it is an excellent way to try many
too many wines and not have to drive.
We checked into our cottage a little after 4 PM. After unpacking we headed into town for
dinner and were back on our wrap around porch to share some wine, enjoy the cool
evening and watch the sunset. As
the moon began to rise, we finally realized we were sitting on the side of the
house facing east. It was a
fabulous full moon. We went off to
bed, probably around 9:30 PM. The
cottage has a nice bedroom and adjoining bath. We closed the blinds put on a light in the bathroom and
drifted off – there is no TV in the bedroom. A short time latter I awoke to the sounds of a pack of
coyotes and what I believe was a chicken that was in the act of becoming a late
dinner for the coyotes. It was a
bit unnerving. After drifting back to sleep, I need to visit the bathroom. The light was no longer on, since the
cottage lights have timers with motion detectors to turn off the circuits after
about thirty minutes of no activity.
I successfully found the bathroom door. The rest of the week we left a
lighted candle in the bathroom.
Most mornings there was early cloud cover and the
browned grass was covered with dew.
I did have early morning visitors one day. There were about twenty birds in the covey and it stayed in the area for
about twenty minutes. Around eight thirty the morning clouds give way to clear
blue skies. The temperature makes
a gradual rise to the eighties, but it is a perfect time for a morning walk. We took our walks on Figueroa Mountain
Road. One
morning we headed back toward Lompoc to play a round of golf at the Village
Country Club (http://www.villagecc.net/v2/golfcourse.php).
This is a private club, but after a short conversation with the pro, Bob Kotowski,
we were able to book tee times.
The club is casual and has a fine course layout. It is higher up the valley than
downtown Lompoc, and the morning fog allows a sunny environment for any tee off
time later than 10 AM. Insert golfing picture. This morning we were paired with two club members. On the very difficult eighth hole, 408 yard,
dogleg right with a large oak tree in the right center of the fairway about 125
yard from the tee box, my planned high soaring tee shot aimed over the tree to get
me past the dogleg was executed perfectly except for the altitude part. My solidly struck low flying drive went
right at the center of the massive oak just high enough to clear the area where
two openings are made as the main branches begin. Not a leaf was touched. I was left with 168 yards to the pin from the middle of the
fairway. Somehow I was able to not
over swing with my five iron and the ball landed on the green rolled one yard
and was sitting ten feet slightly below the hole.
I could see it now – a bronze plaque nailed to the
mighty oak:
Through
the tree, for a birdie three.
CPH
8/20/13
What I got was a cocktail napkin with a hand penned
message:
Through
the tree without a mar, had to settle for a two-putt par.
CPH
8/20/13
Latter in the week we played at the Alisal River Course
in Solvang. This course was made
famous for a hosting a couple of scenes in the movie Sideways. It is much too long a course from the red
tees, over 5,700 yards. There was
a persistent 20 mph wind throughout the afternoon.
The best part of the week was driving along Foxen Canyon
Road and taking in the summer beauty of this massive stretch of farm and
grazing area. Houses and ranches
are few and far apart. Wineries,
vineyards and horse ranches are spaced far apart and stretch all the way along
this road from Los Olivos to Santa Maria.
We did find some favorite wines during our travels. Insert picture of wines.
On Saturday we had a BBQ at the cottage with my daughter
and her family. It was a great
finish to a great week.
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