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Random Tips

Traveling in the tropics or where you might encounter bugs? Use short bungee cords to wrap around your pant cuffs to keep bugs from going up your pant legs. This also works for long sleeved shirts.

Do you travel with a flat iron for your hair? Did you know they can be useful for getting out wrinkles in your clothes, too? Do check the TSA website as I don’t believe they can be in your carry-on luggage.

Not sure you can remember what your rental car looks like when it “looks-like-every-other rental car” in the parking ramp? Take a photo with your digital camera. No camera? Pack a magnet and place it on a door or the trunk.
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Tomato Days 2009

Cacti spilling out of an old wheelbarrow make an interesting display at Morningsun Herb Farm’s Tomato Days. Tasting hundreds of tomatoes and then voting on favorites made for an exciting day.

Not tomatoes…but red hot chili peppers hanging around

Lots and lots of tiny tomatoes, still on their vines, filled box after box.

Pick a shape or size and there was probably a tomato or several that resembled it.
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Check out this Integrated Travel Site

Check out this site www.gowaza.com for a new way of thinking about your upcoming trip.
GoWaza allows you to build a trip on a map and then send your friends the entire trip.

Some of their unique features include:
* You can upload your contacts to find hotels, restaurants and events close by
* All of your travel items are integrated in one dashboard and map
* Each item you add becomes an anchor you can click on to update the entire search
* Distances are automatically updated every time you click on a new anchor
* You can select any two anchors to get pop-up directions
I can’t wait to try it out for myself. Give it a look…
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Airfare Tips

Did you know that traveling on a Tuesday, Wednesday or Saturday will save you money on air travel, and that connecting flights are often cheaper than non-stops? And did you know that airlines raise fares for travel during peak holiday periods and for last-minute travel? And were you aware that when shopping you should check fares from all airports that are a short drive from your nearest airport?

In addition, www.Airfarewatchdog.com has gathered some additional advice that might save you money next time you’re shopping for a plane ride.

Check fares often
Airfares fluctuate like the stock market so you need to check them every day, or better still several times a day, if you’re serious about saving money. Airlines can update domestic fares three times a day during the week, and once on Saturday and Sunday. International fares tend not to change as often, but can be updated up to 5 times daily. Also, even if the fare itself hasn’t changed, seat availability at the lowest fares can change, so there might be just one seat available at 10 a.m., but the airline will open up more cheap seats later in the day.

Try a flexible fare search
If you’re at all flexible, you can sometimes save hundreds by adjusting your travel dates. Travelocity will search most domestic fares and many international ones over a 330 day search period; Orbitz and Hotwire cover nearly all routes from the U.S., but only over 30 day periods. Southwest.com also has a good flexible date search function.


Sign up for the airlines’ e-mail feeds and frequent flyer programs
I know you probably get too many emails, but this one could save you dollars.

Sign up for fare free alerts
Most airfare web sites offer these, and they all have something to offer. Yapta.com lets you track your specific itinerary, down to the flight number and dates of travel, and will let you know if the airline owes you a price-drop refund. Travelocity’s easy-to-use FareWatcherPlus lets you track up to ten routes and you can choose to be notified either when a fare goes down by $25 or more, or when it goes below a price you choose. Orbitz and Kayak also offer alerts, as does Bing Travel. But since all of these sites use the same airfare data provided by the airlines’ computer systems, they won’t include discounted promo code fares, and most don’t include Southwest Airlines. Airfarewatchdog.com does provide promo code and Southwest alerts, although it covers far fewer routes than the above-mentioned sites.

Search airline sites individually
Some airlines have “private” sales, reserving their very best fares for their own sites. These are different from promo code fares. Airfarewatchdog fare searchers often find lower fares on JetBlue.com, even without discounts such as a recent system-wide 20 percent off promo code, than on third-party sites. International airlines such as Aer Lingus, Iberia and Qantas regularly offer lower fares (i.e., $100-$400 less) on their own web sites compared to what you’ll find on Kayak or Orbitz.

Buy hotel + air packages
It could be significantly cheaper to buy an air plus hotel package rather than airfare alone.

Use Priceline for last minute trips
If you don’t have a 7, 14, or 21 day advance purchase window to buy your fare, your best bet is the “name your own price” feature of Priceline.com. True, you won’t know the exact flight times or airline you’re flying until to pay for your trip, but you can save 50 percent or more.

Combine two separate fares rather than buying one fare
If you’re flying to a destination in Europe, you might save money by purchasing one fare from the U.S. to, say, Dublin, and another from Dublin onward.

Buy tickets on an airline that will refund the difference if a fare goes down
Currently, the “nice” airlines are JetBlue, Southwest and Alaska.

Don’t listen to airfare pundits who predict airfares
Airlines are unpredictable creatures. With that in mind any airfare expert who claims he knows that airfares will be lower or higher in the coming months is just trying to snag some publicity. No one can accurately predict where airfares are heading.

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Let’s Go to the Boardwalk at Santa Cruz

Here they come…

There they go…

The Giant Dipper Roller Coaster celebrates 85 years of fun and thrills in Santa Cruz, CA. This wooden roller coaster is my personal favorite. Not only do you hear the clack, clack of the wooden track but you have quite the beginning to this ride.
Hop in a car (front is best in my opinion), listen as the attendant releases the brake, and off you go… into an immediate sharp down turn with the wind blowing in your face and then…blackness so black you can’t even see who is sitting beside you as you head into a tunnel before heading up the steep slope.
How many roller coasters have a view like this from the top of the big hill? On the Giant Dipper you can see for miles over the ocean.
Thrills and a great view…it doesn’t get any better than this for a roller coaster ride.
Just when you’ve recovered from the tunnel and are looking out over the Pacific…your view disappears from sight as you get hurdled down the big hill.
Finished with rides as the sun starts to sink a little lower in the sky?
Plop your beach chair in the sand and stay awhile for the nightly summer music on the Boardwalk. What a way to spend a summer day. It just doesn’t get much better than this.
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NIKE Missile Site, Pt. Bonita

On our way to Pt. Bonita Lighthouse, we passed through a restored Nike missile site.

This valuable historic site is the only restored Nike missile site in the entire country.

During the tense years from 1953 to 1979 the US Army built and operated 280 Nike missile firing batteries in the United States.

These missile sites were put in place as the last line of defense against Soviet bombers.

Today a dedicated group of volunteers works in partnership with the Golden Gate National Recreation Area on the continuous task of restoration at site SF-88, which has been turned into a museum.

Impressive now, I can only imagine what they looked like with big guns coming out. If you get the chance this is a really great way to see the tools of the Cold War up close.
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Pt Bonita Lighthouse

The US Coast Guard built a lighthouse on this point due to the fact that over 400 shipwrecks had occurred here or nearby.

Point Bonita Lighthouse, located at the end of Point Bonita, is a sharp rocky peninsula that extends into the Pacific Ocean from the Marin Headlands not far from San Francisco.

Access to the Point Bonita Lighthouse, which was originally via a narrow frequently eroded trail, was improved when a hand carved tunnel was dug through 118 feet of rock over 6 months in 1856. It is thought that Chinese workers carved this tunnel.

The original lighthouse keeper’s quarters were destroyed in the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake. Both the original and replacement lighthouses survived the quake but the original was later torn down.
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A suspension bridge was added by the Coast Guard in 1954. This suspension bridge was made to resemble the Golden Gate Bridge, visible to the east on a clear day.

Wild cabbage, originally planted by the keeper, now clings to the rocky soil around the lighthouse and the trail leading to it.

Our hike was slightly foggy but the Golden Gate Bridge was still visible.

Unless you are at this site, you won’t get a view of this side of the Golden Gate.

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Green Tip

Even though this is not a travel tip nor a destination idea…check out this blog…
www.greenbaglady.blogspot.com or you can go to www.greenbaglady.org.
She gives interesting tips on saving our environment, fabric bags, and lots of other good ideas.
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Taxes

In many countries the local or national taxes you pay on certain goods will be refunded to you at customs, as long as you fill out the proper forms, save your receipts, and document your purchases.

Check with the tourist board, and for major purchase, double-check with the merchant you’re dealing with.