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Traveling the Central California Coast

April 15, 2024 by Beth Wilson in Travel

We recently took a short trip up the California Coast. It was perfect timing because Spring Breaks were over and the summer crowds haven’t started yet. This is a photo of Highway 1 near Cayucos, California. California State Route 1 is a major north–south California highway that runs along most of the Pacific coastline of California. At 656 miles, it is the longest state route in California, and the second longest in the United States after Montana Highway 200. We like to sometimes take Highway 1 up the coast from Los Angeles as far north as Cambria for a few days. At Oxnard, Highway 1 joins the 101 Freeway and shares the same route for a while. To save time we stay on 101 when Highway 1 splits off later for a while. Once you leave Malibu and get through Oxnard, Ventura, and Santa Barbara the traffic gets easier. You can travel further north on Highway 1 but the route north of San Simeon to Monterey becomes very narrow in parts with lots of curves, and there is a steep cliff on the edge of the road falling down to the ocean. I won’t travel that part anymore, there are just too many idiots on the road, but it is a beautiful trip. The road is often closed because of land slides after heavy rains too, the road just collapses and falls down the cliff into the ocean.

As you drive along the coast north of Santa Barbara on Highway 1 you can see houses and camping areas along the beach and sometimes, the usual California palm trees. As you look across the water, when the air is clear, you can see the Channel Islands. This is Santa Cruz, Santa Rosa or San Miquel Island off in the distance.

This time of year, depending on how much rain there has been, the California coastal hills are often full of California wildflowers and they are truly beautiful.

Drought in California is a common occurrence that can last for multiple years. The regional climate is characterized by a dry season (approximately May to September) and a wet season (approximately October to April). These green hillsides in the spring are brown for most of the rest of the year in this area. Since we have had several recent storms pass through the region the hills are really green right now but that will change and they will become brown again.

On our way north we sometimes stop a few miles off Highway 101 at Solvang, to get our favorite elephant ears at a local bakery ( and maybe some fudge too at another shop). Solvang has a rich Danish heritage. Founded by Danish immigrants in 1911, Solvang has authentic architecture and traditional windmills. It is a bit of a tourist trap now but it is worth a visit if you are in the area.

Highway 101 turns inland and when you pass through the Santa Maria Valley you can see evidence of California’s agricultural life with tenting protecting various crops.

While it was a bit cold, the weather cooperated, and we had lots of sun during our journey.

On our trips north we often stay at a hotel on the sand in Pismo Beach but this time we decided to go inland just up the highway to San Luis Obispo and stay at the Apple Farm Inn where we have stayed before several times. Unfortunately I can’t recommend it to anyone now. It apparently has changed ownership and the service and accommodations were not up to par. We won’t be staying there again, lots of other options in town. San Luis Obispo is a college town, and there are interesting shops and restaurants in the downtown area.

They do have a water wheel at Apple Farm Inn on the property though and that is always fun to see.

Every day we drove over to Pismo Beach and Morro Bay and then took Highway 1 up the coast to Cayucos, Harmony, and Cambria. I love driving along the coast and watching the waves crash on the rocks. Cayucos has a few antique shops and I always find something of interest there that comes home with me.

There are many places along Highway 1 where you can park and walk along the beach.

Hubby walking on the sand.

As we drove north on Highway 1 from Cayucos to Cambria we passed through Harmony just off the road and stopped. It is a cute tiny town with just a few buildings on a one block main street. Founded in 1869 around a burgeoning local dairy industry, Harmony served as the home of the Harmony Valley Creamery Association (closed in 1955) and de facto capital of Central Coast dairy production for nearly half a century, while also serving as a picturesque stop for the rich and famous on their way to visit William Randolph Hearst up the highway at Hearst Castle. 

Harmony has a Pottery Shop and also Harmony Glassworks. The Glassworks has gorgeous (and expensive) glass for sale but they have inexpensive items as well.

A few glass pumpkins have come home with me from here over the years.

We stopped along the ocean near San Simeon and immediately were surrounded by three squirrels looking for food. Apparently they are trained to appear when a car stops because people feed them. They looked well fed and they were not afraid of us at all. They really didn’t want to leave us alone!

I didn’t take any photos in Cambria (I was spending too much time shopping!) but I borrowed this photo from the Cambria web site. We had lunch here one day and enjoyed it so much we went back the next day for lunch too. They had the best Tuna Melt I have ever had with unusual ingredients. They are known for their delicious pies. We missed the gift shops behind the restaurant so we will have to go back again sometime. Cambria has many cute and unique shops and restaurants and I always find things to bring home with me from there.

We returned south again near Hearst Castle. My father was a security guard there after he retired in the 1970’s and we got a behind the scenes tour of it all then so we haven’t taken another tour of the Castle since then. Hearst Castle is an historic estate on a hill in San Simeon, California. Conceived by William Randolph Hearst, the publishing tycoon, and his architect Julia Morgan, the castle was built between 1919 and 1947 and many movie stars visited the castle. Their guest list included many of the Hollywood stars of the period; Charlie Chaplin, Cary Grant, the Marx Brothers, Greta Garbo, Buster Keaton, Mary Pickford, Jean Harlow and Clark Gable all visited, some on multiple occasions. A stunning showplace for Hearst's art and antiques collection, the castle is home to centuries old sculptures, paintings, tapestries and an ancient Roman sarcophagus dating back to about 320 A.D..

If you spend any time along the ocean you will see sea gulls and other animals and birds.

When we stayed on the sand in Pismo Beach in 2022 we saw two sea otters, one with a baby sea otter on her stomach. We were there at the perfect time for baby sea otters. A trip up the coast can be a bit off the beaten path but it is well worth it.

Bishop, California

This is not part of the California coast but I am including this photo to illustrate the different areas of this large and diverse state. I grew up in this small California town surrounded by mountains in the central east part of the state. It’s about as far as you can get from Los Angeles and Southern California, about 300 miles, and it’s 360 miles from San Francisco. An interesting fact, this town is about 70 miles north of Mt. Whitney, the highest point in the continental United States and it’s about 180 miles away going southeast from Badwater in Death Valley, the lowest point in North America. This is a wonderful part of California to visit as well but that’s a story for another blog post someday.

I always find it interesting to hear what people who have never been to California think about California, the preconceived notions as it were. Some tend to think of California as Los Angeles or Hollywood or San Francisco only, with crazy people as well, and I have to laugh. I am a second generation Californian, my parents were both born in California, my children are fourth generation Californians and two of my grandchildren are fifth generation. My husband’s grandmother was born in California also as was his father. There is much more to this state than people realize. I could never imagine living anywhere else.

April 15, 2024 /Beth Wilson
Travel
Travel
2 Comments
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Spring has Sprung, the Tablescape is Set!

April 10, 2024 by Beth Wilson in Tablescapes

It’s time for another tablescape to celebrate Spring. I can’t remember where the tablecloth came from but it was probably HomeGoods several years ago. I like the trellis and flower design and there are even a few bunnies on this tablecloth.

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These Bordallo Pinheiro geranium leaf plates were some of the first plates that I started collecting when I started tablescaping. I bought them a few at a time on Ebay several years ago. You can still find them for sale there. I like that the leaf design covers this entire salad plate.

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This dinner plate is a great anchor for any Spring themed salad plate. The rim leaf design really sets off any smaller plate.

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This is a large heavy charger and another great plate to anchor the plates on top of it. The three matching plates together makes an eye catching plate stack.

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I wanted to show this cute design along the side of the tablecloth so I finally remembered to take a photo before I added the dishes! I am still looking for napkins to match the pink roses on this tablecloth.

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I used my Madeline Green frosted green flatware on this table setting, I bought it at World Market several years ago. I really like the frosted design on the handles. After red, I think green is the most used color flatware on my tablescapes.

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I bought the white plastic napkin rings on Etsy several years ago. The pink gingham and solid pink napkins came from Amazon a few years ago. I don’t have a lot of pink items for tablescaping so I am trying to add more of that color now.

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I have had these bird cage tea light candle and place card holders for a few years. I can’t remember where I bought them online but I think it was a wedding supply store. They were cream and Hubby spray painted them white for me.

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The green goblet on the right was made by Noritake and it is called Sweet Swirl in light green. These were made between 1985 and 2005, I bought them on Ebay a few at a time several years ago. The blue and green goblet on the left came from Horchow online several years ago. They are called Bormioli Rocco Group Bahia goblets.

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This wire wicker type cake stand is one of my favorite centerpieces. We found it in an antique mall up the California coast in Cayucos several years ago. I can’t remember what color it was originally but Hubby spray painted it white for me. It usually sits on a table on the back patio with various flowers inside and he touches it up for me every Spring. I put some flowers inside but I didn’t want to detract from the design so they are small. I really love this thing!

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I bought this small creamer at Juliska online a few years ago. I was attracted to the raised design on the sides.

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Hubby brought this small hand painted bird house home to me from an Estate Sale. The colors match this tablecloth perfectly!

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I found a set of these small open salt cellars at an Estate Sale last year. I suddenly realized that they would be a good match for this table too with their blue and pink flowers. I love the tiny birds! There is a mark on the bottom but it is faint and I haven’t been able to identify it.

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Hope this table sends a bit of Spring cheer your way!

To see 220+ other tablescapes that I have created please click here. If you are on Facebook, join my Tablescape Ideas group! Just click on the Facebook Search box at the top of the page and type in Tablescape Ideas. Don’t miss my Tablescaping How-To section at the top of this blog post for more tablescaping tips and tricks.

I put a new tablescape on my blog every week so please check back!

This blog post was featured at Miz Helen’s Country Cottage, https://www.mizhelenscountrycottage.com/ and Life and Linda, https://www.lifeandlinda.com/ Please visit these blogs, you will enjoy them!

April 10, 2024 /Beth Wilson
Tablescapes
6 Comments

Greatest Spring Tablescape Ever Toad

April 04, 2024 by Beth Wilson in Tablescapes

I did a Frog Spring tablescape two years ago but it was green and white. You can see that tablescape here. But I wanted to use all my frogs again and do something different so I searched Spoonflower online for a frog tablecloth and when this one popped up I knew I had found exactly what I needed. And before someone points out the difference between frogs and toads, yes, I know the difference, (after looking it up…always the librarian), and these are all probably toads and not frogs but for the sake of this table setting I am using the word frogs.

This tablecloth is such a happy one and the colors are perfect for Spring. It could easily be used on a Tropical themed tablescape as well.

I really wanted a frog shaped salad plate for this table setting but as sometimes is the case I could find five that I liked but not the sixth one so I went with these salad plates that I had already. I bought these Bordallo Pinheiro frog salad plates on Ebay a couple of years ago. I love the raised design of little frogs on lily pads on the lip of the plate and there are also small butterflies among the flowers.

The true pink color of this dinner plate shows more accurately in the previous photo. My phone camera sometimes washes colors out a bit. I found these pink stoneware dinner plates at Pier 1 online last year. Other than this pink flatware set I haven’t had much pink in my tablescaping collection for years so I have been trying to increase items in that color for a while now. You can read my blog post about what to consider when you are buying dinner plates here.

This is a Mikasa Color Spectrum Charger in the color Alpine White. I have this charger in several different colors and I bought them all on Ebay as I saw them over a few years. The Internet says that this pattern was only made between 1992 and 1993. I am not sure that is true but in any case they are no longer being manufactured. I have been trying to get six of this color and pattern for years with no success until this last month when suddenly I found six at different places online after occasional google searches. You need to have patience when you are looking for things for tablescaping, that’s for sure!

This pink frosted flatware set was made by Bugatti for Vietri and the pattern was called Aladdin Brilliant. I bought the set at Macys several years ago. I have several sets of frosted flatware. These are 18/10 stainless, and I really like the frosted design. You can read my blog post about what to consider when you are buying flatware here.

I felt sure that I had a pink napkin set that I could use on this tablescape but none of the pink napkins that I have were the right shade of pink to match the tablecloth so I found these pink cotton napkins on Amazon a few days ago. They are nice casual napkins and they survived the washer and dryer and ironed well so I may buy some other colors. I found the metal frog napkin rings a few years ago at Hobby Lobby and Hubby painted them green for me. To read about the What, Where and How of napkin rings please click here.

I found these frog tea light candles on Amazon a few years ago. I love that little face! I have them sitting on my Oleg Cassini clear glass place card holders. I bought them at HomeGoods several years ago when I first started tablescaping. They are heavy and solid and I really like the simple design. I often use them as a stand for place card items. I see them for sale on Ebay from time to time. You can read my blog post for ideas about how to store napkin rings and place card holders here. Just looked back at this and realized that I forgot to add the place cards!

The green acrylic goblet on the left came from our Pier 1 store before it closed a few years ago. I bought the pink glass goblet on the right at World Market four years ago. True pink goblets are hard to find, they often are called pink when they are actually a coral color. When I saw these I grabbed them and then they quickly sold out so others were looking for them too! You can read my blog post about what to consider when you are buying goblets for your tablescaping collection including the colors that I use most often here.

I found this frog figure at a Grocery Outlet store while we were on vacation two summers ago and it was really inexpensive. When I am out and about I am constantly looking for centerpiece ideas. Hubby was dragging his feet about buying it but when I told him I had been looking at frog cookie jars for three times the price he quickly changed his mind! I love the expression on this frog’s face, his eyes, and his feet. He is sitting on a small white plastic stand that probably came from HomeGoods several years ago.

I have so many candle holders and candles so I decided that this year I would try to use them more often. Then I saw this Venezia Smoke Green glass candle holder at Crate and Barrel online and the shape reminded me of a lily pad so I bought two to add to this tablescape on each side of the centerpiece. It comes in three different sizes but I bought the shortest ones. They have this candle holder in Deep Blue and Clear as well. They can also be used for flowers. They are really delicate glass and I love them.

We have had tiny frogs in our garden the past few years although I have only heard them once this Spring so far. I think it has been too cold for them. They are about the size of two thumbnails. I love hearing them croak although it doesn’t sound like a croak, it’s a loud weird scratchy sound. I hope they come back and stay a while!

To see over 270 different tablescapes that I have created please click here. If you are on Facebook, join my Tablescape and Table Settings Ideas Facebook group for lots of tablescaping inspiration! Just click on the Facebook Search box at the top of the page and type in Tablescape and Table Settings Ideas or click here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/2553689988183392

If you live in Southern California join our Facebook tablescaping group Southern California Tablescapers BTS Group. https://www.facebook.com/groups/440356398581157 We are planning a gathering for tablescapers in January 2025 in the Los Angeles area.

Don’t miss the Tablescape How-To tab at the top of my blog for DIY tips and tricks. Here is that link, https://www.whispersoftheheart.com/tablescapehowto

I put a new tablescape on my blog every week, please check back!

April 04, 2024 /Beth Wilson
Spring
Tablescapes
5 Comments

My Nana, Joanna Pruitt Leonard, and her Interesting Life

March 30, 2024 by Beth Wilson in Genealogy

My Nana, Joanna Pruitt Leonard, my mother’s mother, died when I was nine. I have no memories of her that I can remember. She became senile during the last years of her life and she lived in a rest home. We lived 300 miles away when she died. Joanna was born in the morning on 19 February 1881 in Princeton, Indiana at her grandfather Elisha Jones house. (Her grandmother Susan was a midwife.)

Entry in Elisha Jones’s Journal about his granddaughter Joanna Pruitt’s birth.

Joanna’s father, Joseph Pruitt, had died the previous July 1880 in Owensville, Indiana and her mother Emma had then moved back to Princeton, Indiana with Joanna and her older sister Helen. According to Helen, Emma was a very independent woman, as was her mother Susan, and Emma didn’t live with her parents very long. In January 1882 she took her two young daughters, Helen and Joanna, and moved to Kansas to live with her brother Alfred Jones and learn the millinery trade so she could support herself and her two daughters. While in Kansas Emma met James Howey and he finally convinced her to marry him in 1886.

Joanna Pruitt, April 1883, 2 years old, probably in Kansas

In 1887 James and Emma and the two girls moved to San Bernardino, California where James worked as a bricklayer for the rest of his life until he died in 1918.

Helen (Nellie) and Joanna Pruitt, September 1888

Joanna attended school in San Bernardino and had an active social life while she was in high school. The local newspaper mentions her several times attending various events and singing at a few of them.

Joanna Pruitt, August 1896, 15 years old

December 24, 1898, San Bernardino County Sun Newspaper Joanna was 17.

January 1, 1899, San Bernardino County Sun newspaper, Joanna was 17.

After graduating from San Bernardino High School Joanna took the examination for teachers and became a teacher.

January 5, 1900, Daily Times Index newspaper

Joanna was appointed to be a teacher at Oro Grande School and she moved to Oro Grande to teach.

August 11, 1900, Daily Times Index newspaper

Joanna continued to participate in social events in San Bernardino from time to time.

May 12, 1901, San Bernardino County Sun newspaper

July 7, 1901, Queen’s Court, Joanna Pruitt, bottom row, second from right

By 1902 Joanna was teaching 2nd and 3rd grade at Mt. Vernon School.

September 4, 1902, San Bernardino County Sun newspaper

In 1903 Joanna was granted a year’s leave from teaching to attend college at Berkeley University.

May 12, 1904, Daily Times Index newspaper

in 1904 Joanna was granted an additional leave of absence from teaching to go back to Berkeley for another year.

June 2, 1904, Daily Times Index newspaper

As she did in San Bernardino Joanna took part in social activities while at Berkeley as well.

April 12, 1905, Oakland Tribune newspaper

Joanna Pruitt, Tri Delt, Berkeley

Joanna didn’t return to Berkeley for a third year and in 1906 she returned to teaching in San Bernardino at Fourth Street School and participating in local social events.

September 6, 1906, San Bernardino County Sun newspaper

March 29. 1906, San Bernardino County Sun newspaper

A family keepsake from Joanna, her Saturday Reading Club, a precursor to today’s Book Clubs.

Joanna apparently loved to travel and the newspaper is full of descriptions of her travel throughout California and also to New Mexico to visit relatives in the early 1900’s.

During this time Joanna lived with her mother and step-father at 802 Fifth Street in San Bernardino. She continued to teach at Fourth Street School during the 1908-1909 school year.

Joanna on the porch at the Fifth Street house about 1909.

Joanna’s trip to Big Trees about 1909

In early 1909 Joanna was planning to move to the Philippines to live with her sister Helen and Helen’s husband and teach. But something happened and she decided to stay in San Bernardino and marry Willis E. Leonard. Willis was 46 and he had 5 children, his oldest child, daughter Florence, was only 5 years younger than Joanna who was 28. His wife Henrietta had died in November 1908. Willis and Joanna were married December 27, 1909 in Joanna’s home on Fifth Street in San Bernardino.

December 28, 1909 San Bernardino Sun newspaper

After the wedding Joanna and Willis left on a 6 week wedding trip by train across the country and back. While on their wedding trip Joanna collected sterling souvenir spoons from several cities that they visited.

Five sterling souvenir spoons that Joanna collected on their wedding trip in 1909 from some of the cities that they visited.

January 26, 1910, The San Bernardino County Sun newspaper

April 19, 1910 United States Census, Willis, Joanna and son Frank are at the bottom of the page, the rest of the family is on the next page

The rest of Willis’s family is at the top of the page, daughters Edith, Margaret, and Dorothy. Daughter Florence was already married and daughter Helen had died young. There was also a servant living in the house in 1910.

Willis Leonard had owned a small department store in San Bernardino, and then one in El Paso, Texas. He then returned to San Bernardino with his family in 1900 and opened another store. Later he sold the store and became manager of the Insurance, Loan, and Land Company. He was involved in a very successful real estate business in San Bernardino for a few decades until the Depression hit and he lost much of his real estate wealth.

May 24, 1910, San Bernardino County Sun newspaper

January 1, 1913, San Bernardino County Sun newspaper

Over the years Joanna was very active in San Bernardino’s social life and a member of various clubs.

April 25, 1913, San Bernardino County Sun newspaper

September 26, 1915

Leonard Home, 427 Magnolia Avenue in San Bernardino, built in 1915 by Willis E. Leonard. Elisabeth Leonard Gardner was born in this house in 1916. (This house still stands and was completely renovated and then sold in 2022.)

April 27, 1918

Probably 1918, Joanna with daughters Elisabeth and Lois

April 26, 1920

Joanna Leonard

16 January 1920, United States Census, Willis and family near the bottom of the page, by now 2 other children have joined the family, Lois and Elisabeth.

Leonard Family about 1924, Joanna back row 2nd from right, daughter Elisabeth in front of her

April 3, 1930, United States Census, Willis and Joanna Leonard with their daughters Lois and Elisabeth and Joanna’s mother Emma Howey.

July 20, 1934

Joanna Leonard

When the Depression hit Willis Leonard lost much of his real estate wealth. They sold the Magnolia house and bought a smaller house on Pershing Avenue in San Bernardino.

June 1937, Pershing House, 3233 Pershing Avenue, San Bernardino

April 5, 1940. By the 1940 United States Census Willis and Joanna were living alone in their house on Pershing Avenue in San Bernardino.

Willis and Joanna in front of the Pershing Avenue house

Leonard Family, Christmas Day 1937, Joanna back row left

1942, Willis and Joanna Leonard

Willis Leonard died October 14, 1944 at home of a heart attack. Daughter Elisabeth was there and remembered that because of war time it took the doctor quite a while to get there but Willis had died instantly.

October 15, 1944, San Bernardino County Sun newspaper

October 15, 1944, San Bernardino County Sun newspaper

October 18, 1944, San Bernardino County Sun newspaper

Joanna Leonard

Joanna continued to live in San Bernardino after Willis died until she became senile and was moved to a rest home in Pasadena where she died in 1960.

November 8, 1946, San Bernardino County Sun newspaper

July 25, 1954 San Bernardino County Sun newspaper

August 13, 1960, San Bernardino County Sun newspaper

March 30, 2024 /Beth Wilson
Genealogy
Genealogy
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