Temecula Rod Run...

It has been over two decades since we've spent a warm April day ogling vintage vehicles in Old Town for the Rod Run. What a blast to have finally done it again!

The Temecula Rod Run basically takes over all of Old Town Temecula each year. Over 600 cars are on display and thousands of people flood into town for the festivities. The fun covers all ages with food, entertainment, and vendors keeping everyone engaged and entertained.

The cool truck Steve is standing in front of was last year's winner, hence it being the image used on this year's poster.



Most of the photos do not need commentary. That said, we were pleased to see law enforcement represented so diversely.


This cool ride was featured in Fast & Furious 8 when the gang headed to Cuba.

For some reason we were all enamored with this very groovy Chevy VANdura from the early 70s.. 

It really is too groovy for words!
Several of the cars had stories to tell. I loved coveted this 1950 Chevrolet Styleline Station Wagon.
The owner, Dave Wulfsberg, shared that his dad bought this beauty new in the fall of 1949 at Beach City Chevrolet in Signal Hill, CA. I loved that he included old photos with his car. Who knew that this photo would lead me to a history lesson? Check out the oil derricks in the background.

Through much of the 20th century, oil derricks towered over homes, schools, golf courses, and even orange groves across the Los Angeles Basin, once among the nation's top-oil producing regions. Beginning in 1892, when Edward L. Doheny and his associates opened the region's first free-flowing well, each new strike would quickly attract a cluster of the wooden structures, which supported the drills that bored deep into the Southland's sedimentary strata.

One such thicket rose atop previously barren Signal Hill in 1921. Workers at a Shell Oil drilling site had hit a gusher that sprayed dark, crude oil more than 100 feet into the air. Because the surrounding land had recently been subdivided for a residential development, would-be homeowners elected to build oil wells on their tiny parcels instead of houses, creating a dense forest of wooden derricks. WILD.

This cool 1965 VW Pickup has a fun back story. The owner's dad bought a motor home in the 1970s, from a private party. It came with this awesome truck as its tow vehicle. The VW went everywhere the RV went, including New York and Canada. When not traveling, the VW was used as an everyday driving vehicle (even using it for hauling firewood to his cabin in Big Bear). Fun stuff.

I think the most intriguing story belongs to this 1927 Dodge Brothers Coupe. Owned by Temeculans Al and Freda Knott, Al owned and operated a blacksmith shop, garage, and gas station, from 1918 to around 1965. I think it was extra cool that its spot, for the Rod Run, was right in front of the historic Knott home.












This license frame cracked me up.
How do you define Hot Rod?
A Bomb Factory in Half Moon Bay? Perhaps. I had to look into this. "On 10 April 1942, the War Department authorized the acquisition of land for use as an antiaircraft radar site. It was known as the Half Moon Bay Tactical Position, Harbor Defenses of San Francisco. With radar being so secret, it was common to give the various sites description that masked their true mission. Sites were called "listening posts" or "tactical positions". Sites were also constructed to resemble farm buildings common to the coastal regions of California to further hide their true purpose. This deception continued throughout World War II and as late as 7 May 1946."




This is a photo from our last Rod Run (c. 1998-ish). While we did not compete, we participated by dressing up with friends and attending with our beloved (and very missed) 1955 Oldsmobile 88. Oh man, I do 💓 vintage rides.

Temecula continues to impress, and this event was a great opportunity for us to mingle, admire, and long for our own hot rod again one day.

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Birch Aquarium at Scripps, UC San Diego

We spent many a day here when the boys were younger. It was incredible to bring the next generation to this aquarium, perched on a bluff overlooking the Pacific Ocean.

Since its creation in 1905, Scripps Oceanography has maintained a public aquarium. Scripps founders felt a deep commitment to communicating scientific findings to the general public and pledged in the institution's founding bylaws to always maintain such a facility.

The Aquarium features more than 60 habitats of fishes and invertebrates, from the cold waters of the Pacific Northwest to the tropical waters of Mexico and beyond.





This unique exhibit is described as, "It’s a Bird, It’s a Plane, it’s a … Giant Tube Worm? Oddities: Hidden Heroes of the Scripps Collections, is a comic book-inspired exhibit that highlights the astonishing adaptations (aka super powers) of ocean species."
Oddities is created in partnership with the team from the Scripps Oceanographic Collections, where millions of specimens allow scientists to understand some of the amazing adaptations marine creatures have developed to survive.  From super vision and invisibility to protective armor and the ability to create electricity to zap prey, real marine creatures do amazing things every day that stretch even the wildest imagination.
It was ooky and cool, all at the same time!




“If there is magic on this planet, it’s contained in water.”
― Lorene Eisley
I am a huge fan of the Brainless Wonders (jellyfish).
Jellies are soft-bodied animals who drift on ocean currents. Muscles in their bodies, or "bells," pulse them up and down.
Jellies do not have eyes or central brains - instead, they use a complex "net" of nerves to sense light, temperature and gravity. I could have stayed in the exhibit all day. So fun.
Another favorite of mine is the seahorse. About 36 species of seahorses are currently known. They range in size from just over one-half inch to 12 inches long. Most seahorse species are between three and six inches long as adults. Seahorses propel themselves by using a small fin on their back that flutters up to 35 times per second. Even smaller pectoral fins located near the back of the head are used for steering.
I love the fact that Seahorses are monogamous and mate for life. Rarer still, they are among the only animal species on Earth in which the male bears the unborn young. Male pregnancy frees to female to make more eggs straight away and so reproduce quicker. Seahorses engage in an eight hour courtship dance which includes spinning around, swimming side by side and changing colors. When mating, the female seahorse releases up to 50 eggs into a pouch on the male’s abdomen. The male seahorse carries the eggs in his pouch until they hatch, then releases fully formed, miniature seahorses into the water.  As little as 5 or as many as 1,500 young can be born. Interesting right?

I know we'll be back soon as I turned today's purchase into an annual pass. We have more of the next generation to share this special place with. AND penguins are coming this summer... PENGUINS.
Lunch was at The Fish Shop in Encinitas.
Is it wrong to go from ogling sea creatures to eating them?

Lunch was delicious. It was the perfect end to our oceanic adventuring.

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