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sunnuntai 22. heinäkuuta 2012

Sweaty and wasted from screaming, but it was fun!


Greetings from high up in the air! We are on our way back home and suffering from jet lag, so apologies if this text makes no sense at times.

After surviving the floods, whirlwind, rattlesnakes, scorpions and tarantella eating wasps of the desert, we headed to the more safe areas of San Diego. Located close to the Mexican border, our GPS navigator decided to go on a tirading rampage and directed us to people's private yards and other very embarassing places. But other than that, we can highly recommend the GPS navigator we bought: the cheapest Tom Tom they carried in Target. (Just make sure it has lane changing aid.)

San Diego Zoo

My experiences of the San Diego Zoo have been prior to this visit limited to the reality TV show on the zoo which came out many years ago. The show followed the animal caretakers and from it I got the impression the San Diego Zoo is a huge, high quality zoo. Correct. San Diego Zoo is one of the top zoos in the world and houses many rare animals and is an active participant in many programs designed to reintroduce near extinct animals back to nature.

On the being huge part, there are bus routes within the zoo you can take. Also the map gives you the impression this area is huge. We both looked at the map and made a list of all the must see animals and tried to plan on which bus stops to use, etc... but it was totally unnecessary. The zoo is actually, for a normal Finnish person used to walking, a large but in no way overwhelming place. We ended up visiting each and every animnal in the zoo, not needing the bus even once and even had time to spend over half an hour looking at the elephants getting fed. We spent about six to eight hours in the zoo and never felt we had to hurry and even had time to stop for a proper dinner even though we are those people who have to stop to look at every animal no matter how (un)interesting they are.

I must also praise the zoo for taking care of its customers. There were restrooms, restaurants, cafes and stores everywhere. In places they even had moving walkways to help you take shortcuts or climb uphill. The only problem was, the zoo is a labyrinth where you can get lost quite easily. There are a few main streets and from them you can enter routes named after a theme or some popular animals on that route. The only problem is the signs don't give you a clear indication on the direction you need to take and in the middle, around a huge bird house, the routes go on many levels and at least we got hopelessly lost trying to find the hippos. But no worries, in the end we did find them, though I still have no idea how.

And as for the animals, which are the main attraction of the place. What can I say: <3 .

*****

Elephants went bananas for food!

A hippo baby teasing its mom. Mother later had her revenge. She pooped in the baby's mouth underwater. Quite a sight! *fail*

This panda decided to get active just when we got to his home.

It looks graceful in this photo, but in reality it was quite scary to watch.
Mostly it just slid down the trees and fell down from places, requiring minimum energy to get down. Weird animals.

Huge birds. The pink headed one is two years old and the dark one only one year old. (You can tell from the colour.)

Camels. Always cool.

After Berlin Zoo a swore I would never go to see orangutans again. I just cried my eyes out there. Here the orangutans looked less depressed but just as bored, except for this little guy here who was doing all the tricks from they monkeying book to ward off the boredom. The others just lied there or rolled around the cage being very, very bored. I hope there would have been some way for me to make their day a bit more exciting. I really don't like intelligent animals such as these held in cages without stimulation.


San Diego Comic Con 2012

Right at the same time we were in San Diego there was the famous Comic Con. Unfortunately the tickets had sold out in 15 minutes and we missed even the second sale so there was no way for us to get in. We hoped there would have been some events in the city arount the Comic Con, but apparently not. Many of the comic stores were open at regular hours and some had even closed their doors. But the ones we visited we bought empty.

Comic Con: **** (we suppose, if you can get tickets and like crowds)
San Diego Comic Stores: **** (Especially Comickaze was amazing! The staff really know their stuff.)

La Brea Tar Pits

Yeah, you read that right, it's a... tar pit. But don't go waving the fail flag quite yet, because it's not just any old tar pit. This one is located right in the middle of Los Angeles and holds the remains of many millions of animals from before the last ice age! They have found many extinct animals from the pits like sabre-toothed cats, mammoths, and these huge giant ground sloths, which resemble modern bears. As they remind the visitors many, many times, there are no dinosaurs there, because the pits were formed only after the dinosaurs had died.

The La Brea Tar Pits is a free public park and in the middle of it there is the Page museum which displays some of the many findings from the tar pits. The most interesting part is, the tar pits are still being excavated and in the park there are many old excavation sites. Pit 91 is currently under excavation and there are paleonthologists working there in front of the park visitors. The excavations are made very visitor friendly. In the public park excavation site they have a white board with explanations of what the paleonthologists are doing currently and what findings they have made on that particular day. The tar pits are so full of remains the list of the daily findings was long already by midday. And inside the museum there is an open aquarium type of research lab for all the findings where the phaleontologists clean up and do the inventory on all the findings and also put together skeletons when needed. When we visited, there were two full time paleonthologists there and almost a hundred volunteers occasionally helping them with the finds.

By the way, if you are interested and happen to be staying in the area, they are accepting more volunteers. In fact all the museums and the zoos we visited had a volunteer program. I only wish we had a similar system in Finland, since accepting volunteers does not only help you get valuable work experience but it also involves people with the museums and, of course, allows the museums to make better exhibitions with less money. I would imagine the cultural historical museum of Finland would greatly benefit from volunteers considering how little money they have compared to the more popular art museums, which also get sponsors more easily. It's like a snowball effect, the less money you have, the less time and money you have to put together exhibitions which interest a wider public, and the less visitiors you get, which causes you to get less money.

The La Brea Tar Pits museum (Page museum) is a rather small museum, but very interesting and with well thought out displays. But just the park is worth the visit. You see, in the past the park used to have many ponds or tar pits, where animals got stuck. First it might have been a herbivore, then a carnivore thinking it found an easy meal, then flies and what not. The tar pits in the area are full of bones and shells. And the best part is, there is a large pond right next to the road which, to my understanding, is just like the ponds in the park in the past. The tar under the park is still oozing through the ground and there are places where it has formed bubbling puddles. There's tar floating in the pond and quite likely the whole bottom of the pond is filled with tar. The place might not be the best place for a picnic because you might accidentally place your blanket on tar and the smell of tar is quite strong in the park.

The park: ***, with the museum *****

Giant ground sloth wondering who dares to lean on him.

Just a small mammoth. Notice how tar has coloured the bones brown.

The laboratory in the Page Musem.

I believe those are used to determine if the marks on fossils are from a certain animal.
In the background a woman is sorting microfossils.

This here is a cutaway of land from the tar pits. Above it in gel is a representation of all the fossils
you can find from the same piece of land. The tar pits are this rich in fossils!

This handsome fellow is the short-faced bear found from Tar Pits. I wonder what it's thinking.

Teeth. @.@

That's tar or asphalt coming up from the ground. Quite exciting!
I wonder if the inspiration for the Bog of Eternal Stench in Labyrinth (1986) came from this place.

Noooooo! Daddy going to drown in tar! :''(


Disneyland

Who hasn't read about Disneyland in their childhood from Aku Ankka ("Donald Duck" in Finnish, ridiculously popular institution in Finnish families) magazine! Around the age of ten I got a chance to visit the place and it ruined childhood for me. Linnanmäki was nothing compared to Disneyland and I stopped visiting the place. Dangerous!

Of course, since we were around we had to visit the place. Maybe we were bit scared if the long lines for all the attracations would take their toll and if we had outgrown the place. We happened to enter the park on its birthday so the place was packed full to make matters worse. But the good thing is, none of it mattered to us in the end.

Yes, there were long lines. I'm talking about 1,5 hour long lines to the most popular attractions. But the best part was, most of the places had been designed in a way that you couldn't see the full length of the line, which miraculously made the wait much more tolerable, and in almost all the places the queue was placed within the set, making even the queueing part of the experience. Also the most popular attractions have a FastPass system which means that instead of queueing you can go to a machine, stick your ticket in and it gives you a ticket which allows you to go past the lines between a certain time. It won't allow you to pass the line completely but you will skip most of it. Note, you can get only one FastPass per two hours or so and the FastPasses run out during the day. So a smart visitor goes to the most popular places first and gets their FastPasses well in advance.

And as for the rest of the people, even they didn't bother us that much, since the park is so huge there was no rush except during parades or other special program within the park. As for parking, bying tickets, getting in - I don't think I have ever had so easy time getting anywhere including my own bed. And even the food they serve in Disneyland is good. Despite the long lines I can't think of anything bad to say about the place. Very good job, guys!

Since Disneyland is a definite ***** we decided to rate the rides we took.
  • Pirates of the Caribbean *****
    • The movies with the same name are based on this classic ride. It's long, it has a great mood, it's quite a lot of fun and also gives you a good scream in the beginning. :D *****
  • Haunted Mansion *****
    • Another one of the classic rides and propably the best spooky ride there is. It's not necessarily scary, though I did scream in the cemetary, but it's so wonderfully made you can't but wonder how they did all that.
  • Jungle Cruise ***
    • This ride possibly got its inspiration from the Jungle Book, but it has nothing to do with the story. In fact, I think they might have redone the otherwise very old fashioned boatride into a comedy show. It's up to your captain how much fun you'll have, but even if you get a bad one at least you get to see how "amusement" was done in my childhood. 
  • Splash Mountain *****
    • When opened, I think this was the tallest fall in any splash rides anywhere. The best part is, when you begin the ride, it's cute and fluffy, but as you get closer to the fall the images get more and more horrifying - actually it's downright weird by modern standards, they've got cute and fluffy animals dying and stuff. And when you're at the top of the fall, you can't see the bottom! That tall.
  • Buzz Lightyear Astro Blasters ****
    • An arcade game style ride where you shoot evil aliens who are trying to steal batteries or something from Buzz Lightyear. Surprise fun!
  • Matterhorn Bobsleds **
    • Old ride, not that scary. Screamed only because I was expecting something worse (better).
  • Star Tours *****
    • A must see! The idea is that you're going on a vacation in the Star Wars world, as anyone in the galaxy far, far away might, but then things turn out rather more exciting than planned. We can't tell you anything more without spoiling it, but it's based on the original Star Wars movies and it's so much fun! And even the queueing is made fun.
  • Space Mountain ***
    • Possibly the wildest and fastest ride in Disneyland, where you ride a rocket in the darkness of the space. The most horrifying part is when you just get a faint feeling of how fast you are going and it's something totally horrifying. But the lines are horrifying. They were 1,5 hours long and even with FastPass they are 45 minutes long. And it's the only place where the line runs in the most boring environment, in straight angles. Booooring!
  • Captain Eo Tribute *****
    • This is the first ever 4D movie starring young Michael Jackson and directed by George Lucas and Francis Ford Coppola. It is a wonderful little piece of magic, which has turned much funnier with the passing of time and especially since the early 80s cutting edge style is just so unbelievably hilarious. The worst part is, the movie print is in bad shape, or the transition from those red-and-blue 3D glasses to the polarised 3D glasses hasn't been a complete success. Also the movie is missing the original's laser and starfield effects, which might have been pretty cool. We read from the internet they are thinking about pulling the movie from the theater and making something new there instead. That would be a shame, but I understand they don't want to keep on showing something that isn't pulling people in. Maybe they could still show the original Captain Eo once or twice a day with the possible new show, because it would be a shame if no-one could ever see this movie again. (It has never been released on video or DVD. It's only been shown once on MTV.)
  • Big Thunder Mountain Railroad *****
    • *SCREEEEeeaaaaaaaaam!* *laughter* *SCREEeeeeaaam!* *laughter* We lost our voices.
  • Indiana Jones Adventure *****
    • The scariest, best, most exciting ride ever! The lines are long and a little bit boring, but still well worth the effort.
  • Snow White's Scary Adventures *
    • We spent some time in Fantasyland,which is designed for smaller kids, before braving the line for Space Mountain. This one is one of those very old rides, where the only excitement comes from trying to understand the story the scenes are trying to tell when it's been too long since you read the Disney version of Snow White and scenes chosen for the ride are a bit random. It ends very abruptly, too.
  • Mr. Toad's Wild Ride ***** 
    • Like Snow White, but fun! I steered us through walls and fireplaces, ended up getting thrown to the jail, and ended up in Hell. 
    • (Remember to use the steering wheel enthusiastically and get into the story!)
  • Mad Tea Party ***
    • Tea cups going around and you can make them go faster and we did. Couldn't walk straight or at all for a few minutes.
This is not part of any ride. This is Disneyland.

We both made planetary pilots in Buzz Lightyear Astro Blasters.

Mr Toad's wild ride was really wild! Outside the ride building. Notice fine details.

Aku!
(eng. "Donald!")


Mary Poppin's carriage from the Mickey's Soundsational Parade.

Sleeping Beaty's Castle. It was smaller than I remembered.

Scary monsters in Disneyland?! It's actually the mouth of a whale.
Exciting!
Lining for the ride. That's C-3PO and R2-D2 entertaining the visitors. The Star Tours had the best queues in the place!

I'm ready for the Star Tours adventure with my new cool 3D specs!

Disneyland on its birthday 2012. Lots of people there.


Finishing words and expert tips

Writing this entry from home one thing strikes us: how quiet everything is back home. There is no humming sound of the air conditioning and the sounds from a close by freeway. The comfort of your own shower not trying to rip your skin off is nice, too. But I miss the massaging shower ends which worked magic on my shouders.

The top memories from the trip are the amazing sceneries everywhere: at mountains, on the coast, in the desert and everywhere in-between. In one hour of driving the vegetation changes and you are continually bombarded with new rock formations. Our tip is to stay off the huge freeways and stick on the smaller roads. Also if you have a chance, keep the daily travel distances short. We had planned to drive from two to four hours per day and we still just barely had the time to see everything we wanted. You do want to stop at all view points and want to have time to walk around the small towns you see on your way. And you also need time to recover so reserve at least one day per week when you don't drive anywhere.

Also huge thanks for the amazing journey go to TripAdvisor.com. We booked our motels mostly from Hotels.com, but making an additional quality check from TripAdvisor we found the best and the cheapest motels in the area, and the best cheap restaurants everywhere. Only twice did we end up staying in a bad motel and both times we knew they might be bit shaky. Also remember to add your own reviews there!

We found the GPS navigation indispensable. You might be okay outside of the big cities without one, if you really want to adventure, but we wouldn't venture into the inner cities without one.

Parking is very easy everywhere. There is generally free or cheap ($5-15) parking available within a block of anywhere you want to go. Only in the most popular downtown areas you might end up paying more than you're comfortable with, and even then if you're willing to walk a couple of blocks, it's okay.

There are some traffic laws that work differently from Finland, be sure to check them out before driving. The big ones are that it's usually okay to turn right on red, if you check to see it's clear, and passing can be done on either side of the vehicle. Be on the lookout for stops, which are a very common way of regulating traffic in intersections. They mean an all the way stop, too. Four-way stops can be confusing, but basically you just take turns in order of approach.

As for financing your road trip, we ended up spending around 1'000 € per week including gas (c. 250 € per week), food ($50 per day on food and drinks), motels (c. $60 per night), restaurants and attractions (the main ones costing $80 per head). On top of that we paid 850 € for my flights and 1'000 € for six weeks' car rental.

All in all, a great journey. Six weeks went by so fast it's unbelievable. And at the same time it feels like a dream, thinking back from our trusty old home sofa.

Hyvää loppukesää!
Mia & Joonas

sunnuntai 15. heinäkuuta 2012

Snakes, scorpions, and tarantula eating wasps


Greetings from Death Valley. It's almost the end of our trip here in USA and even though I miss my own shower and home cooked meals, I'm not ready to go back home yet. This trip has proven to be much more interesting than either one of us expected. And especially this last week, we expected to face the most boring week ever but instead discovered the America of small towns and wonders of the nature.
These mountains are located close to Salt Lake City, UT.

These amazing mountains are in Arizona.

This canyon is located in La Grande. That small dot in the water near the bottom is a boat. The white streaks on the walls are waterfalls.

In desert areas the roads are mighty interesting.

Just before Las vegas in Nevada we ran into a small tornado. Or is it a whirlwind? Anyway, cool! Scary!



Abandoned trains

We were driving somewhere close to the Twin Peaks town of North Bend. Suddenly there were these abandoned old trains lying along the road on old railroad tracks. It seems the trains were sort of taken care of since there were some signs telling what the trains were originally used for, but they were all in a bad shape. Still, old trains are always a pleasure to eyes. Rust just adds to the charm, right?

Some of the train cars may have been used to shoot scenes early on in Twin Peaks, too - the crime scene set.

***

Joonas walking towards abandoned train car.

Abandoned trains. This hook belongs to a type of car they used to clear tain wreckage. Train wrecks used to be pretty common before modern guidance systems and communications.


Church of God-Zillah

We promised to tell you about this last week so here it is. In the small town of Zillah, WA, some people had a wonderful sense of humour and they made this great God-Zillah statue to celebrate their Church Of God, Zillah, WA, but then some other people apparently found it in bad taste and now it's hidden behind their church building... or that was the explanation we read from the internet. Who knows, but cool it was and really hard to find, because it was deliberately hidden behind the church.

They had plans to situate it next to the interstate with eyes glowing whenever cars drove by. That would've been a sight!

***
God-Zillah!



Dinosaur town of Granger

On our way east we also drove through a small town inhabited by dinosaurs. According to the internet, the townspeople of Granger, WA, just happen to like dinosaurs so they have decorated their whole town with such specimens. No dinosaurs have been found from Granger except for these. There should also be volcano toilets (?), but we didn't see them.

***

Dinosaurs! Just because!


Tamastslikt native American heritage museum

In the middle of nowhere in a native American reservate lies a casino and a gas station. In case you are planning on visiting the museum, don't bother asking the locals since none of them seems to know where the museum is located. It took us half an hour to find the place, which is pretty good considering I just listed everything there is in that place. To find the museum, drive past the casino and right after it turn right and drive until you find a narrow, winding road leading to nowhere. That's where the museum is located. It takes a bit of faith.

The museum itself was very fine, but we got the impression it was built for the native American tribe who owned the land instead of a casual visitor. The museum presented how people had lived before the Europeans and how their arrival had changed the tribe's life, also going through how the early settlers stole their lands, breaking treaties until their lands were reduced to maybe a tenth of their original size. If you are interested in native American history, Yle Teema has broadcasted at least twice an excellent five episode series on the subject in the past two or so years.

***

No photography inside the museum was allowed, but in the lobby we ran into this little cutie.


Small towns

While traveling in the rural areas of Oregon, Utah, Arizona and Nevada we mostly stopped in small towns and drove in the middle of endless fields and cattle ranches. The most prominent memory from Oregon and Utah was the thick, unbelievably striking stench of pure cow poop. We both have stayed in normal Finnish country houses next to cattle and pigs, but this was something quite different. The worst part were the huge, many meters high and wide piles of cow poop people had piled on their front yards, covered with a tarp and left there to boil in the heat of 40 C. The stench was just undescribable.

But when it didn't smell we absolutely fell in love with the small towns we stayed in. The people we met were just most kind and seemed extremely delighted to get visitors who were willing to spend some time chatting with them. Each town also has their own character. Some are more lively than others, some barely surviving, some with blooming communities offering many locally produced luxury items like vinegars and coffee at ridiculously low prices compared to Finland. And size has nothing to do with how well the towns are doing. Rather it's up to the people.

One of the things which separate Finland from the small (and larger) towns of America is their willingness to do things together as a community. For example even the smallest towns seem to have a local museum put up by volunteers. In Union, OR, we found a Union County Museum which we expected to be small and hardly worth a visit, but it turned out to be a surprisingly big and well thought out place where numerous people had donated their family's old items with stories attached to them, making the place much more interesting. The locals had also involved local school children in putting up the museum and they had painted murals and made paper(?) fish in the room introducing local wild life.

And many times when we asked for recommendations for places to dine in, we found small places we might have never visited but found them serving normal home made food and surprisingly good dishes and ended up chatting with the owners this and that and about their future plans, pets and sights worth a trip and tips on local bakeries, etc. For example in La Grande, OR, we were pointed to the local town fair where people were dancing and selling their produce like cherries and wine. In Buhl, OR, the motel served locally baked breads and pastries which were so delicious we had to go to the store which produced them to buy snacks for the road. And in Beatty, NV, just before Death Valley, we found a great place with home cooked meals and got into a long conversation with a twenty-something woman with her own cafeteria and great plans for the future.

*****

Union County museum's saddles.

Joonas photographing genuine Wild West era bank safe's door, which has marks from an earlier break-in attempt.
Inside the vault we ran into this merry fellow.

In Beatty, NV, someone had left their ammo lying beside the street. So weird. Quite scary.



Las Vegas

Previously I thought that if I died and went to hell I'd end up on those cruise boats between Helsinki and Stockholm, searching forever for a place to sit down. Now I'm sure I'll avoid them and end up in Las Vegas. The whole city is like a gigantic cruise ship designed to make you lose your way between the endless lines of slotmachines, if you ever enter indoors. And if you go outside you are faced with 44 C temperatures in narrow streets full of people pushing and trying to move forward, up and down stairs and across pedestrian bridges over the multi laned roads. At times the crowd stops to follow some casino's outdoors show or some fellow dressed in a Stormtrooper suit, and then agonizingly slowly the crowd moves on. Everything is hideously overpriced and if you run out of water and go indoors to look for it, you are lost forever. It took us almost two hours to walk 3 km (1,5 miles) from the Luxor hotel to Treasure Island, on the other side of the Strip.

The most shocking yet maybe not that surprising thing is how sexist and misogynist the place is. Every hotel offers their own striptease show with tacky headlines and even Cirque du Soleil isn't safe but are apparently forced to make their own naughty show for those whom the amazing circus just isn't enough. Also on those hot streets, in every corner there were crowds of people pushing cards featuring nude big tits and apparently very horny women at you, trying to hand them secretly over to fathers walking down the street with their families. Disgusting and so degrading.

And in case you were thinking of taking your kids there, don't. There is _nothing_ for kids and most of the "non-stiptease" shows are not appropriate for young kids. And despite this, even late at night we saw many families with very young kids being dragged through the streets or having fallen asleep on their father's shoulders. Ridiculous!

Now, I must admit we are not in the target group of people to whom Las Vegas is designed for. We don't gamble and we don't drink alcohol and being as cheap as I am we weren't even willing to pay the very expensive ticket prices to see any of the shows. But if you are into those things, I'm sure this is the most expensive place you have ever gotten drunk in.

*

The Strip.

Iron-Man and Mia. No, that's not bad Photoshop skills, that's the supposedly proficient camera man/husband manually focusing.

Luxor hotel in Las Vegas, NV, where we stayed in. It was pretty awesome, though still quite tacky. There's a torch shining from the top of the pyramid at night, so you always know which way to go to get back home.

Arrrrr! Someone blew up our pirate ship!


Las Vegas Outside the Strip

The Strip is only a very small part of Las Vegas and around it lies a wide city which houses all the casino workers, and it looks pretty much like any regular town. And you can get food and drinks at less than half the price compared to Strip. So after enduring that one night on the Strip we decided to make our escape.

National Atomic Testing Museum & Area 51 exhibition

Las Vegas is located right next to the Nevada atomic testing site and Area 51. Though the museum was a bit dry and probably gave its best kick to those working in the atomic industry, there were some jewels. First of all, the museum holds the Ground Zero Theatre which lets you experience what it's like to sit in an observation bunker at an atmospheric nuclear detonation test. It was quite frightening and after the explosion, when they showed a short video with the first people working at the testing site, it was interesting to hear how even they felt the terror each time an atomic bomb exploded and they had to wait for the shockwave to get to them.

Another interesting thing was that they didn't inform the Las Vegas residents about the very first atomic bomb test they did. Suddenly there was just a bright flash of light, then the mushroom cloud, and the earth was shaking. People thought it was either some accident or an earthquake. Later the atomic bomb tests became popular tourist attractions and the townspeople and tourists had benches where observe the explosions. Of course, later people realised the atomic bombs caused radioactive dust to spread around and the testing moved underground.

The museum had also a temporary exhibition called Area 51 - Myth or Reality. Despite the enticing name, it was the silliest exhibition ever! First we got a special badge complete with our "alien identity profile" and then we met a secret agent in a briefing room who told us to keep everything we were about to see in secret. (...am I just breaking the law or something?) Then we were led to an area where we were told about the theories about Area 51 and the Roswell incident and after some pretty childish, crude displays were introduced to the modern fighters and experimental aircraft actually tested at the site. I think the main message of the exhibition was that if we had had extraterrestial visitors and learned their technology, how likely is it that we are still using human technology on airplanes? And though the exhibition didn't say it, it would seem the secret experiments going on in Area 51 have to do with these experimental aircrafts. Oh wow, can I get my money back? *not impressed*

***

Just like in Fallout. They really loved everything Atomic back then!

An actual thermonuclear bomb. Made safe last year. Above is a scale model of the bomber that would carry it - the small dot below the plane is this bomb in scale.

No photography allowed inside the Area 51 exhibition (understandably). Intead, here is a photo of an alien.


Pinball Hall of Fame

In the Las Vegas suburbs there is also a similar place to the pinball museum we visited in San Francisco. The only difference was in this place the entry is free but you have to pay to play the games. With ten bucks, which we paid for the place in San Francisco, we got more than enough play. Still, I liked the free games better than this way since it didn't bother as much if you happened to put your money into some disappointing game which dropped all the balls straight out between the flippers.

BTW, if you are trying to find the place, the place is still functional despite the out of date website (last updated in 2009) and almost non-existent signage on the building. It's pretty popular, too, and as a non-profit they're giving out close to half a million dollars in charity every year.

*****

A pinball machine. Note the unusul vertical configuration - the playing field extends quite a ways upwards.


Death Valley

The last thing we wanted to mention is the Death Valley national park. If you ever get a chance, go see it. It is awesome. Especially the Artist's Drive is spectacular. Also we loved the western exit route towards Ridgecrest, CA.

*****

That over there is the infamous Death Valley. Yep, it's a lot of nothing. But nice nothing!

Death Valley and Artist's Drive. Not pictured: 45 C of heat, which wasn't too bad just now because the sun wasn't shining.

Death Valley's amazing colours at Artist's Drive and the Artist Palette.

It looks like there was chocolat powder on top of that mountain.

Flash floods can kill you. Though it "never" rains in Death Valley, we got flooding!

A ghost town just before entering Deah Valley. We saw an unidentified snake (there's lots of warnings about rattlers), a scorpion and ridiculously huge black insects with orange wings that a local identified as tarantula-eating wasps. Like that's supposed to make me feel better! We also learned that tarantulas migrate. Eugh! Hope to not be around to see that.


Next to the ghost town there was a free art exhibition and information centre on the ghost town. Top above: a pixellated lady. Above: The Death Valley Ghost Rider.

Some kind of a refinery in the middle of the desert.


Next week it's time for out last post from USA. We'll be visiting the San Diego Zoo, hopefully see a glimpse of the sold out Comic Con and visit the Los Angeles Disneyland and La Brea Tar Pits.

Hyvää kesää!
Mia & Joonas