Archive for January, 2009

Thursday, January 15th, 2009


, we cruised along the Northern California Coastline; now it’s time to rev up your Road Trip Planner and zip along the southern coastline to complete your own California Cruisin’ Dream Trip.

We left off in one of my favorite areas, Big Sur. Simply put — and the main reason to include this in your road trip planning — Big Sur offers stunning views. It’s that stretch of highway where land meets sea in a jaw-dropping way because the Santa Lucia Mountains rise like colossal sentries from the Pacific Ocean.

I recommend staying on Highway 1 for an unforgettable coastal road trip. This way, your Road Trip Planner will include highlights like hiking at Limekiln State Park, and treasure hunting at Jade Beach, one of the few places in the world where you can find quality Jade strewn about like pebbles.

Settle into your road trip with a scenic drive along the Cabrillo Highway till it turns into the San Luis Obispo North Coast Highway. Soon you’ll find San Simeon, home of the opulent Hearst Castle. Hearst Castle is the palatial estate built by newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst. It’s one of the largest of historic house museums in the U.S. and well worth the ticket price for the informative tour.

From here, suggested places to add to your road trip planner are Morro Bay, San Luis Obispo, and Pismo Beach (a popular ATV camping spot because of all the sand dunes).

Now here’s where I’ll recommend cutting over to Highway 101 to discover a California city with a decidedly Danish twist, Solvang. I found it utterly charming, with stores offering delicate lace and handmade quilts, Danish cuisine in quaint restaurants, and a European flavor to the buildings lining the main streets. Of course, you’ll see the ocean again once you head into Santa Barbara, a quintessential California coastal city.

Below Oxnard, you’ll find the **** city of Malibu, full of opulent homes on the lolling hills and beautiful bodies on the beaches. Be sure to enjoy the Santa Monica Pier as you continue south. It’s a fun place to spend the evening. But you’ll definitely daylight to people-watch the myriad of characters found at Venice Beach.

By now, you’re in the thick of Southern California, a region where sunglasses, shorts, and flip-flops are the main attire. Another well-to-do city is Newport Beach, worthy of inclusion in your road trip planner. A delightful surprise on my last trip south was the Dana Point Harbor, one of the prettiest harbors I’ve come across in my journeys. Nearby, you’ll find San Juan Capistrano, another great cultural stop, this time with a Spanish twist, as you stroll the grounds of the California icon, Mission San Juan Capistrano.

If you want to taste the salt air & be completely surrounded by water, then add to your road trip planner a stop near Newport Beach and hop a ferry to Santa Catalina Island & explore the appealing city of Avalon. This is a popular cruise stop destination so you can enjoy glass-bottom boat rides, take a trolley car up to some lush gardens, or enjoy snorkeling to the left of the pier (on the pier, facing land).

Now it’s San Diego time, the biggest southern city before you hit the Mexican border! There you’ll find a thriving city with distinct areas like Little Italy, the Gaslamp Quarter, and Balboa Park. Include in your road trip plans a fun side trip by driving to an island, compliments of the San Diego-Coronado Bay Bridge. You’ll easily spot the famous Hotel Del Coronado, a sprawling white and red-roofed resort, which housed Presidents, movie stars & tycoons in its illustrious past. From there, scoot along the Silver Stand Highway just for the sheer enjoyment of cruising a highway flanked by water on both sides. For even more fun, enjoy a sunset gondola ride and pretend you’re in Venice, Italy! From there, you’re less than 5 miles from the Mexico border with San Ysidro being the southernmost community.

So there you have it. Between this blog and Cruisin’ The California Coastline Road Trip - Part I, you’ve now hugged the California coastline from stern to bow, complete with side-trips only the locals know about. To do this road trip justice, I’d recommend at least two weeks. But however you fill your Road Trip Planner, you’re guaranteed awesome photos, spectacular sunsets, and a lot of cool cruisin!



Childrens Education Site

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009


With the increasing number of vehicles on the roads, road safety has become one of the major concerns of the countries around the globe. “Drive Slowly: Someone Is Waiting For You At Home”- the slogan is very old for people nowadays; they just follow their own rules, and drive rashly.

One should drive sensibly to protect oneself and others from the harms of the accident. Various accidents take place due to driver’s fault and some due to bad conditions of roads, broken guardrail, defective signals etc. To prevent the accidents from occurring on the roads, various road safety measures and products are used. These road safety measures and products are made so as to improve the driving conditions and offer smooth flow of traffic. The road safety measures help provide proper directions to traffic even if the signals due to some reasons are not working properly.

These products can be briefly divided according to their usage, for example,

Road Safety Barriers: These include guardrails, wire rope safety barriers, and crash cushions. These products are generally used on the roadside to prevent any vehicle fall down the elevated road.

Motor Cyclist Barriers: These products are specially designed by any guardrail manufacturer. These are usually made up of plastic and include stack cushions, ingal rule post and others.

Guideposts: These products are used for smooth running of traffic; they include night star guidepost, rubber lane divider, reflective lane, markers, rebound able lane divider, mini guard steel barrier. All the above products are made either of plastic and metallic substances. The metallic products are fixed on the road itself for making lanes; they reflect light due to which the lane can be seen even from a far distance.

Work zone and Traffic Control: Guardrail suppliers also supply a wide range of work zone products. These include T-top bollards, traffic cones, traffic barricades, light guardrails TRACC etc. The products are made of high quality materials and are tested to standards. These use UV stabilizers and are unaffected by whether conditions. They contain heavy base to attain proper stability.

Car park and industrial products: Speed bumps, pivot bollards, and steel bollards come under this category of road safety products. Ideal for hospitals, schools, colleges’ etc, speed bumps are made of pre-colored sturdy plastic. These are highly resistant to heavy impacts and high temperature conditions. As studded with reflectors on both sides, these ensure their better visibility to the driver during night hours.



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