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Destination
guides for
California
Publicized and idealized all over the world, CALIFORNIA really does
live up to the myth. More than just a terrestrial paradise of sun, sand
and surf, it has high mountain ranges, fast-paced glitzy cities, primeval
old-growth forests and vast stretches of deserts. The landscape is imbued
with history, ranging from rock carvings left by indigenous Native
Americans to the eerie ghost towns of the Gold Rush pioneers.
History
- Getting
Around California - Best
Of - Explore
California
In some ways, the west coast is the ultimate "now" society.
Anywhere so vulnerable to the constant threat of the Big One - a massive
earthquake of unimaginable terror - is bound to have a sense of living for
the moment. However, its supposed superficiality is largely fictitious.
Although home to such reactionary figures as Ronald Reagan and Richard
Nixon, it has also been the source of some of the country's most
progressive political movements . The fierce protests of the Sixties may
have died down, but California remains the heart of liberal America, at
the forefront of environmental awareness, gay pride and social
permissiveness, and increasingly a bulwark of the Democratic Party.
Economically , too, the region is crucial, whether in the film industry,
the music business, the financial markets, or the all-consuming sector of
real-estate development.
California is too large to be fully explored in a single trip, but in
an area so varied it's hard to pick out specific highlights. Los Angeles
is far and away the biggest and most stimulating city: a maddening
collection of freeways, beaches, seedy suburbs, upscale neighborhoods and
extreme lifestyles. From Los Angeles you can head south to the growing
metropolis of San Diego , with its broad, welcoming beaches and easy
access to Mexico; or push inland to the desert areas , most notably Death
Valley , a barren and inhospitable landscape of volcanic craters and salt
pans that in summer becomes the hottest place on earth.
Most people, though, follow the shoreline north up the central coast :
a gorgeous run that takes in lively small towns like Santa Barbara and
Santa Cruz . California's second city, San Francisco , at the top end, is
about as different from LA as it's possible to get: the oldest, most
European-styled city in the state, set on a series of steep hills, its
wooden houses tumbling down to water on three sides. It is also well
placed for the national parks to the east, such as Yosemite , where
waterfalls cascade into a sheer glacial valley, and Sequoia/Kings Canyon
with its gigantic trees, as well as the ghost towns of the Gold Country.
North of San Francisco the countryside becomes wilder, wetter and greener,
approaching Oregon through spectacular and almost deserted volcanic
tablelands.
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Boston,
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Honolulu,
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York City, San
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