And where, exactly, does Route 66 end?
"At the park" he answered definitively, as if it had been silly for me to ask such an obvious question.
At the Northern end of Palisades Park you'll find this plaque.
By the way, lest you think the pithy humor of Will Rogers outdated, I'd like to offer the following quotes:
"We always want the best man to win an election. Unfortunately, he never runs."
"A fool and his money are soon elected."
"If we ever pass out as a great nation we ought to put on our tombstone 'America died from a delusion that she had moral leadership'"
But, back to Route 66 and the plaque. It was placed here by Warner Brothers, Ford and the Main Street of America Association, not only to honor Rogers but as part of a publicity campaign for the 1952 movie The Story of Will Rogers. Not that we have any misgivings about adopting it as the our own personal end of Rt 66, but isn't it fitting that a city so associated with make-believe would have a plaque marking the end of a road where it isn't but where we would like to to be?
When I shot the picture below, I was thinking "what a cool looking place; maybe we should have stayed there instead of the Motel 6 in Hollywood."
Back up in Palisades Park is Santa Monica's Camera Obscura at 1450 Ocean Avenue. I didn't get to go inside, but you can see interior pictures here, and an in-depth history of the device, here.
A pedestrian bridge spans Highway 1 from Palisades park over to the beach. Highway 1 is also called the Pacific Coast Highway. You can see Santa Monica Pier in the distance. Shall we walk over to the beach?
Looking back from below, I was struck by the eroded rock formations at the top of the 100-foot bluff that Ocean Avenue and Palisades Park are perched upon.
Those towers look like....well, never mind.
On the beach, just north of the pier, is "Walk on LA", a 1988 "art tool" designed by Carl Cheng. When pulled by a tractor, it leaves the imprint of a city in the sand.
Ace meets a new entourage in LA. The two new female drivers decide to set foot in the Pacific...
...and discover the water is cold today.
So, I'm in the park, minding my own business and doing nothing that should attract attention - just watching a jackalope check out an observation telescope, and I hear "Oh!...is so cute!"
Journeys often start and finish with a passage through a ceremonial arch. Ace Jackalope poses for the classic "end of Route 66" photo at the entrance to the Santa Monica Pier, the spiritual end to our Route 66 journey. The entry arch was built in 1938 by the federal Works Project Administration.
Yes, ceremonial arches...Tolkien's Moria, Paris' Arc de Triumph...in our case, the McDonald's in Vinita Oklahoma and the arch at Santa Monica Pier.
There is a steep ramp down to the pier. I believe the ramp is also a WPA project and dates from 1938.
One of the first attractions you'll see is, in our opinion, the best. It's the only one that has much history attached to it.
Even unpainted, there is an appeal about these things.
A little motion blur gives the unsettling visage of a baby being pulled by a spectral horse.
And if you ever wonder at the wisdom of maintaining such things, just read the expressions.
Ace meets a new friend, "Da Munkee" in the carousel giftshop.
As I was editing this photo of this cool, kinda retro-looking Santa Monica Police station on the pier, I ran across this note in Route 66 News about surveillance cameras being installed on the pier: "Some men were videotaping in a manner that was inconsistent with tourist photography. They were photographing access roads and security structures" said the Chief of the Santa Monica Police Department.
I wonder if they realize that some movements around the pier can be monitored by a 24 hr webcam?
Now that's what I call art. I'm serious; I love the giant Testors bottle.
The pier has the usual tourist trappy features.
Kids play with remote-controlled boats.
There's a pirate themed nine-hole miniature golf course which can be played for $5. The mural at top advertises an aquarium under the pier at the east end.
It must be cool to be a seagull at a tourist trap...
The harbor office sits beside an old observation building which currently houses Mariasol, a Mexican restaurant where we had lunch.
Mariasol's food was good, but they charge for drink refills.
Mariasol's decor uses one of my favorite tiki bar decorations, the puffer fish...too bad this isn't a tiki-theme location; that'd rock, especially on a pier.
Soon, Ace would be saying goodbye to two of his drivers as they had to return to the Midwest. This one was made slightly uncomfortable by the musicians.
The other departing driver holds her purse at the ready, a signal she is done with this place and ready to seek other touristic venues.
A view from the Pacific end shows the original pier stretching back to the shore, and the connected "amusement pier" at right, which is currently home to Pacific Park, an amusement park of recent vintage. Previous to this amusement park, there had been another one called Pacific Ocean Park which operated from 1958 to 1967 and was demolished in 1974.
This young tourist has found the facility to her liking.
I'm just glad I never take pictures "inconsistent with tourist photography."
Ace and I would like to thank the people that aided us in August's Route 66 journey and our subsequent exploration of LA: Barb, Mark, Mia, Natalie, Patsy, Richard and William - seven very patient fellow explorers. And, thanks to Mark for the second plaque picture and to Richard for the two pictures of the girls in the surf.
After finishing Route 66, we explored quite a few of LA's mid 20th century architectural treasures, we basked in googie and we swam in tiki. Ace even hopped a cruise ship to Mexico, but that is another story.
For our entire 2005 Rt66/I-40 trip, see:
Joplin to Amarillo
Amarillo to Holbrook
Holbrook to Winslow
La Posada
Grand Canyon
Seligman
western AZ
From the California border onward, we stayed to Route 66:
Colorado River crossing
Needles
Needles to Fenner
Fenner to Amboy
Amboy
Amboy to Barstow
Barstow
Barstow to Victorville
Victorville - California Route 66 Museum
Victorville to Rialto
Rialto Wigwam Motel
Outer Los Angeles
Los Angeles
Santa Monica Pier
Other posts concerning California:
The Future was so Cool in 1961
Goodbye, Sam's Seafood
hi, by chance i happend to come across your blog, this summer i went to santa monica and some other places along the cost of california, i've loved route 66 for so long, i didn't know it ended there in the park, i didn't even see the sign in fact, which makes me kinda regret it.. but thanks anyways for sharing your trip with everyone ;)
ReplyDeletecheers,
fran