Like many other major cities, the geography of Los Angeles determines its destiny. The Los Angeles basin is surrounded by mountains on the north and high hills on the south, which funnel together into the narrow San Gorgonio Pass, immediately west of the Coachella Valley. The mountains trap pollution within the Los Angeles metropolitan area, and the low precipitation levels ensure that the smog isn't washed from the air by rain showers. In spite of its dismal history and even its current status, the city is actually an example of how pollution can be successfully controlled. In the 1970s it was rare to be able to see the mountains, even from close up, and there were usually more than 100 stage one smog alerts each year. The Clean Air Act of 1970 eventually resulted in the current situation where the mountains are usually visible and there are virtually no stage one smog alerts at all. This piece of legislation was put into force by Richard Nixon, who hailed from the Los Angeles basin city of Yorba Linda, where I worked for four years. |
The pollution at least gives Los Angeles some wonderful sunsets, though you'd have to be looking west, rather than north as in this photo. This shot does illustrate another feature of Los Angeles, which it shares with other California cities such as San Francisco and San Diego - the marine layer. This is a fog which develops in the afternoon or evening over the ocean and then moves inland, sometimes considerable distances. It mostly occurs only in spring, and the sun usually burns it off by about noon, but it's still referred to as "June gloom" by the inhabitants of this normally sunny city. The marine layer is very unfortunate for photographers - I was on my way to photograph downtown Los Angeles for this page when the fog rolled in and forced me to turn back, and the same thing has happened to me in San Francisco and San Diego! |
The coastline north of Los Angeles is rugged. There are some nice beaches, but many of them are rocky, and there's some serious surf at most of them, which makes them unsuitable for most swimmers. It's a nice drive along highway 1, the Cabrillo Highway, which follows the coast from Los Angeles through Santa Barbara and hugs the coast as much as possible all the way up to San Francisco and then further north. |
The beaches within the Los Angeles metropolitan area are much broader and have nice sand, even if the color of the water often leaves something to be desired. This is the world-famous Santa Monica pier, which is over a century old and remains very popular to this day. As well as the Ferris wheel there's also a small roller-coaster and a carousel from the 1920s which was used as a set in the Robert Redford movie The Sting. The movie was set in Chicago, but Redford himself was actually born in Santa Monica! |
Here's another star, belonging to a four-footed performer. I guess we should call this a "dog star" (but no, Siriusly folks...). Lassie, it might be shocking to learn, was actually a Laddie, or in fact a whole sequence of Laddies! Male collies are larger and have better coats than females, and so the first Lassie was a dog called Pal, who appeared in this role in seven movies and two television programs. Ten more generations of his descendants have earned their dog food in the same way. |
Here are the tombs of the great director and producer Cecil B. DeMille, alongside his brother William deMille, who also directed movies. And yes, the difference in capitalization of the two names isn't a mistake! In the background you can see a water tower on the grounds of Paramount Studios, which is on the other side of a very high wall. |
Mel Blanc himself chose the epitaph "That's all, folks!" which is now on his gravestone. Blanc is famous as one of the greatest and most prolific voice-over talents in America. As well as voicing Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Sylvester the Cat, Tweety Bird, Foghorn Leghorn, Yosemite Sam, Wile E. Coyote, Woody Woodpecker and Barney Rubble, he also created the voices for hundreds of other characters, including the skunk Pepe le Pew, who starred in cartoons such as For Scent-imental Reasons and is the reason for the stuffed toy someone has left here. |
The Page Museum is right on the site, surrounding some of the pits which are still being excavated. The bones and displays depict the large mammals found in the pits, including mammoths, bison, giant ground sloths, American camels, American lions, American cheetahs, dire wolves, short-faced bears and saber-toothed tigers, which are now the California state fossil. The 9000 year old remains of a woman who seems to have been murdered were also found there. In this shot you can also see the methane gas whose bubbles make ripples on the water as they come up along with the oil itself. |