“These are a few of my favourite things...”
San Marcos and Poway
    It was at the local play park the other         day that Cal Guy Snr         pronounced himself King of the World. He had scrambled to the         topmost position         of the climbing frame and adapted the well-known "I'm the king         of the castle"         expression. "Well, if you're king of the whole world," ventured         Boatwif, "what         would be your first rule?"
            Back came a reply:         "All lessons in         school will be about trains and planes and nothing else."  Cal Guy Snr and Cal Gal         certainly know their         minds. In a pre-breakfast discussion we had listed all sorts of         favourite         things from foods (pizza for Cal Guy Snr, spaghetti bolognese         for Cal Gal), to         toys, to theme parks, then books (The           Phantom Tolbooth, current third grade class reader, and A Thousand and One Things           to Spot in           Fairyland) and on to weather: snowy (Cal Guy Snr), rainy         (Cal Gal, "because         I like jumping in the puddles"). 
A trip to Poway was suggested – and this too         might have featured         in a favourites list. In the park at Poway (a town about 15         miles north east of         San Diego) is the Poway-Midland Railroad, run by a group of         volunteers who         restore, maintain and operate several antique railcars. Today         was to be a steam         day, when the Baldwin Steam Locomotive built in Philadelphia in         1907 for quarry work is         operated.  We arrived         just as the         impressive engine came out of the engine shed, did a first         circuit of the park         and was filled with water.  We         sat         sideways on in the passenger car, waving madly at all the other         visitors in the         park as the train did its two laps. A brass bell rings, a hooter         and whistle         are sounded, steam hisses out at ground level when pressure         needs to be         released, smoke billows from the funnel – wondrous sights and         sounds for all         generations! We lingered; Cal Guy Snr asked questions, Cal Guy         Jnr taking a         keen interest too. "Would you like to ride up here?" asked the         (female)         engineer. "There'll have to be an adult, you'll have to listen         to         instructions..." and that is how Cal Guy Snr, Cal Gal and         Boatwif became         assistant engineers riding on the footplate of a steam         locomotive, right behind         the boiler with full view of the brake lever, the water pressure         gauge, the         bell rope et al! 
"If you've got to make a report in school         after Thanksgiving         on something you've done over the holiday then I think you've         got a topic!" Cal         Son said sagely To Cal Guy Snr. What a good time had been had.         Such was the         lady engineer's enthusiasm for old trains that she had visited         the Rail Museum         in York in 2008 – and as we left the Fireman called "Pass our         regards to your         Queen Mother..."
On the second day of our San Marcos stay we         were dispatched         to Sprouts Organic Food Market for various items. Just as we         arrived at the         checkout the Captain's phone bleeped, signalling the arrival of         a text message.         Techno Son-in-Law, spending a night afloat nb Cleddau had written: Not sunk the boat but             have a question.         While the Captain's attention was diverted into responding to a         boating crisis         five thousand miles away Boatwif had to deal with the checkout         staff. 
"Plastic or paper?" Blank look on Boatwif's         face. "Plastic or         paper?" came the question again. Realisation: this was a         decision to be made         about carrier bags. No handy Sainsbury's yellow everlasting         elephant bag with         us so a decision was required. It must be non-PC to opt for         plastic in a shop         whose name includes the word "Organics" so paper it ought to be         – which is how         Boatwif came to be standing in a parking lot in bright sunlight         looking for an         unfamiliar rental car holding a very heavy paper bag, containing         amongst other         things a gallon jug of milk, while the Captain texted and then         phoned Techno         Son-in-law to discuss the vagaries of Cleddau's central         heating systems...  Apparently         all is well and we are led to         believe the boat is now tied up again back on the right pontoon!         
"These           are a few of my           favourite things..."         At some point Boatwif must check out the Barnes and Noble         bookstore.  Will she be         brave enough to walk down the hill         to the university campus light railway station and get off at         the right stop in         Escondido in the next valley...? Perhaps she'll have to recruit         some local help, payment by book of course!
            









