Showing posts with label San Diego. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Diego. Show all posts

Camping at San Diego's Animal Park


If you've wondered what it might be like on an African safari, camping in outfitter tents with lions roaring in the distance, you won't have to leave the continent to find out. A trip to San Diego Zoo's Safari Park (sdzsafaripark.org), the city's premiere animal park, provides a variety of tent accommodations -- including outfitter tents -- and evening programs where you can stay the night and observe the park's 300 species of animals roam 1,800 acres.

Roar and Snore

  • Experience San Diego Zoo's Safari Park in its off hours with guided walks, tasty meals and campfire programs at your choice of Roar and Snore Safaris. The experiences range from adult-only sleepovers to those designed for the entire family, kids only, or all ages. Book a premium tent for the most luxurious accommodations, including electricity, a queen bed, area rug and wooden floor in a roomy 12-by-16-foot accommodation where all linens and pillows are provided. Smaller 9-by-14 tents have vinyl floors over a dirt tent pad where you must provide your own bedding for the 3-inch sleeping pads. The fun takes place on weekend nights from February through November. Dinner and breakfast are provided.

Summer Camp

  • Kids as young as those in third grade can experience overnight camping with animal education programs and hands-on adventures designed for their age level. Critter Caper Campout gives kids in grades three through six three days and two overnights at the park. The kids investigate animal behavior through activities such as following animal tracks and dissecting owl pellets. Older kids in grades six through eight get hands-on opportunities to observe and assist zookeepers and trainers at a five-day Animal Care Boot Camp. Kids help feed giraffes and rhinos, monitor animal behavior with a field biologist, and visit the park's animal hospital to see veterinarians in action. Day-camp adventures also are available at the park.

Accessibility

  • The Roar and Snore Campground meets ADA guidelines, including wheelchair-accessible restroom facilities. Some behind-the-scenes areas of the park are not accessible by wheelchair. Your service animal is welcome, but cannot accompany you in certain areas of the park. Kennels are provided on site if you wish to visit these areas, and you can call ahead for someone to assist you in areas where your service animal cannot go. Electric conveyance vehicles and wheelchairs can be rented at the park's main entrance, and you can ride a shuttle to areas of the park not accessible by wheelchair.

What to Bring

  • If you are staying in a premium tent, you only need to bring a duffel bag or suitcase with your clothing for the evening and following day. Suggested items include comfortable closed-toe walking shoes, sleepwear, and a jacket or sweatshirt. Insects can be plentiful on summer evenings, so plan on long sleeves and long pants, or bring insect repellent. If you're not staying in the premium tent, you also need to bring a sleeping bag and pillow. Expect nighttime temperatures ranging from 50 to 65 degrees Fahrenheit year-round. Although daytime temperatures generally remain in the 60- to 70-degree range year-round, temperatures as high as 111 degrees have been recorded in San Diego. Remember to bring a telephoto lens for your camera, and a spotting scope or binoculars.

The Best Way to Drive From LAX to San Diego in Traffic


Southern California is a place where freeway congestion is commonplace and stop-and-go is a way of life. In its 2012 report on nationwide traffic congestion, the Texas Transportation Institute ranked Los Angeles second, right behind Washington D.C., as the city with the worst traffic tie-ups and least reliable freeways in the country. Whereas heavy traffic once was encountered only during rush hours, there is now little difference in traffic volume any time of day. A drive from Los Angeles International Airport to San Diego that used to take a little over two hours might take twice as long today. However, there are alternate routes that might ease that frustration at least a little.

Traffic Information

  • To try and avoid heavy traffic, you need to know where the congestion is. The California Highway Patrol and Caltrans provide that information on their websites, and local radio stations such as KFWB-AM 980, KNX-AM 1070 and KFI-AM 640 all broadcast regular up-to-the-minute traffic reports throughout the day. It’s also important to know which road is which, as freeways in California are referred to by name as often as they are by number. Once you know where the congestion is, a very good way to avoid at least some of it is by using the high-occupancy vehicle or diamond carpool lanes; however, be warned that use requirements are very specific, so don’t wander into one if you’re driving alone. The fines for misuse are severe.

The Simplest Route

  • The simplest route from LAX to San Diego is to turn right out of the airport onto Highway 1 (Sepulveda), pick up the 105 (the Century Freeway), head east a few miles to the 405 (the San Diego Freeway) and head south. The San Diego Freeway merges with Interstate 5 (the Golden State Freeway) just outside of Orange County and continues south all the way to San Diego. The problem with this route is that the San Diego Freeway is the most congested freeways in the country, so when it’s busy -- which is usually -- estimated drive times can double or triple.

Alternatives

  • When the 405 is excessively busy, you can avoid the 405 altogether by taking Highway 1 -- which begins as Sepulveda at the airport and becomes Pacific Coast Highway in Hermosa Beach -- past the beach cities to San Pedro. Then hop on the 110 (the Harbor Freeway), and head east to the 91 (the Riverside Freeway). Continue south on the 91 until it merges with I-5, and continue to San Diego. Because the Pacific Coast Highway is a surface street riddled with traffic lights, it sometimes can be as frustrating to navigate as the 405. An alternate to this route is to take the 105 to the 405 as far as the 110, and then proceed east on 110 to the 91, which is usually at least a little less congested than the San Diego Freeway.

Toll Roads

  • You can bypass a lot of Orange County traffic on the 405 by picking up State Route 73 (the San Joaquin Transportation Corridor). This is one of California’s few toll roads, privately owned by investors and managed by the San Joaquin Transportation Corridor Agency. Because Californians don’t like the idea of toll roads, it isn’t very popular with drivers, commuters or investors, so you're likely to have a clear lane even when the diamond lanes on the 405 beside it are jammed. If you decide to take the toll road, be warned that it is the most expensive in the country, and not all the toll booths are manned; exact change is necessary, and the fines for missing a toll booth are relatively extreme.