English French German Spain Italian Dutch Russian Portuguese Japanese Korean Arabic Chinese Simplified

Monday, November 30, 2009

In Walter Knott's Footsteps: Calico (1)

The little town of Calico, near Yermo, California, sprang to life with a silver boom. At it's peak the place had about 1,200 residents. But like most boom towns, things went bust. After a short but lively existance, from 1881 to 1896, Calico quickly faded into a "ghost town," as seen in the photo above.
.
In 1951, just ten years after opening his highly sucessful mock ghost town in Buena Park, Walter Knott purchased the entire real ghost town of Calico. He already had a couple personal links to the site. First, he had briefly worked as a carpenter during a short-lived scheme to revive one of Calico's mines. Secondly, Walter's uncle, lawman John C. King helped found Calico and was a key partner in its most productive mine: The Silver King.
.
The Knotts rebuilt many of the long-since-missing buildings in town, and added a few additional buildings they thought would help the tourist trade. Like Ghost Town at Knott's Berry Farm, Calico soon had a general store full of tourist tchotchkes, a saloon serving boysenberry punch, a train ride, a gussied-up mine to explore, mule rides, a "Mystery Shack," and much more. In the photos below you can see what the town looked like during Knott's reconstruction effort in the 1950s and what it looks like today. Note that both images are taken from a similar angle to the older image above.
Ultimately, government interference kept Walter from making Calico the kind of financial success he had hoped. In 1966, he gifted the whole town to the County of San Bernardino, and it became a regional park. Today, visitors can see all the layers of the site's history: From prehistoric rock formations, to silver mining boom town, to 1950s roadside attraction, to county historical park. All of it is fascinating. I'll share more Calico photos with you in the coming days.

Pooja Mishra Hot Photoshoot In Bikini

Pooja Mishra

Pooja Mishra

Image Hosted by PicturePush - Photo Sharing Image Hosted by PicturePush - Photo Sharing

Amrita Rao THE MAN Magazine HQ Scans

Amrita Rao’s big, brown eyes can look deep into your heart. It gives Amrita’s delicate face an unique edge. It was Amrita Rao’s second flick ‘Ishq Vishq’ that made her rise to popularity. Soon, there was no looking back for Amrita as she won accolades for her performance in movies like ‘Main Hoon Na’, ‘Vivah’ and ‘Welcome to Sajjanpur’.
Amrita Rao THE MAN Magazine HQ Scans
Amrita Rao THE MAN Magazine HQ Scans
Amrita Rao THE MAN Magazine HQ Scans
Amrita Rao THE MAN Magazine HQ Scans

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Nandana Sen Hot Look In Prince–It’s Showtime

Nandana Sen in a all new hot look for her upcoming movie Prince, starring opposite Vivek oberoi.
Nandana Sen’s Hot Look In Prince–It’s Showtime
Nandana Sen’s Hot Look In Prince–It’s Showtime
Nandana Sen’s Hot Look In Prince–It’s Showtime
Nandana Sen’s Hot Look In Prince–It’s Showtime

Saturday, November 28, 2009

In Walter Knott's Footsteps: Buena Park

Walter Knott and his cousin, Jim Preston, rented land south of Buena Park and started growing berries there in 1920. They soon opened a berry stand and then a nursery to sell berry plants. The before-and-after photos above show the original berry stand around 1926 and that exact same location as it appears today.
.
After a while, Jim left to run his own farm in Norwalk. Then Cordelia Knott added a tea room, which eventually grew into the popular Knott's Chicken Dinner Restaurant (which turned 75 this year). Their daughter, Virginia, opened a small gift shop which grew into a large one. Walter started adding attractions to occupy visitors while they waited for a table at the restaurant. Eventually, this string of small attractions led to a larger one -- A replica of a Ghost Town, which opened to the public in 1941.
.
One of the earliest attractions in Ghost Town was the Wagon Train Show, in the Gold Trails Hotel, which appears in the before-and-after photos below. The older photo shows the hotel (new construction, incorporating a few pieces of buildings in actual ghost towns) in the 1940s. The "after" photo shows the recently rebuilt hotel as it appears today.
I won't give you a blow-by-blow account of all the ways Knott's Berry Farm prospered and grew. It's a pretty well known story. Suffice it to say, it was very, very successful, owing in large part to the hard work of the Knott family themselves. The photos below show a later addition to Ghost Town: The Calico Saloon. The first image shows it when it was new, around 1952, and the second image shows it as it appears today.
The Calico Saloon sat right across from the Calico Mine Ride and the Calico and Ghost Town Railroad on Calico Square. Why were all these 1950s and early 1960s additions named "Calico?" Stay tuned.

Friday, November 27, 2009

Sizzling Hot Amisha Patel In Saree at Shilpa Shetty’s Wedding

Amisha Patel

Amisha Patel

Amisha Patel




In Walter Knott's Footsteps: Shandon

The Knott's long experiment in the Mojave proved a failure. Walter took other jobs nearby, including one as a carpenter in a short-lived scheme to revive a silver mine at Calico. (More on Calico later.) But it was clear that they needed a new start -- And that start appeared in the form of a job in Shandon, California, near Paso Robles. Walter was allowed to use a strip of land to raise fruits and vegetables for the ranch hands, and could sell anything they didn't eat. It turned out he had a lot left to take to market. Combined with income from Cordelia's new business making candy for nearby shops, they were soon solvent again.
.
The strip of land Walter farmed in Shandon is shown below. It lay between the Estrella River and the home of the ranch owner, which is shown above in its current (vacant) state.
On their feet once again, they were prepared when, in 1920, Walter's cousin Jim Preston suggested they move south and partner with him to start a berry farm near Buena Park. Indeed, without the time they spent in Shandon, there would have been no Preston & Knott's Berry Place (later known as Knott's Berry Farm).
.
The photo below shows the Shandon property from another angle. It took Katie and me a good deal of time tracking around Shandon to find this location when we visited last year. My research had only turned up a few sketchy descriptions of the property. Luckily, the guys at the local San Luis Obispo County Fire Station pointed us to a knowledgeable local rancher who in turn led us to the entrance of the Red Cedar Vinyard, where we found the ranch house.
Of course, the Knotts didn't live in the big adobe ranch house. They undoubtedly lived "in town." I never did figure out an address for them. The photo below shows the local United Methodist Church and gives you an idea of the kind of town we're talking about,... Small. Rural. A little bit charming around the edges. There are about 1,000 residents living there today. The ones I met were friendly and helpful.
Old-timers in town still remember the Knotts fondly, and recall being treated with the utmost hospitality when they later visited their old neighbors in Buena Park.

Thursday, November 26, 2009

In Walter Knott's Footsteps: Newberry Springs (2)

Today's images are before-and-after photos of the Knott homestead in Newberry Springs. Aside from the small house disappearing, things haven't changed much since the family left. But with no buildings to use as landmarks, the mountains in the distance were our only guide.
The photos above look west and the ones below look east. One wonders if struggling like pioneers in an inhospitable place somehow appealed to Walter Knott (who grew up with his grandmother's stories of coming west in a covered wagon), or whether it was just the free land that appealed to him. Or perhaps a bit of both.
Standing in the middle of the desert, looking at this land, one can well imagine how hard living here must have been for Cordelia. Walter probably didn't enjoy it much either, but at least it was his idea. And as Phil pointed out, "Cordelia was a city girl" and not used to roughing it.

Amrita Rao Hot Photoshoot for PETA

Activists of the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) disrupted an ongoing photo shoot featuring Bollywood actress Amrita Rao because they thought it to be a vulgar one.
Amrita Rao Hot Photoshoot for PETA
Amrita Rao Hot Photoshoot for PETA
Amrita Rao Hot Photoshoot for PETA
Amrita Rao Hot Photoshoot for PETA
Amrita Rao Hot Photoshoot for PETA

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Paris, Guest blogger for Style Society, Giveaway,...

I'm going to Paris for 1 week. You all have a great time. I think I will :)

Meanwhile check out the post which will be live on Monday 30th November. I'm guest blogger for Style Society (by Dorothy Perkins)!!! :)

You can also enter their competition and win a pair of shoes.

You all still have time to join giveaway wich will ends on 10.12.09 and win a handmade scarf.

Shilpa, Raj Wedding Reception Photos

Shilpa Shetty with husband, Raj Kundra at their wedding reception at a hotel in Mumbai.
Shilpa, Raj Wedding Reception Photos
Shilpa, Raj Wedding Reception Photos
Shilpa, Raj Wedding Reception Photos
Shilpa, Raj Wedding Reception Photos

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

In Walter Knott's Footsteps: Newberry Springs (1)

The second stop on our Knott trek was the parcel of land Walter and Cordelia homesteaded in Newberry Springs on the Mojave Desert from about 1914 to about 1917. The photo above shows what it looks like today. The Knotts tried to grow grapes here, which proved to be one of their few significant business missteps. However, they still stuck it out long enough (three years) to establish the homestead.
The black and white photos in today's post are from the homestead and show the Knott kids, Cordelia, and the family dog with a number of turkeys. I don't know if I'll get to post again before the 26th, so I'd better make use of these gratuitous gobbler shots while I can.
If you don't hear from me before then (or even if you do), have a happy Thanksgiving!