Love immersive art experiences? Donât miss this psychedelic exhibit in Little Tokyo
By Rachel Schnalzer
Design and illustrations by Jade Cuevas
Good morning, fellow Escapists. Autumn is here, and though temperatures will hover in the high 80s this weekend, itâs an ideal time to plot your fall travel â whether youâll be heading to a desert campground or an air-conditioned museum.
My Times colleague Christopher Reynolds recently assembled a list of the 40 best California experiences: Fall edition to provide readers with seasonal inspiration. Youâll see some of his recommendations highlighted in Escapes in the coming weeks.
Did he miss any of your favorite destinations? Keep an eye out for a follow-up story in which readers share their must-visit fall spots.
Get inspired to get away.
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đ Immerse yourself in a sound bath
The Integratron has been a landmark in the Southern California desert for decades. Once focused on time travel and extraterrestrial life, it now is a destination for those seeking a sound bath and a sizable dose of New Age desert vibes.
âAt the Integratron, sound baths are a way of life, and the acoustics are amazing,â Reynolds writes.
The Integratron, 20 minutes north of Joshua Tree National Park, offers both private and public sound baths by appointment only. Visitors are treated to the sound of 20 quartz crystal âsinging bowlsâ tapped by mallets, which âcan sound like church bells, elegant feedback or a planetary dial tone,â Reynolds describes.
Group sound baths are offered Thursdays-Sundays at $50 per person (ages 14 and older). Private sound baths are $1,200 and up.
đ§ââď¸ Love Yosemite? Donât miss this new museum
Staring slack-jawed at daring climbers scrambling up Yosemiteâs granite walls is an integral part of any visit to the national park.
Now, a new museum in Mariposa, Calif., is devoted to telling the story of these climbers. Ken Yager, a veteran climber, founded the Yosemite Climbing Museum after spending decades collecting artifacts and photos that illuminate the history of climbing in the park.
âIt has everything you would hope in it and more,â Joseph Taylor, author of the 2010 book âPilgrims of the Vertical,â told Times contributor Alec Scott. âI donât know quite how he got it all, but itâs all there.â
Call (209) 742-1000 or email yosemiteclimbingmuseum@gmail.com for the museumâs hours. Tours available upon request.
đźď¸ Put this immersive art exhibit on your must-visit list
âForget about the âimmersiveâ Van Gogh exhibit,â writes Times art critic Christopher Knight. âPipilotti Ristâs MOCA show is the real thing.â
Knight recently reviewed the exhibition, which highlights Ristâs video, sculpture and installation art from the last 35 years, calling it a âgenerous psychedelic excursion through the digital looking glass.â
A few highlights from the trippy experience:
- The âPixel Forest Transformer,â a room with flickering LED lights hanging from the ceiling. âWalking among them is like being inside a video screen surrounded by digital pixels,â Knight wrote.
- The âPeeping Freedom Shutters,â the rear façade of a clapboard house, with a smattering of picnic tables in a backyard. Video projections swirl across the floor and in the homeâs windows. âI found myself walking gingerly across the indoor/outdoor room,â Knight said. âIt was as if I might trip and stumble over the flickering light of an image projected onto the floor.â
- Donât miss the â29 Palms Chandelier,â a large chandelier lined with underpants hanging above the museumâs front desk.
Admission costs $10-$18; children younger than 12 are free.
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đ Sleep in a trolley car
Love tiny homes and yurts? You might consider staying at this trolley car-turned-Airbnb in Castaic next time you venture north on a road trip.
The trolley, nestled in a residential neighborhood, includes a TV, stove, refrigerator, microwave, air fryer, tile shower and other creature comforts. Just outside is a deck and chairs for kicking back and enjoying the evening.
The Airbnb hostâs fiancĂŠ and his teenage son purchased the working trolley car in 2020, then gutted and renovated it. âEvery step of the way has been a labor of love and lots of father/son bonding,â the listing says.
The trolley car can accommodate two guests and can be booked for $171 per night.
đ° What Iâm reading
- Pismo Beach is âthe best place to see the great monarch butterfly migration.â Stacey Leasca explains how to see and protect them in Travel + Leisure.
- In Northern California, a lawless state park has been overtaken by off-roading, fireworks and raves, reports Ashley Harrell in SFGate.
- Autumn is an ideal time to camp in southern Utah. If pitching a tent under the stars is on your fall bucket list, check out Megan Michelsonâs guide in Outside Online.
- Peruâs Incan rope bridges are hanging by a thread, reports Lidio Valdez and Cirilo Vivanco in Sapiens, as the âtradition of creating suspension bridges to unite communities in the Andes [fades] into history.â
- In 2015, Tom Turcich set out to cross the world by foot â and has been on the road ever since. Ann Babe covers his journey in Afar.
đ¸ Photo of the week
đ¸ Road song
Song: âCaliforniaâ by Chvrches
Favorite lyric: âGod bless this mess that we made ourselves.â
Best place to listen: California 154, on the way from the Santa Ynez Valley to Santa Barbara.
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