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Before Traveling to California, ...
The Latest trees, the oldest buildings, the most spectacular sights and unique
landscapes- California is a collection of superlatives. From the amusements of Disneyland to the
golf courses of Palm Springs, the state offers every imaginable attraction. From the gaint trees in
Sequoia Natioanl Park to the below - sea - level mud flats in Death Valley, the slopes of Mount
Shasta and the cliffs of Laguna Beach, ,t boasts unequaled sights and unparalleled scenery. Which
explains why more people visit California than any other state in America. Almost 300 million trips
are taken here each year, generating $60 billion for the economy and creating 700,000 jobs.
The first "tourists" to reach the shores of California were the explorers. Historians estimate that
about 250,000 native people lived in the region when Hernando Cortes sailed parts of the coastline
in 1535. He was followed by Portuguese and English sailors, including Sir Francis Drake, who is
believed to have landed at Point Reyes, and may have been the first European to come ashore.The
explorers sailed home with stories of sun and gold-stories not proven until centuries later.
In January 1848, James Marshall was working on the construsction of a sawmill when he found small
nuggets of metal in the American River. The nuggets proved to begold, and when news of the
discovery spread, half a million people thronged to the state. Within 4 years, annual gold
production reached $ 81 million. Many of the fortune seekers left California when gold was
discovered on the Fraser River in the British Columbia, but prospecting continued until about 1864,
leaving, a legacy of ghost towns and historic sites.
The Riches in the Golden State today are found in the shops of Rodeo Drive, the commerce of San
Francisco, the mansions of Monterey Bay, and the glamor of Hollywood. Television and film have sent
images of never-ending white ssand beaches and waving palm trees around the world, temting visitors
to this ocean paradise. Yet despite the booming popuşation of Los Angeles and the constant influx
of tourists, California retains vast tracts of pristine forest and desert. There are more than 260
state parks, and 18 national forest. In these untouched places, it's possible to imagine California
as the explorers saw it centuries ago.
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