“Santa Barbaria” is not some meaningless drivel spoken by some wild-eyed storyteller, but comprises a very real-life locale within Santa Barbara County. Its southeastern boundary begins along the shoreline of More Mesa (at the base of Hope Ranch) and continues in a northwesterly direction past the Campus Point of UC Santa Barbara. It then proceeds along the cliffs of Isla Vista’s Del Playa Drive; past the waters of the Devereux Slough and ever onward inexorably to the World War II beaches of Ellwood and Haskell’s. Its northeastern point can be found within the waters of the Gaviota coastline some (23) miles from Isla Vista. The Ventura Pitas-Point fault submerged in the Santa Barbara Channel constitutes its sole southwestern boundary.
To be continued…
“Santa Barbaria” is not some meaningless drivel spoken by some wild-eyed storyteller, but comprises a very real-life locale within Santa Barbara County. Its southeastern boundary begins along the shoreline of More Mesa (at the base of Hope Ranch) and continues in a northwesterly direction past the Campus Point of UC Santa Barbara. It then proceeds along the cliffs of Isla Vista’s Del Playa Drive; past the waters of the Devereux Slough and ever onward inexorably to the World War II beaches of Ellwood and Haskell’s. Its northeastern point can be found within the waters of the Gaviota coastline some (23) miles from Isla Vista. The Ventura Pitas-Point fault submerged in the Santa Barbara Channel constitutes its sole southwestern boundary.
To be continued…