I'm always looking at life in a creative way whether it be a cooking a class, traveling to a exotic country, bellydancing, photographing my life, finding the guts to run my first marathon, or simpliy sipping champagne as I write my blog. I'm alway's looking for ways to make my life a little more CRAZY,SEXY and SWEETER!
Monday, December 27, 2010
Saturday, December 11, 2010
Tonights The Night!!
Tonight Sandra and I get to dance!!!! I hope it all goes well!! We are scared!!! LOL!!! Our dance routine is super cute. I just hope the crowd likes it. I mean Burlesque in a little Tea house. Fingers crossed.........
Thursday, December 9, 2010
I'm So EXCITED!!!
It's almost time for me to go to Paris!!! I can not wait. Paris for New Years Eve!!! OMG...... Pop Champagne ohh!!! I'm ready! Lets GO!
Monday, December 6, 2010
Sunday, December 5, 2010
Friday, December 3, 2010
Boudoir Opening Night!!!
BOUDOIR is an intimate nightclub that follows an edgy, sexy theme spread over three levels that are rich with elaborate décor and atmosphere with sly nods to "Moulin Rouge" and "Chicago". Boudoir challenges your senses from the moment you cross our threshold. You find yourself catching your breath, feeling your pulse quicken and with only a slight pause to accept the fact that this truly is something that San Diego has never seen before; You lunge forward with an excitement you haven't felt in years! Click to View Picture:) 12/2/10 DiscoverSD Presents Boudoir Grand Opening Party
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Friday, November 19, 2010
Hearst Castle
The Castle
In 1865, George Hearst, a wealthy miner, purchased 40,000-acres of ranchland that included the Mexican Ranchos of Piedras Blancas, San Simeon and Santa Rosa. In 1919, his only son, William Randolph Hearst, inherited the land from his mother, Phoebe Apperson Hearst. By then the ranch had grown to encompass 250,000 acres.
Originally known as "Camp Hill," its wilderness offered a place for family members and friends to "rough it" on camping trips. Despite elaborate arrangements with separate sleeping and dining tents, Hearst envisioned more comfortable accommodations. His simple instructions to famed San Francisco architect Julia Morgan in 1919: "Miss Morgan, we are tired of camping out in the open at the ranch in San Simeon and I would like to build a little something"
Hearst and Morgan's collaboration was destined to become one of the world's greatest showplaces. As they were planning and constructing his dream home, Hearst renamed the rocky perch from which it rose "La Cuesta Encantada" - The Enchanted Hill. By 1947, Hearst and Morgan had created an estate of 165 rooms and 127 acres of gardens, terraces, pools and walkways.
The estate's magnificent main house, "Casa Grande," and three guest houses are of Mediterranean Revival style, while the imposing towers of Casa Grande were inspired by a Spanish cathedral. The blending of the architectural style with the surrounding land, and Hearst's superb European and Mediterranean art collection, was so seamless that world-renowned architectural historian, Lord John Julius Norwich, was moved to say that "Hearst Castle is a palace in every sense of the word."
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