I went to Deer Hollow Farm. It was a lovely 1-mile walk from the trails entrance by the main parking lot at Rancho San Antonio Park. There were huge pigs, chickens, sheep, bunnies... and openings for docents. I thought about it.
There were also signs on the fences that had pictures of chickens and pigs and said things like "What We Get from Chickens: Feathers, Eggs, Chicken Meat," for kids who visit from area schools. They also grow vegetables and herbs, including eggplant, sage, asparagus.
A few days later I went back and met a friend there for a longer walk, past the wild turkies, the deer, the Bay tree, the farm and up into the hills. Three hours passed like nothing. We walked out of the park into the residential neighborhood behind park boundaries and saw some lovely homes, met some nice people who told us how to get back in. My only wish is that they had a little cafe by the farm, I think it could make a killing. Other than that it is one of my favorite finds here so far, entirely pleasant.
We have had two weekends since then, and though there were frustrating moments of disappointment in the quietness of this area, we did make a few finds, which I will list in efficient fashion:
1. Lulu's. Fresh Mexican on Main Street in Los Altos, open (reasonably) late, with a fantastic menu, a little on the unconventional side. You order at the counter, eat in or take out. Kid-friendly seating. However, a little more pricey than I'm used to paying for Mexican. Still, good, fast, healthy, and open.
2. San Pedro Square Marketplace, downtown San Jose. An indoor eating mall, hip styling, good options, including woodfired pizza (great for kids) and crepes. Also beer, if you're so inclined, and a couple of bars, good for friends. Noisy, but not too big, so not overwhelming. Two "wings" - one with great dessert options, like Treatbot, a karaoke ice cream truck. They have horchata ice cream (!) and a bunch of other delicious-sounding flavors but the kids opted for vanilla. Convenient to get to, and parking garage across the street. It is built next to the oldest building in San Jose, the Peralta Adobe, built in 1797 and named for Luis Maria Peralta, a sergeant in the Spanish Army who lived there with his family when he owned Rancho San Antonio, one of the largest ranchos in the East Bay.
3. Ikea, East Palo Alto. On a weekday, fabulous access to parking where you can wheel your giant cart load out to your car and fiddle around with various configurations for getting your loot to fit in your car all day long if you want to. This is a great improvement over the one in Burbank, where you got a 15-minute "pickup" spot for that and everyone stood around watching and waiting for you to get in and out.
4. Corner Bakery, El Camino Real, Palo Alto. Not that it has the fabulous Pasadena/Lake Ave layout next to Macy's and Trader Joe's with the kid "boat" play sculpture or anything but it still has all Liv and Wyatt's favorite kid-foods and is easy, easy, easy. For a few mins., it felt like we were "home."
5. Hoover Tower, Stanford campus. Free parking in visitor parking area on the weekends, then you can explore the campus to your heart's content. We made an adventure out of spotting and advancing toward the tower, paid our $4 per ticket to ascend, and went up binoculars and all to view the Bay from the observation platform. The kids also enjoyed playing in the shady tree area adjacent to the tower and roaming the halls on campus. There were several open eateries and cafes we will be frequenting in the future, more like a little town than anything else I've discovered with a little bit of bustle and a lot of prettiness.
6. Children's Discovery Museum, San Jose. I am not sure this was fun for ME, but the kids loved it, especially the fire truck and the water-play room. The Pin board was also a hit. We may go back, but not on a holiday. Parking is in an awkward spot across the train tracks and the dining inside is pretty terrible.
7. Carmel Bay: Need I explain? We loved Carmel before, we still do. In winter it is even better as parking is more plentiful and restaurants are a little more layed back. We had brunch at an old-school establishment called Little Swiss Cafe and hung out on the beach for an hour. From there we drove over to Monterey and walked from the Marina to Cannery Row. Plenty of sea anenomes and other creatures. Ice cream in waffle cones at Ghiradhelli made for a nice day about an hour and twenty mins. from home.
8. Hidden Villa, Los Altos. I only list this because it is, indeed, a free and open farm experience kids will probably enjoy (yes, goats, yes, sheep), but I am pretty sure mine will think it's too boring. It is an open space with an organic garden, class spaces, a youth hostel, the original hand-built yellow villa the Duveneck family lived in on the grounds, and yes, farm animals.
9. And finally, the Los Altos Library. I have heard that the libraries here are ALL pretty great (and was urged to check out Portola Valley stat) but I have to say, our own little local library here in Los Altos is pretty fabulous. You can tell there are taxes at work here. The library is split nearly down the middle - with one side devoted entirely to kids. There are computer stations - at least 8 of them - and free-use iPads loaded with educational apps. There are legos, YA fiction, manga, and parenting books. Plus an ongoing book sale to raise more money for the library system and special event book sale at the end of this month -- $5 for a bagfull. And yes, even a cafe.