Tequila wrote:
kx250rider wrote:
I grew up in Los Angeles, and you literally could drop me off blindfolded in any place in Los Angeles, and I could tell you exactly where I am.
Would you work out where you are by sound then?
No, it's more a matter of direction per the sun, or by the direction of the breeze, the direction of the tilt of the trees, and/or a combination. Honestly I can't explain it. I just get a feeling when I start going the wrong way. Last year when I drove to Dallas from LA by a new route, and was following my own written directions, I came across a place along the I-30 where they had done a realignment of the interstates (BIG screwed up project). I missed the interchange for the North Tollway, and I somehow knew it right away, and I got off the freeway in a part of town I'd never been, and made my way right back to the Tollway, and was back on track. And in Los Angeles, it's easy to figure out exactly where you are, by looking at two addresses.... Case in point: If you are in front of a building with the address 11565, and you look on a cross street with the address of 6800, you are in North Hollywood. You couldn't be anywhere else, because there is no 6800 block west by 11500 block south, and there is no 11500 east at all, so that leaves only 11500 west by 6800 north, which would be someplace near Vanowen Street and Lankershim Blvd in North Hollywood. And the Los Angeles city street signs are blue, while other suburban cities on the same address grid are other colors. That's how I'd figure it out in LA, in addition to the other things I cited first.
Anyplace I've ever been, I'd be able to get around. I've only been to Philadelphia once, and that was nearly 30 years ago, and I still remember clearly the layout of the streets. I only need to look at a map once, when driving somewhere new to me. I can then return home, or go there again years later, and not bother with any map.
Now if I could trade that gift for being able to find my way around a social event or party.................
Charles