Cemetery Travels Notebook
Copyright information
© Loren Rhoads and Cemetery Travel, 2011-13. Unauthorized use or duplication of this material -- both photos and text -- without written permission from this blog’s author is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Loren and Cemetery Travel with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.Subscribe by RSS:
Networked Blogs
Blog: Cemetery Travel Topics:cemetery, graveyards, travel Postaweek
The Sunshine Award

Cemetery Travel catagories
Cemetery Travel tags
angels Arlington National Cemetery Bay Area cemeteries Black History Boston cemeteries California cemeteries cemetery photographs cemetery tours Colma cemetery Cypress Lawn Cemetery Detroit cemetery English cemeteries Forest Lawn French cemeteries Green-Wood Cemetery Highgate Cemetery Hollywood Forever Italian cemetery Jewish cemetery London cemetery Los Angeles cemetery Manhattan cemetery Massachusetts cemeteries Metairie Cemetery Michigan cemetery military cemetery Mount Auburn Cemetery New Orleans cemeteries New York cemetery New York City cemetery Paris cemeteries Pere Lachaise Cemetery photo of the week pioneer cemeteries postaday postaweek2011 postaweek2012 private mausoleums Protestant Cemetery Revolutionary War graveyard Rome cemetery San Francisco cemetery sculpture St. Louis #1 statuaryTop Posts & Pages
- Cemetery Tours in Northern California again
- Welcome to Cemetery Travel
- Cemetery of the Week #50: Gravesite of Sojourner Truth
- 2012 Northern California Autumn Cemetery Tours & Events
- Cemetery of the Week #49: The Jimi Hendrix Monument
- Cemetery of the Week #18: King's Chapel Burying Ground
- Cemetery of the Week #30: the San Francisco Columbarium
- Vacation in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina
- Cemetery of the Week #93: Montparnasse Cemetery
- Cemetery of the Week #69: Seattle's Lake View Cemetery
Blogroll
Daily Archives: July 28, 2011
How to be Safe in the Cemetery
Earlier this month I explored the historic cemeteries of Pescadero. The grass was ankle-high on the Protestant side, but over my knees on the Catholic side. Holes the size of juice glasses riddled the ground, but I never saw a … Continue reading










