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- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!unix!maslak
- From: maslak@unix.SRI.COM (Valerie Maslak)
- Newsgroups: ba.food
- Subject: Re: Monterey to San Simeon: food & lodging
- Message-ID: <42862@unix.SRI.COM>
- Date: 21 Jan 93 21:54:00 GMT
- References: <1jjn8lINNg6i@transfer.stratus.com> <93020.154514TONY@SLACVM.SLAC.STANFORD.EDU> <1993Jan21.201132.16890@casbs.Stanford.EDU>
- Organization: SRI International, Menlo Park, California
- Lines: 63
-
- Monterey to San Simeon is a HUGE area: make sure you take out a good
- map and scope it out. Also, the coast highway that connects them,
- Highway One, has a nasty habit of washing out/landslides this time of
- year. It can take MONTHS to get such landslides fixed. Keep informed.
-
- Basically, what you're looking at is a long narrow strip of land
- between mountains and sea. Monterey is the biggest town, Then, going
- south, you find Pacific Grove, Carmel, Carmel Valley, Big Sur,
- and then not much til you get to San Simeon and Cambria.
-
- That said, you'll be looking at one of the most spectacularly
- beautiful parts of California. (Keep your camera handy and loaded.)
- There are lots of hotels, large and small in Monterey itself,
- and you may be able to get a corporate rate at some of them.
- There's a Doubletree in Monterey, for example.
- But the Monterey-Pacific Grove-Carmel-Big Sur area is also great for B&Bs
- and small inns. So you can get a larger hotel in a commercial area,
- a smaller hotel in a more scenic area, or a very small guest house.
- It depends on how much you want to spend. I suggest you call 800
- information for the number and talk to the California state
- tourist information service. They can send you comprehensive lists.
- Anyplace you call, ask for special rates or promotions. Times is
- tuff, and places may deal.
-
- Names I can suggest in various price ranges are the Monterey Inn,
- Spindrift Inn, Hotel Pacific, Highlands Inn, Mission Ranch,
- Adobe Lodge, Cypress Inn, Pine Inn, La Playa, Ventana, Post Ranch,
- Deetjen's Big Sur Inn, Inn at Spanish Bay, Carmel Valley Ranch
- Resort,.........endless.
-
- For places to eat, there is a similar variety. Try the Sardine
- Factory, Nepenthe, Fresh Cream, Abalonetti on the wharf,
- several nice little places in Cambria....heck, it's been too long
- since I've been there! I used to like a little place in Monterey
- called the Clock Garden, but I don't even know if it's still there.
- There is a deli on Ocean Avenue in Carmel that will help you put
- together a great picnic for a day on the beach.
-
- Anyway, there are tourist things you shouldn't miss. You'll need
- reservations for Hearst castle tour at San Simeon. The Monterey
- Aquarium is worth a visit. Call Esalen in Big Sur to find out when their
- famous cliffside mineral baths are open to the public. Walk through Point
- Lobos Park; my favorite spot is China Cove. Carmel Mission is worth
- a quick stop. Seventeen Mile Drive may or may not be worth
- the admission price to you. If it is to you, I think you
- get a credit for your admission at the bar at Del Monte Lodge, as I
- remember, if you want to stop for coffee. The "Poor Man's 17 Mile
- Drive " with no admission is a road that goes along the water
- in Pacific Grove. It goes past the secret Place To Stay
- called Asilomar Lodge, a state conference
- center that may have rooms when everyone else is full. Not all rooms
- are created equal however, so make sure you know what you're getting
- (some are really dormitories), but it's in a great location and very
- scenic. Pfeiffer Beach is hard to find, down a small, bad road on
- the right side off HWY One, but might be worth a stop to see
- crashing surf and huge rocks, very California....
-
- Have a great visit!
-
- Valerie Maslak
-
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