Monterey Peninsula: Baby, it’s cold outside, but kids don’t care
The few times I visited the Monterey Peninsula in California in the past, I went for work or with adult relatives. I thought Monterey was a little dull and Carmel a symbol of tourism gone awry. This time, I went with my kids and found a wonderland.
My husband and I had once tried booking a room in Monterey at the last minute years ago and ended up staying in a dive on some six lane highway where even the bathmat was nailed down to prevent thievery. Lovely.
This time with a little help from Kango and Expedia, we found the Country Garden Inn, a cute hotel, just 11 miles outside of Monterey in Carmel Valley. That seems a bit far, but I wanted to stay in Carmel Valley to escape the seaside fog and bask in some afternoon sun. The coast can be damp and cold, average temperature year round is a brisk 57 degrees. Good news, the fog ends about 5 miles out from the coast. Stay inland. Our room featured two twin beds and a queen in a separate room. It included breakfast with made-to-order waffles, soft boiled eggs, blueberry coffeecake, toast, etc. Best of all, it allowed a one night stay—really hard to find on a three day weekend. The setting was beautiful, the staff was old-world accommodating and the room was clean. The only negative was there was no thermostat in the room. We slept with four blankets each on our bed. It was either that or sweating next to a noisy heater. My son didn’t mind, he thought it was the best hotel ever because it had a soda vending machine with root beer. Who needs heat?
We succumbed to a Jose’s Mexican restaurant just one block off Cannery Row for lunch, good food and a friendly, service oriented staff. For dinner, we ate at the very funky, westernish-themed Running Rails restaurant in Carmel Valley. The ceiling was decorated with hundreds of worn cowboy boots, the walls were covered with all sorts of stuff including a couple of deer heads and a bear head, a few pelts, stained glass lamps, overalls, old signs and more, much more. It is the perfect place to play I Spy. It has so much wall décor, no one noticed the bear head until it was in the game and it still took the other players a long time to find it, despite really obvious hints like “it is a bear.” Food was fine, the wall décor and happy kid factor is a ten.
We started our first day with the Monterey Bay Aquarium. I thought we would spend two hours at the Aquarium and then wander around Cannery Row. We were there for four hours and left only because it was closing time. My daughter was engrossed by the environmental exhibits, my son ran joyfully from the Kelp Forest to the Rocky Shore to the Sea Otters exhibits and back again, my husband was mesmerized by the Outer Bay exhibit, and I had to be pulled away from the dancing jellyfish. It was a wonderland about the sea. I would skip the crowded special talks, but my husband and son liked them. TIP—book your tickets online to avoid a very long ticket line. If you book on the phone bring the confirmation number, it is quite difficult for them to find a name in their system.
Maybe it was the aquarium’s educational influence , but we loved Pt. Lobos State Reserve, it was our second wonderland. We took the trail to Sea Lion Point and lucked into a docent guided tour through the Cypress Grove lead by Jack. These walks were kid friendly, fairly flat trails, smashing , crashing waves and lots of wildlife. Did you know otters have a million hairs per square inch, the average human has 200,000 if we are lucky. The Sea Lion Point trail started with waves crashing up 40 feet into the air by the parking lot. From there we ambled along the coastal trail and spotted otters and seals playing in the surf as we walked. The sun lit the sea and we could clearly see the seals swimming underwater. It was the aquarium brought to life. We then followed the Cypress Trail loop back to our car. It got cold after the sun disappeared , bring wind-proof warm clothes and hot chocolate.
We then drove through Carmel. Still touristy, but the Hansel and Gretel architecture interested my kids, well o.k. only a little. I love beaches, but I think Carmel’s crescent shaped, white sand beach is exceptionally pretty. We spent about five minutes there before we went back to our car. More coats were needed, but then I already said that.
We then drove back to Monterey, parked near Dennis the Menace park, another Kango find, which my son described as a wonderland and my daughter described as awesome. This park has it all–play structures of all sizes, a real train engine, a climbing wall, swings, slides, a maze, and swinging bridge. It really is a great park. We had lunch at McDonald’s and then took a bike ride on the coastal trail.
This trail is designed for kids. It is nearly flat and it felt like every few feet was worthy of a stop. We started at the park, crossed the street and immediately had to explore Del Monte beach. Back on our bikes and another stop to watch the seals basking on rocks in the marina, another stop to look at old boats, another stop to look at more seals, then a stop to watch otters, a stop at a park to watch volley ball players, a stop to climb on a huge pile of rocks jutting out over the bay, a stop for tide pooling for anemones and starfish and then back along Cannery Row for hot chocolate and to the car. We could have spent a leisurely day just doing the bike ride. This short ride took about 2.5 hours. We were cold and ready to go home.
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4 Responses
Thanks for submitting a great article to the March 2008 Mom’s Blogging Carnival. You can see your story and all the others at:
http://www.gogirlfriend.com/reviews/moms-blogging-carnival-2-7760
[...] California: If you want to see fish without getting wet, head to the Monterey Bay Aquarium, described by Patricia on the Kango blog. While you’re there, check out the rest of the [...]
If you want to spend time in Monterey when the jackets are not required, go in September and/or October, if your schedule will allow it. Those two months have the warmest average temperatures of any other months throughout the year (mid to upper 60’s and higher). Bonus: the beaches and restaurants are not as crowded as in the summer!
I go a lot to California on vacation and always stay in holiday rentals. Next time I’m there I’ll follow your advice.