UNITED STATES  |  Monterey, California Travel Guide
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
images
5 Of 5

Big Sur

One of the world's most scenic coastal drives, Big Sur, California
Photo:
 

Big Sur

The Big Sur Coast is a spectacular, 90-mile stretch of coastline that extends from the southern tip of Carmel Bay (a little over 2 miles south of Carmel) to the tiny coastal settlements of Big Sur, Lucia, Gorda, and on to San Simeon. Indeed, Big Sur—which derives its name from “El Grande Sur,” Spanish for “Big South”—offers in it one of the world’s most scenic coastal drives, with dramatic cliffs overhanging sandy beaches and small, rocky coves, and the rugged Santa Lucia Mountains plunging directly into the sea. The highway here—Highway 1, built in 1937 and designated California’s first scenic route—clings precariously to the coastline much of the way, dipping and climbing and weaving madly around the coastal hills, treating the motorist-sightseer to endless sweeping vistas of the ocean.

The Big Sur Coastal Drive

The Big Sur drive is in fact quite splendid from the moment it sets out, passing by wilderness reserves and state parks, secluded beaches and coves, small, wooded canyons and valleys, and numerous vista-point turnouts all along the highway, most with superb, breathtaking views. There are also a handful of spectacular, single-span concrete bridge along the highway, including Rocky Creek Bridge and Bixby Bridge, the latter with a 320-foot span, perched 260 feet above the creek bed.

For campers and hikers there is no dearth of opportunities here, at the 159,000-acre Ventana Wilderness, the 2,154- acre Andrew Molera State Park, the 810-acre Pfeiffer-Big Sur State Park, and the 1,700-acre Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park, which also has in it the scenic Saddle Rock Fall, the only waterfalls on the California coast that plunge directly into the sea.

Also along the way are the Big Sur Village, situated in the Big Sur Valley; the exclusive Ventana Resort and Ventana Country Inn, set on a wooded hill overlooking the ocean; Nepenthe a landmark restaurant and bar-cum-gift shop that was originally built in 1944 as the honeymoon cottage of Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth; Deetjun’s Big Sur Inn, a Norwegian country-style inn; the Henry Miller Memorial Library, devoted to the works of the one-time Big Sur resident writer and artist; and the Coast Gallery, housed in two large redwood water tanks and exhibiting original watercolors of Henry Miller.

On the highway, too, near the southern end of the Big Sur coast, are the small communities of Lucia, Pacific Valley, and Gorda, all with minimal facilities.

Array
Last updated December 26, 2010
Posted in   United States  |  Monterey
No votes yet
Explore the Destination
Amenities and Resources
Trending Themes:

Guides to Popular Ski Resorts

  • Ischgl is a small mountain village turned hip ski resort, with massive appeal among the party-hearty young crowds. It is... Read More

  • Andorra la Vella is its own little world, and not just because it’s a 290-square-mile independent principality (a fifth the... Read More

  • Bariloche (officially San Carlos de Bariloche) is the place to be seen. It is to Argentina what Aspen is to the... Read More

  • Aspen is America's most famous ski resort. And that's an understatement. For, as a ski complex, Aspen is unsurpassed. Its... Read More

  • Zermatt is a small but glamorous mountain resort town, with a population of approximately 5,700. It is one of Switzerland's... Read More

  • St. Moritz is a glitzy, alpine resort town in the celebrated Engadin Valley of Switzerland, with huge notoriety as the... Read More

  • Lake Tahoe is the premier lake resort of America, and the largest alpine lake in all of North America. It is an absolutely... Read More

  • St. Anton, Sankt Anton am Arlberg in German, is Austria's premier ski-bum resort! It's actually a small village cum... Read More

  • Kitzbühel, a small, Tyrolian resort town in the Kitzbüheler Alps, comes with international renown and huge snob appeal, and... Read More

 

Copyright © 2010-2013 Indian Chief Travel Guides. Images tagged as (cc) are licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA license.