About This Experience
The ultimate California coastal road trip — 10 hours of Big Sur cliffs, Carmel-by-the-Sea charm, and the wild Pacific coast. Door-to-door in your ride with snacks and water onboard. Maximum 4 guests ensures an intimate, personal experience. $825
- All payments are final
- Door-to-door pickup
- Private group only
- Refreshments included
A Day in Coastal Charm & Scenic Drive
From the fog-kissed headlands south of San Francisco to the wild, cathedral cliffs of Big Sur, this ten-hour journey traces the most breathtaking stretch of California's coastline. You'll move through fishing villages, cypress-lined bluffs, and the storied lanes of Carmel-by-the-Sea, with every mile unfolding like a page from a travel memoir you never want to put down.
Devil's Slide Overlook, Highway 1, Pacifica
25 minYour first stop sets the tone for the entire day — a dramatic coastal bluff where the old Highway 1 once clung to the clifftop before erosion claimed it. You step out to a panorama of sea stacks, crashing surf, and the Santa Cruz Mountains tumbling into the Pacific. The former roadbed is now a beloved trail, and even from the overlook the scale of the California coast begins to sink in.
Pigeon Point Lighthouse, Pescadero
40 minStanding 115 feet tall on a rocky promontory in San Mateo County, Pigeon Point is one of the tallest lighthouses in the United States and one of the most photographed. Your guide walks you down to the bluff's edge where harbor seals haul out on the rocks below and the lighthouse keeper's cottages — now a hostel — add a lived-in warmth to the scene. The air here carries the particular salt-and-kelp perfume that belongs only to the Northern California coast.
Año Nuevo State Park Viewpoint, San Mateo County
30 minJust a few miles south of Pigeon Point, Año Nuevo's windswept dunes and offshore island form one of the most important elephant seal breeding grounds in the world. You pause at the state park boundary for a scenic stop and a brief story from your guide about the remarkable seasonal migrations that bring thousands of seals to this stretch of shore. Even from the road, the scale of the dune landscape and the raw, untamed coastline feels genuinely remote.
Santa Cruz Wharf & West Cliff Drive
50 minYou roll into Santa Cruz along West Cliff Drive, one of California's great urban coastal promenades, where surfers paddle out at Steamer Lane and pelicans glide in formation overhead. A stroll out onto the historic Municipal Wharf — the longest wooden pier on the West Coast — brings you face to face with barking sea lions lounging on the pilings below. Grab a coffee from one of the wharf's casual seafood stands and watch the surf break against the cliffs at Lighthouse Point.
Carmel-by-the-Sea — Ocean Avenue & Carmel Beach
75 minCarmel-by-the-Sea is a village that seems to have been designed by a committee of romantic novelists — stone cottages with fairy-tale rooflines, art galleries tucked into garden courtyards, and Ocean Avenue descending straight to one of the finest white-sand beaches in California. You wander at your own pace through the village before your guide leads you down to Carmel Beach, where Monterey cypress trees frame the dazzling crescent of sand. Lunch is yours to discover here — from the beloved Carmel Bakery to the cozy booths of Dametra Cafe on Ocean Avenue.
Point Lobos State Natural Reserve
60 minCalled 'the greatest meeting of land and water in the world' by the artist Francis McComas, Point Lobos sits just south of Carmel and rewards every superlative thrown at it. Your guide leads you along the North Shore Trail past Whalers Cove — where Chinese fishermen and later whalers once worked — to headlands where sea otters float in kelp beds and Brandt's cormorants nest on the offshore rocks. The color of the water here, shifting from jade to cobalt in the afternoon light, is something photographs rarely do justice.
Bixby Creek Bridge & Big Sur Cliffs, Highway 1
60 minThe final act of the day belongs to Big Sur — and it opens with Bixby Creek Bridge, the single most iconic image on the entire California coast. Your guide pulls over at the north viewpoint where the 1932 concrete arch spans a 260-foot gorge above the churning Pacific, and the Santa Lucia Mountains rise behind it in folds of chaparral and redwood. You continue a few miles south along the cliff-hugging highway to a second pullout above the sea, where the coast stretches in both directions without a building in sight — just rock, ocean, and the last warm light of the afternoon.
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