Mendocino Hotels

11:16AM March 25, 2007 3 Comments »

Alegria

Laura Ashley’s cabbage-rose design aesthetic lives on at Mendocino inns: lace curtains and flowered wallpaper are the norm. Some call it classic, I call it stale—but it matches the 19th-century gingerbread-cottage architecture. In the top-picks category, I’ve mostly listed places that break this stereotype, or at least do it really well.

Because of their age, many Mendocino inns have paper-thin walls. Choose an upstairs room whenever possible. All provide breakfast. Most have no TVs; if it matters, ask when you book.

Mendocino Motels, Inns, and B&Bs
My favorite place to stay in Mendocino is the Stanford Inn ($$$$). High on a hill, surrounded by lush flowering gardens and acres of rolling land on the banks of the Big River, the Stanford Inn is Mendocino’s only proper resort. Sure, the village’s tiny inns are cute, but you can’t make a move in them without running into other guests.

Not so here. The Stanford Inn’s rooms are in modern buildings with wood-burning fireplaces, knotty-pine-paneled walls, excellent soundproofing, and balconies overlooking gorgeous gardens and a horse paddock. The ocean lies in the distance, its roar never out of ear shot. The indoor swimming pool—a rarity on the Mendocino coast—is gigantic, perfect for laps, and open 24 hours. Town is a ten-minute walk away, but there are free bicycles to get you there faster. The inn’s organic gardens provide food for the vegetarian dining room, the Ravens, which makes a terrific breakfast. The Stanford Inn is also dog-friendly.

On the edge of the village, Alegria Oceanfront Inn & Cottages ($$$$) is Mendocino’s only inn with private beach access. Perched on a cliff above the mouth of the Big River, the converted house has rambling gardens and a series of interconnected decks overlooking the ocean. Some rooms have drop-dead water views. The decor is not overly fussy, and has an inviting, homey feel that’s instantly comfortable. Grown-up bohos love it. I do too. The service is just right—personable without being personal. Don’t skip the mouth-puckering lemon bars at tea time. Yum.

For the classic Mendocino experience, stay at the Joshua Grindle Inn ($$$–$$$$), Mendocino’s original B&B. An elegant 1869 Victorian house with gingerbread trim, it’s ideally located near the heart of the village on two lush acres of land with gorgeous gardens and distant ocean views. Service is superb: The charming innkeepers are there when you need them, then disappear when you don’t. Rooms are decorated with Americana country furnishings (think quilts and wing chairs); it’s predictable, but matches the house and manages to be pretty, but not overly frilly. Some rooms have fireplaces. Say hello to Charles and Cindy; they’re really nice people.

Bless the gay boys. Done up in a blue-and-white nautical theme, the John Dougherty House ($$$–$$$$) is one of Mendocino’s only inns that looks like it was styled by real decorators. And it was. Some of the design touches are too aggressively urban, like the flat-panel TVs, but thank God someone in Mendo finally had the cojones to break ranks with other innkeepers and import real style to this sleepy little town.

Likewise at the Packard House($$$$), which looks like something off the pages of Architectural Digest, with fabulous limestone bathrooms and contemporary design touches like sisal rugs and butter-soft leather club chairs that beautifully complement the classic lines of the Victorian house. You’ll find copies of Wallpaper, not Country Living, on the coffee table in the living room. ‘Nuf said.

I’d be remiss not to mention the MacCallum House ($$$–$$$$), which I swear must be run by the Mendocino mafia. Every year they grow bigger and bigger, with an ever-expanding inventory of rooms on multiple properties. They’re marketing geniuses, and they’re all over the web. But choose your room carefully. I don’t care for those in the main house; they’re attractively furnished, but they’re upstairs from a busy restaurant and have thin walls; and foot traffic up and down the stairs seems never to cease. Book the barn, one of the cottages, or the way-cool water tower. Skip the so-called luxury suites: they’re overpriced and in a modern house with little charm.

Looking for a rural retreat? Leave your Lancôme at home, and head 25 miles north of Mendocino, past the tiny hamlet of Westport, to Howard Creek Ranch ($–$$$). The last permanent structures before the beginning of the Lost Coast, the 1880 ranch house and carriage barn stand on 60 idyllic acres across the road from the ocean. This is the boonies; you may even see a bear. Rooms in the original farmhouse feel like a traditional B&B, but my first-choice rooms are in outlying buildings. Those in the carriage barn have stunning woodwork, fashioned of recycled old-growth redwood by the owner, a master carpenter. The decor is strictly Americana country. Don’t even consider bringing kids. The only drawback? Having to drive 15mi to Fort Bragg to eat dinner. But ask about other options when you book.

Rates are great at the Blue Heron Inn ($$). Upstairs from the Moosse Café, right in the Village of Mendocino, the inn has only three small rooms (two share a bath), but the beds are deliciously comfortable and have high-thread-count linens. Rooms are small, but at these prices, so what?

If you’re tight on cash but want the classic Mendocino experience of a Victorian B&B, try the Sea Gull Inn ($–$$). The rooms are compact and simply decorated with a few frilly touches. One teeny-tiny room, without a shower, costs a mere $65—a steal, considering the inn’s locations smack in the middle of the village. Continental breakfast comes to your door on a tray, a nice touch. The meandering gardens are perfect for dozing off with a book on your face.

Across Hwy 1 from the village, the Blackberry Inn ($$–$$$) has comfy rooms with traditional American furnishings like rag rugs, brass lamps, and tufted-velvet easy chairs. It’s basically a fancy motel with a façade of Old West-style storefronts (yes, they’re cheesy, but you don’t see them once you’re in your room). Many rooms have fireplaces (some gas, some wood-burning), and there are distant ocean views. The place is understated and quiet: I like it because it’s totally unfussy, and the innkeepers are nice like my grandmother. And the rates are damn good for Mendocino. Town is a 10-minutes walk away, or a two-minute drive.

I have mixed feelings about the Mendocino Hotel ($–$$$$). Town’s original hotel, it was built in 1878 and has some modest rooms with shared baths and thin walls, but they’re a bargain in pricy Mendocino, and the place is rich with history. There’s even a resident ghost (scaredy cats, fear not: she hangs out in the dining room). For thicker walls and modern plumbing, book one of the garden suites, built a few decades ago. Alas, they’re style free and provide no sense of place.

Fort Bragg Motels, Inns, and B&Bs
You’ll get more bang for your buck by staying in Fort Bragg, a blue-collar lumber town 10 miles north of Mendocino. Think of it as Mendo’s ugly stepsister.

The best reason to stay in Fort Bragg are: a.) you can’t afford Mendocino, or b.) Mendocino’s inns are full. Still, there are some good places. Here’s a selective list.

Of Fort Bragg’s B&B inns, the Weller House ($$–$$$) is by far the nicest. A beautifully restored 1886 Victorian, the inn has a grand floor-to-ceiling redwood-paneled ballroom on the third floor, where guests have breakfast in the morning, then congregate over backgammon boards in the evening. There’s a hot tub in the adjacent water tower, town’s highest structure. The decor is traditional Victorian; leave the kids home or they might break something.

I love the Rendezvous Inn ($–$$), if only because the best chef on the Mendocino coast cooks your breakfast (really). Rooms are on the second floor of a Craftsman-style house; on the main floor is the top restaurant on the Mendocino Coast (read my review). Rooms aren’t at all fancy, but they’re comfortable enough—if you’re not a fussy traveler. Out back there’s a cottage ($$$) that sleeps four, good for families.

Budgeteers: If you’re considering one of the motels on the suburban strip of Hwy 1 south of downtown, be forewarned that most do not have air conditioning, which means you’ll have to sleep with the windows open and endure truck noise. Of these cheap motels, the Super 8 ($) has totally generic rooms, but it has air conditioning.

On ocean-front bluffs north of downtown, there are three motels in a row. Choose the Hi-Sea Inn ($), the least pretentious of the lot. Who cares if your foam pillow is wafer thin when you’ve got the Pacific roaring right outside your window?

The best bargain on the entire north coast is the Colombi Motel ($); every unit has two rooms, either two bedrooms, or a bedroom and a kitchen—a boon for families on a budget.

If you have kids, the Holiday Inn Express ($$) has the most family-friendly amenities, chief among them a swimming pool. Otherwise, you’ve seen this motel in a hundred different American cities.

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Mendocino Restaurants

11:08AM March 25, 2007 4 Comments »

Mendocino

At the top of everyone’s list of places to dine in Mendocino, Café Beaujolais ($$$$) put Mendo on the culinary map. Originally opened as a breakfast restaurant in 1977 by now-celeb chef Margaret Fox, Beaujolais became a dinner house after the economic crash of the mid-1980s forced visiting guests to economize by eating the breakfast provided at their B&Bs. As a survival measure, Fox began serving dinner instead—and did a damn good job, too. She sold the restaurant in 2000, along with her recipes, which remain the backbone of the kitchen.

Beaujolais’ monochromatic urban-chic dining room is a far cry from the Laura Ashley–Victorian style of the old days, but the place remains an institution. Incorporating organic produce and free-range meats, the Cal-American menu mixes regional domestic styles and ingredients, as in the sautéed prawns with corn cakes or pan-roasted duck with buttermilk spaetzle and Bing cherry sauce. The food is solidly good, though detractors claim that creative drive has lately been lacking. The restaurant is on its third owners since Margaret Fox, and the jury is still out. I’ll dine here again this spring and update you then. But for now, it’s totally worth a visit, if only once. Reservations essential. Dinner only.

Beaujolais is the most famous, but it is not the best. That honor belongs to the fabulous Rendezvous Inn ($$$$). Protégé of Georges Blanc, the legendary Michelin-3-star French chef, master culinarian Kim Badenhop continues his mentor’s tradition of excellence at the Rendezvous Inn. Firmly rooted in French technique but tempered by a California sensibility, the menu changes with the seasons: When there’s a tasting menu built around seasonal ingredients such as crab or wild mushrooms, order it without hesitation. If you want Caesar salad and prime rib, go somewhere else. Inside a converted Craftsman-style house with floor-to-ceiling redwood paneling, the dining room is long on charm but it’s drafty; ladies, wear something that covers your shoulders. Dinner only. Reservations essential.

In the redwood-paneled Victorian dining room at the MacCallum House ($$$$), tables are a bit close together (book one on the wall or outside on the veranda), but the consistently good Euro-Cal cooking makes up for the tight seating. Expect hearty roasted meats like lamb and duck, house-made gnocchi, and fresh seafood. Chef Alan Kantor prides himself on using organic, sustainably farmed ingredients. (Yes, everyone else in Mendocino does too, but he’s one of the pioneers.) Great breakfasts too ($$). No lunch. Reservations essential.

The cooking is heartfelt and earthy at Moosse Café, with soul-satisfying dishes like chicken pot pies, and macaroni-and-cheese at lunch ($$); or braised short ribs, and saffron-rich cioppino at dinner ($$$$). The kick-back airy dining room has the friendly vibe of a friend’s house. On Monday nights, there’s a 3-course prix-fixe for $20 and no corkage fee—a steal ’round here.

The Ravens ($$$), at the Stanford Inn, elevates vegetarian cooking and healthful eating to high art. Who knew you could make veggies taste so much like…well, meat? Much of the produce (organically farmed, of course) comes from the gardens outside. In the morning, the sun-drenched dining room is the setting for Mendocino’s best breakfast. (So what if there’s not a strip of bacon in sight? There’s real maple syrup on the table.) No lunch.

Surprise, surprise: there’s a stellar French-Thai restaurant in Fort Bragg, called Nit’s Café ($$$–$$$$). The place is tiny, so make reservations. Dinner only, closed Sunday and Monday.

The best bargain for lunch and dinner in the village of Mendocino is at Mendocino Café ($$–$$$$). The diverse menu blends American, Asian, and Mexican cooking, from steak and seafood dishes to Thai burritos and fish tacos. When it’s warm, sit on the deck surrounded by hundreds of flowering orange-and-yellow nasturtiums. Lovely.

When cocktails are as important as dinner, head to Patterson’s Pub ($$), an Irish bar with good pub grub in the middle of the village. And it serves till 11pm on weekends, which may sound like nothing to a city slicker, but around here? Unheard of.

Fill up on organic-veggie burritos at Lu’s Kitchen ($), a tiny order-at-the-window shack set back from the street; outside seating only. Don’t tell her I told you about her—she dislikes me for calling her place a shack. But really, it is. (Sorry, Lu.) Arrive by 5pm. 45013 Ukiah St

The burgers are awesome at hard-to-find Mendo Burgers ($), a ratty little lunch counter set in a pretty little garden: order inside, but sit outside. Great hand-cut fries and milkshakes too. Come before 5pm; closed Weds.

On an icy afternoon, warm up over a bowl of chowder at the bar of the Mendocino Hotel ($), the ideal spot when you’re shopping in the village and failed to wear a proper jacket. Skip the dining room.

Stock up on picnic supplies, grab-and-go prepared foods, staples, and wine and beer at Harvest Market at Mendosa’s ($), which opened about a year ago. Locals are thrilled not to have to drive to Fort Bragg anymore to buy groceries. Alternatively, for sandwiches to take on a picnic, head to itty-bitty Mendocino Market ($).

In Fort Bragg, overlooking the water at Noyo Harbor, Chapter and Moon ($$) serves folksy American cooking like chicken and dumplings, and meatloaf and mashed potatoes in a sweet little whitewashed dining room with low ceilings and exposed wooden tables. If you’re on a budget, you’ll appreciate the inexpensive entrée prices, but watch out for the pricey appetizers.

For thin-crust pizza, microbrews, and local wine, head to Piaci Pub and Pizzeria ($–$$) in Fort Bragg. Avoid peak hours, or plan to wait.

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Mendocino - The 71Miles Travel Guide

6:46PM March 23, 2007 37 Comments »

At a Glance: John’s Favorites

  • Lodging: Stanford Inn, Joshua Grindle Inn, John Dougherty House
  • Vacation Rentals: From Coast Getaways in Mendocino
  • Restaurants: Rendezvous Inn, Nit’s Cafe, Moosse Café
  • See & Do: Wandering the village; paddling Big River; Mendo Coast Botanical Garden.
  • Slideshow: Watch the video overview.

Introduction

Thank God for the art freaks. In the 1950s, Mendocino was falling apart, its tiny New England-style saltbox cottages decaying, the entire 19th-century fishing village nearly abandoned. Enter the bohemians, who fixed up the town and made it what it is today: a storybook village of rose-covered cottages, surrounded by white picket fences, on a rocky headland jutting into the icy-blue Pacific.

No place on the California coast conjures the romance of Mendocino. Fog swirls like evanescing ghosts. The scent of jasmine and lavender floats on the salt air, while the ocean roars in the distance. Front-yard gardens explode in a riot of colors and fragrances.
When I’m beginning a new love affair, I book a stay in Mendocino to seal the deal.

Mendo is not without its problems. On summer weekends, crowds turn the quiet village into a Disney-esque parody of itself, earning it the nickname ‘Spendocino’. The freaks are getting harder to spot: many of them sold out long ago, making way for second- and third-home owners, whose houses stand empty most of the year. Land prices have shot through the roof, and families are few and far between. Mendocino has become a victim of its own charm.

But life still moves at half tempo (God forbid you ever need an ambulance in this town), and art remains the cultural currency. There’s not a single billboard, fast-food joint, or cell-phone tower for miles around. And because the whole town is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and the surrounding lands protected in a series of state parks, nothing is going to change anytime soon, at least visually. Just remember to bring your platinum card.

Why Go?

  • Fire up your romance in a coast-side hideaway.
  • Ride the ebbing tide up Big River in an outrigger canoe.
  • Roast marshmallows at a beach bonfire.
  • Fall asleep to the ocean’s roar.
  • Ditch your cell phone.

How Far?

  • Three hours from the Golden Gate Bridge.

Drawbacks?

  • Sky-high lodging prices; to economize, stay in Fort Bragg.
  • Weekend crowds; don’t even think of coming without reservations.
  • Pea-soup fog is the norm; pack layers.

See & Do

If you’ve never seen it, spend a day exploring the village. A good starting point: the Ford House Visitors Center, where you can fuel up on hot cider—an inviting detail on a foggy day—and check out a scale model of town in 1890. Ask about guided walks in nearby Mendocino Headlands State Park. Pick up a map too, if you want, but part of the fun of visiting Mendo is finding your own way as you explore the sleepy side streets. Fear not: it’s (nearly) impossible to get lost (for very long), since the ocean surrounds you on three sides.

On summer weekends, the Kelley House Museum hosts walking tours of town for ten bucks. Call ahead. The museum’s early-California collection entices history buffs and bookworms, but if you’ve got kids in tow, expect them to whine with boredom if you linger.

Seek out the tiny Kwan Tai Temple. Climb the rickety wooden staircase and peer through the glass to see the frozen-in-time 19th-century Taoist altar. It takes only seconds to see, but it’s compellingly eerie and collars me every time I see it.

Shopping is huge in Mendocino. Of the arty shops, I most love visiting Color and Light; it’s a working artist’s studio, and the stained-glass work is gorgeous. At the Village Toy Store, browse a huge selection of kites and wooden toys and games that don’t require any batteries—a godsend for harried parents who inevitably forget to buy the proper accessories for their kids’ toys. Astronomy geeks and birders: Don’t miss Out of This World, where you can drool over a fancy pair of binoculars or a new telescope; there’s a cool selection of science games too. If you like to make your own jewelry, check out the awesome selection of glass beads at Rubaiyat Beads.

The epicenter of town’s art scene, the Mendocino Art Center hosts cool exhibits, scores of classes, open studio tours, live performances, and second-Saturday gallery walks. Check the site for current offerings, or pop in while you’re here—but don’t be surprised if nobody can answer your impromptu queries; the artists here are myopic and usually can’t help with broader questions about the center.

The Mendocino Theatre Company puts on some damn good shows in the art center’s 90-seat black-box theatre. If there’s a show up while you’re here, book tickets.

Wish you could draw better? Visit the World of Suzi Long, a tiny shop in an old redwood water tower, and take a one-day landscape-drawing class. The 90-minute course costs $35; throw in another $35 for a pocket-sized sketchpad and watercolor set, and start painting pictures of the places you visit during your travels—very nifty indeed. Call ahead; this is strictly by reservation.

The town’s quiet streets dovetail into the windswept prairies of Mendocino Headlands State Park, where rocky bluffs rise from the surf. If it’s warm and lovely outdoors, bring a picnic, then trek along easy walking trails to watch the changing light on the ocean. This is the place to watch the sunset in Mendocino. In spring, take a guided wildflower walk (ask at the Ford House Visitor Center). In winter, the whale-watching is superb, but the season ends in early April and won’t resume again till November.

The longest undeveloped tidal estuary in Northern California runs 8.3 miles from the mouth of the Big River, which opens to the sea just south of the village. Rent a canoe, kayak, or (best of all) a redwood outrigger canoe from Catch a Canoe and Bicycles, Too!, and float upriver with the tide. The further inland you float, the quieter and warmer it gets. The wildlife viewing is spectacular. At present a debate rages about whether dogs should be allowed on the beach; if you’re bringing a pooch, read on.

If you’d rather laze on the sand of Big River State Beach at the river’s mouth, don’t park at the main parking area on the inland side of Highway 1; instead park by the Presbyterian Church on Main Street and take the stairs down. In the evening, bring wood and light a bonfire (buy firewood at Harvest Market at Mendosa’s, next to the hardware store on Lansing Street).

If you’re like most, you’ll walk a lot in Mendo. Soothe your aching gams in a hot tub at Sweetwater Spa. Tubs are available by the hour; book massages appointments in advance. Skirt-and-sweater travelers, take note: this isn’t Elizabeth Arden. Attendants don’t wear white lab coats, they wear Indian print skirts. (Bring your own spleef.)

State parks surround the village of Mendocino. South of town, divers and kayakers favor Van Damme State Park, but don’t overlook the fascinating pygmy forest, where a layer of hardpan beneath the topsoil prevents trees from growing tall, yielding bonsai-like redwoods and pines, decades old but barely a foot high. Take the 3-1/2-mile-long Fern Canyon Trail. If you’d rather explore sea caves than miniature forests, contact Kayak Mendocino; no experience necessary. Kayak tours cost $50.

Point Cabrillo Lighthouse sits on a 300-acre wildlife preserve. It’s picturesque, but the one at Point Arena is way more dramatic, and you can climb up that one (for more, see our Sonoma-Mendo Coast guide). Still, the photo ops are good at Point Cabrillo, especially if you’re into lighthouses. It’s a couple miles north of the village.

Five miles north of the village, Jug Handle State Reserve is famous for its ecological staircase, where five wave-cut terraces rise like stair steps, each one 100ft higher than the next, and 10,000 years apart in geological evolution. (One of the steps has a pygmy forest, but the one at Van Damme is better.) Jug Handle mostly appeals to rock geeks; otherwise it’s just a lovely, 2-1/2-mile-long walk through the woods to a rocky promontory and beach with drop-dead ocean views.

The money shots at Russian Gulch State Park are the Devil’s Punchbowl, a collapsed sea cave with ocean water swirling round and round; and the ‘blow hole,’ a 100ft-wide, 60ft-deep hole in a rock outcropping, where you can peer inside and watch the ocean churn and roil. Nearby are critter-packed tide pools. Check the tides: come at high tide for the blow hole, low tide for the tide pools. The park is two miles north of the village.

It’s worth a ten-mile drive to visit (some of) the sights in Fort Bragg, the blue-collar lumber town north of Mendo. The last of the mills closed a few years ago, leaving the town to reinvent itself. Downtown is cute, but you have to navigate through suburban sprawl to get there. Alas, Fort Bragg is the only town on Highway 1 north of the Golden Gate where you’ll spot Golden Arches.

Into gardening? You’ll drop your jaw at the stunning Mendocino Coast Botanical Gardens, one of the most spectacular botanical gardens in Northern California. From wild and fragrant pine forests, to lush rhododendron dells, to wildflower-studded fields of native grasses, these gardens are among the most beautiful I’ve seen, partly because of their location on cliffs above the Pacific—the ocean’s roar is never out of ear shot. Check the website to learn what’s in bloom.

If you’ve got kids, a trip on the Skunk Train is a must. Originally a logging train through the redwoods, trains run from Fort Bragg into the woods along the Noyo River, ultimately reaching Willits. The open-topped cars are a treat on a warm day. Unless you’re a train fanatic, the ride gets a bit monotonous; the 3-1/2-hour roundtrip to Northspur (the half-way point to Willits) is plenty long. Trains leave at 10am. Make reservations.

Go wine-tasting in tiny Westport, 15 miles north of Fort Bragg. Pacific Star Winery sits high atop an ocean-view bluff, a gorgeous spot for a picnic (b.y.o.). The Italian varietals
are surprisingly good, and tastings are free. Best of all, the view. Bring your camera. And do not get hammered—you’ll need your wits about you to navigate curvy Hwy 1.

Road-trippers and off-road aficionados: Get a taste of the Lost Coast, that wild stretch of land that juts like a burl off the California coast, north of Mendocino and south of Eureka. The terrain is so rugged that Caltrans couldn’t successfully build a road through, which is why coastal Hwy 1 cuts inland and ends at Hwy 101 in Leggett. (Hence the coast being ‘lost.’)

Much of the land is protected in wilderness areas and state parks, and it’s unlike anyplace else in California. Mountains rise a mile straight up from the sea. Landslides are the norm. If you want to disappear, this is the place.

Here’s the itinerary for your teaser trip to the Lost Coast. Pack a picnic basket and head 30 minutes north of Fort Bragg. Continue to where Hwy 1 cuts inland; at mileage-marker 90.88, turn onto County Rd 431 and follow the rutted dirt road atop high cliffs six miles to Usal Beach Campground, where you can spot roaming elk and picnic by the beach. The road is graded once annually, in spring. Take it slow! To travel past the campground, you’ll need a high-clearance vehicle and a chainsaw. No kidding. Don’t take this road in winter or during rainy season. Nervous drivers: Forget you read any of this.

For more adventures in and around Mendocino, check out Mendocino Fun—they manage an expansive list of fun things to do. GoMendo also has a good list of events.

Mendocino and Fort Bragg Restaurants

There are some great mid- and high-end dining around Mendo, but the local culinary landscape doesn’t change often. Here’s a quick rundown.

At the top of everyone’s list of places to dine in Mendocino, Café Beaujolais ($$$$) put Mendo on the culinary map. And it’s totally worth a visit, if only once. Beaujolais may be the most famous, but the best cooking is at Rendezvous Inn ($$$$) in Fort Bragg. Firmly rooted in French technique but tempered by a California sensibility, the menu changes with the seasons. At the MacCallum House ($$$$), expect hearty Euro-Cal cooking like roasted meats, lamb and duck, house-made gnocchi, and fresh seafood. Great breakfasts too.

The cooking is heartfelt and earthy at Moosse Café ($$$–$$$$), with soul-satisfying dishes like macaroni-and-cheese and braised short ribs. The Ravens ($$$–$$$$), at the Stanford Inn, elevates vegetarian cooking and healthful eating to high art. It also makes Mendocino’s best breakfast.

Thank God the only midprice restaurant in the village of Mendocino is good: the Mendocino Café ($$–$$$) blends American, Asian, and Mexican. When cocktails are as important as dinner, head to Patterson’s Pub ($$), an Irish bar with good pub grub.

Fill up on organic-veggie burritos at Lu’s Kitchen ($), a tiny order-at-the-window shack with outside seating. The burgers are awesome at hard-to-find Mendo Burgers ($). Stock up on picnic supplies, grab-and-go prepared foods, staples, and wine and beer at Harvest Market at Mendosa’s ($), on Lansing St. Or pick up sandwiches at itty-bitty Mendocino Market ($).

Surprise, surprise: there’s a stellar French-Thai restaurant in Fort Bragg, called Nit’s Café. ($$$–$$$$). Also in Fort Bragg, overlooking the water, Chapter and Moon ($$) serves folksy American cooking like chicken and dumplings. For thin-crust pizza, microbrews, and local wine, head to Piaci Pub and Pizzeria ($–$$).

Read full-length reviews of my favorite Mendocino and Fort Bragg restaurants.

Restaurant Prices

  • $ = entrées under $10
  • $$ = $10 to $15
  • $$$ = $16 to $22
  • $$$$ = $22 and up

Mendocino Bars

On a cold and foggy evening, cozy up to the bar at the 1878 Mendocino Hotel and surround yourself with dark-wood paneling and Oriental rugs. Keep your eyes peeled for the resident ghost.

The Irish-style Patterson’s Pub ($) is a cozy, middle-of-the-road spot for cocktails—not too fancy, not too shabby—safe enough to bring your parents, but also good for buds who want to get hammered and watch the game.

Inside a lovely Victorian inn surrounded, the Gray Whale Bar at the MacCallum House is an atmospheric spot for wine and appetizers, especially on the window-lined veranda overlooking the gardens outside.

Mendocino looks pretty on the outside, but scratch the surface and you’ll find a surprising number of dirt bags. And they all seem to get wasted at Dick’s Place. It’s not for me, but if you like to drink till you black out, stumble on in and join the party.

Mendocino Inns, B&Bs, & Hotels

I’ve seen all of Mendocino’s inns and B&Bs, but have only listed the inns I like best.

My favorite place to stay in Mendocino is the Stanford Inn ($$$$). On the edge of the village, Alegria Oceanfront Inn & Cottages ($$$$) is Mendocino’s only inn with private beach access. For the classic Mendocino experience, book the Joshua Grindle Inn ($$$–$$$$), town’s original B&B.

The John Dougherty House ($$$–$$$$) is one of Mendocino’s only inns that was styled by real decorators. Likewise the Packard House ($$$$), which looks like something off the pages of Architectural Digest. For a rural retreat, get off the grid at Howard Creek Ranch ($–$$$).

The rates are great at the Blue Heron Inn ($$) and the beds are deliciously comfortable. If you’re tight on cash but want the classic Mendocino experience of a Victorian B&B, try the Sea Gull Inn ($–$$).

I have mixed feelings about the Mendocino Hotel ($–$$$$), but some of the rooms are a bargain in pricey Mendocino—never mind the (friendly) ghost. Across Hwy 1 from the village, the Blackberry Inn ($$–$$$) has comfy rooms with traditional American furnishings and fireplaces.

Read full-length reviews of my favorite Mendocino inns.

Fort Bragg Motels, Inns, and B&Bs

You’ll get more bang for your buck in Fort Bragg, a blue-collar lumber town 10 miles north of Mendocino. Think of Fort Bragg as Mendo’s ugly stepsister. The best reasons to stay here are: a.) you can’t afford Mendocino, or b.) Mendocino’s inns are full. Here’s a selective list of Fort Bragg properties.

Budgeteers: If you’re considering one of the motels on the suburban strip of Hwy 1 south of downtown, be forewarned that most do not have air conditioning, which means you’ll have to sleep with the windows open an endure truck noise. Of these cheap motels, the Super 8 ($) has totally generic rooms, but indeed has air conditioning.

The best bargain on the entire north coast is the Colombi Motel ($); every unit has two rooms, either two bedrooms, or a bedroom and a kitchen—a boon for families on a budget. And it’s off the main drag. For the most family-friendly amenities, stay at the Holiday Inn Express ($$), which has an indoor swimming pool.

On ocean-front bluff north of downtown, there are several motels in a row with the ocean roaring right outside the back door. The Beachcomber ($$) is my first choice. It’s a bit fancy-pants for a motor lodge, but service is good and oh! those views.

Of Fort Bragg’s B&B inns, the Weller House ($$–$$$) is by far the nicest. A beautifully restored 1886 Victorian, the inn has a grand floor-to-ceiling redwood-paneled ballroom on the third floor, where guests congregate over backgammon boards. There’s a hot tub in the adjacent water tower, town’s highest structure. The decor is traditional Victorian; leave the kids home or they might break something.

I love the Rendezvous Inn ($–$$), if only because the best chef on the Mendocino coast cooks your breakfast (really). Rooms are upstairs in a Craftsman-style house. They’re nothing fancy (at all), but they’re clean and have the basic comforts. Out back there’s a freestanding cottage ($$$) that sleeps four, good for families.

Hotel Prices

  • $ = standard double under $100
  • $$ = $100 to $200
  • $$$ = $200 to $300
  • $$$$ = $300 & up

More Mendocino Hotels

More Mendocino trips, hotels, hiking and restaurants.



Book a Custom Trip With John

10:29PM March 6, 2007 1 Comment »

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Need help planning your trip? Whether you’re looking for a special-occasion getaway with your sweetheart, or the perfect week-long family roadtrip, I’ll craft a custom itinerary, right down to the last detail.

Trip-planning is my specialty. Not only have I written all the California content on 71Miles, I’m also a former luxury-hotel concierge and member of Les Clefs d’Or, the Paris-based union of the world’s elite concierges. I’ve covered California for Lonely Planet, Conde Nast, Fodor’s, Sunset, San Francisco magazine, and local and national television networks, including KRON4, ABC7 and CNN. I know California, and I know whom to call to get things done right.

Here’s how it works: We consult via telephone, then I tap into my black book of contacts to secure you the best tables, hotel suites, fancy cars—whatever you need. I charge by the hour. In exchange, you get to bounce around ideas with a local expert; tap into my personal list of contacts; and relieve yourself of the headaches associated with the nitty-gritty of planning a trip.

To set up a time to talk, email me at John [at] 71miles.com. It would be my pleasure to help.