ULTIMATE GUIDE TO CALIFORNIA 2009
Los Angeles Times Travel editors’ picks, from Coronado City Beach north to Trinidad State Beach.
The Times Travel section's favorite California beaches
Dr. Beach's 2008 Top 10 beaches in America
When we think Colorado, we think Rockies. Missouri? The Mississippi River. And California? Well, we have so many fabulous physical features that it’s hard to choose one. But for our purposes, we’re concentrating on beaches, if only to rub it in to Colorado and Missouri. The staff has chosen its favorites, which appear below. This may not be the end-all and be-all, and you may even disagree. If you do, let us know at tellus@latimes.com.
Coronado City Beach
Coronado
Bookended by military stations and parading past the storied Hotel del Coronado, this nearly two-mile stretch of Pacific Ocean sand is a great place to hobnob with summer crowds or escape them. Either way, you'll have room to play. One of
Along Ocean Boulevard, (619) 522-7346 (lifeguard service); www.coronado.ca.us.
--Jane Engle
Windansea Beach
La Jolla
Not a state beach, not a county park, Windansea has nevertheless been on the Big Map of
6800 Neptune Place, La Jolla; www.sandiego.gov/lifeguards/beaches/windan.shtml
--Christopher Reynolds
Black's Beach
San Diego County
This is the great-granddaddy of California nudist beaches, reached from near the Torrey Pines Gliderport north of La Jolla. The beach is lined by a high cliff and the path down is treacherous, which help isolate Black's from gawkers and other forms of nonmarine lowlife. Part of the beach is in a state park, and the other part is governed by the city of San Diego. Its naturist status is only semiofficial; there are no toilet or trash facilities and lifeguards make only occasional patrols.
Torrey Pines; www.blacksbeach.org.
--Susan Spano
Aliso Beach
If you've moved many times, you develop touchstones; Aliso Beach is mine. Despite the Laguna Beach address, it's hardly artsy, pretentious or self-absorbed. Instead, it's the sort of place the Cleavers would have visited. Why? There's parking. There are restrooms. It's bordered by a wildlife refuge. You can have a bonfire. And best of all, it's accessible. You don't have to walk down 900 steps to get there. Lazy man's beach? Perhaps. But isn't being lazy what a day at the beach is all about?
31131 S. Pacific Coast Highway, Laguna Beach; (949) 923-2280, www.ocparks.com.
--Catharine Hamm
Crystal Cove State Park
South
I don't know that I've ever been on a bad beach in California. But I've never been on one with as many appealing qualities as Crystal Cove: tide pools, scenic bluffs and a family-friendly vibe. It's roomy too, though development on this stretch of land between Laguna Beach and Newport Beach has amped up the action in recent years. Still, on weekends, you'll have plenty of space for a blanket or a pop-up awning. No snack shops or bike rentals here, just a great rustic and pristine beach. Note that the walk from the parking lot to the beach can be long and steep. Kids have no trouble with it, but unsteady grandparents might.
Between Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar; (949) 494-3539, www.parks.ca.gov.
--Chris Erskine
East Beach
Santa Barbara
Creamy sand, a dozen courts for serious volleyball, arts and crafts shows on weekends, a perpetual parade of watchable people, the distant dreamy houses on the slopes above -- East Beach delivers all these things, along with a well-situated restaurant, the East Beach Grill (breakfast and lunch, starting at 7 a.m.), and adjacent sports facilities at the Cabrillo Pavilion Bathhouse (the handsome 1927 building at 1118 E. Cabrillo Blvd.). For the sporty and the slothful, this is atop the Santa Barbara list.
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