Latest trek: Savoring a lakefront yurt near Santa Barbara

cachuma While working on a new book about California’s Central Coast, I recently visited Cachuma Lake in Santa Barbara’s Santa Ynez Valley and stayed in a lakefront yurt. It’s an idyllic spot tucked along Highway 154, one of the prettiest drives in California.

Here’s a link to the story I wrote for Sunday’s LA Times Travel Section, which also ran this photo gallery and handy info guide, too.

This summer I’ll be spending more time in Central California and also am looking forward to the release of my newest book, The Wonder Years: Portraits of Athletes Who Never Slow Down, which is being published by Chronicle Books.

The book is a collection of stories and stunning photographs by Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Rick Rickman (my co-author), who has been the official photographer for the National Senior Games for many years. The Senior Games arrive on the West Coast for this first time Aug. 1-15 and will be held on the Stanford University campus. You can read an excerpt from The Wonder Years here.

Savoring the holiday weekend in SoCal

pier
I did an interview this week with LAist Editor Zach Behrens, who asked about SoCal getaways for the holiday weekend and my new project, the Seal Beach Daily website.

On long weekends I like to escape up the coast or plan a kickback retreat to the desert. But this tumultuous season of fires, storms and economic meltdowns feels like a good time to stick closer to home. So I suggested a handful of day trips. Among them: the California landscape exhibit at the Long Beach Museum of Art. Orange County’s timeless Crystal Cove. Southern California’s other Wine Country. Bargain hunting in LA’s Fashion District.

Browse the entire LAist interview here.

More buzz: Check out Shelby Grad’s nice take today on the LAist interview at the LAT’s LA Now blog. Michelle Vranizan Rafter also writes about Seal Beach Daily at the excellent Word Count website.

**Photo of the Seal Beach Pier by Kate Cohen/Seal Beach Daily

Excerpt: Take this drive and love it


Author and world traveler Pico Iyer has it just right: You’ve got to head to the hills when you’re roaming Central California. These are the same magical hills where the Queen of England’s horse whisperer built his ranch and the dethroned King of Pop created his Neverland. Where the world’s best bicyclist brought his team each winter to train for the Tour de France. Where Davy Crockett traded in his coonskin cap for a vineyard and country inn. Where two middle-aged guys named Miles and Jack careened Sideways onscreen chasing women, swilling pinot noir, and transforming a string of bucolic towns into tourist hubs.

Cowboys and celebrities, retirees and wine growers, oenophiles and ostriches; they all coexist peacefully in this corner of Santa Barbara County, a world of sprawling ranches and rolling hillsides quilted with vineyards and surrounded by the Santa Ynez and San Rafael mountains.

In Great Escapes: Southern California, I explore the Santa Ynez Valley in a chapter called “Take This Drive and Love It.”

“The beauty of driving through the mountains behind Santa Barbara is that it’s a perfect place and way for getting lost,” says Iyer, who grew up in Santa Barbara and shares a first-person passage in the chapter. “And whatever you stumble into will have the feeling of a rare discovery that not so many people know about.”

You can easily drive from one country town to the next along a pair of country roads (CA 154 and 246) that ramble across the valley and crisscross near Santa Ynez. The 2004 movie Sideways put Central California’s wine country on the map of popular interest after so many years in the shadow of Napa and Sonoma.

Less well known is that the Santa Ynez Valley also is an equestrian paradise, even though Seabiscuit, an Academy Award nominee in 2005, was filmed here, too. From Kentucky Derby winners to dainty miniature show horses, more than 30 equine breeds thrive on the valley’s ranches and family farms. As Gigi Meyer noted in The New York Times, “It’s hard to say which valley town is the horsiest.”

Or which of the valley’s many wineries is the tastiest.

Those are questions you’ll want to ponder for yourself as you wind your way north from Santa Barbara along Highway 154 on one of the prettiest drives Southern California has to offer.