48 Hours Around Clear Lake

July 23, 2024

Clear Lake sunset with view of Mt Konocti
Clear Lake sunset with view of Mt Konocti

A warm welcome to Lake County! We’re delighted—but not surprised—you’ve stopped by, because this idyllic wine and watersports destination is coming into its own.

Toss a grape out of Napa or Sonoma and it may just land here, but those fancy neighbors feel a world away. Lake County puts the country in wine country, as we like to say, and to visit these parts is to encounter the wild heart of rural California. Here, you can breathe some of the cleanest air in the nation while cruising around the state’s largest freshwater lake—and never hit traffic. You can hop around to 30 family-owned wineries and drink Napa-quality Cabernet for a fraction of the price. You can roll up to a farmstand selling saffron-infused lemonade and pay on the honor system.

Mt Konocti overlooking Clear Lake
Mt Konocti overlooking Clear Lake

A dormant, hike-worthy volcano rises over it all, and the tight-knit communities ringing the lake offer quaint lodgings, farm-to-table restaurants, serene nature parks and quirky attractions. From the drive-in movie theater to the lunch box museum, the world’s largest geothermal energy complex to the annual Pear Festival, this place is a hoot.

If you’ve got two days to play, here’s how we suggest passing the time around Clear Lake for a Clearly Different getaway.

Day 1

Valley view from hiking trail
Valley view from hiking trail

Rise early to take full advantage of this nature lover’s haven, where fishing, hiking, biking, kayaking and birding are all easy to access. If you’re in Kelseyville, fuel up on caffeine and a croissant at Studebaker’s Coffee House, then consider a morning hike up Mount Konocti, a 4,299ft peak that dominates the lake’s eastern shore. From the Konocti County Park parking lot, a moderately challenging 3-mile hike leads you through an enchanting oak forest and past historical sites on the way to the volcano’s highest point, Wright Peak, from which you can glance over the enormous lake and surrounding agricultural land.

The shallow, ancient lake features more than 100 miles of shoreline and is the largest natural freshwater lake wholly within California (Tahoe is bigger, but it lies partly in Nevada). As you glance over the Clear Lake Basin, try to envision it 10,000 years earlier, when the Pomo tribe hunted these forests and fished the lake and creeks. Some of the farms, orchards and cattle ranches within view were established in the mid-1800s, when European settlers arrived, but today six tribes of Pomo descendants remain, as does an abundance of wildlife.

Bass Fishing on Clear Lake
Bass fishing on Clear Lake

Bear, deer and elk roam these fertile hunting grounds, and Clear Lake is known for some of the best bass fishing in the west. Anglers also cast their rods for catfish, bluegill, crappie and carp, both in the lake and on Cache Creek. Right on the creek, Clear Lake Campground is a great place for fishing enthusiasts to camp out, but it’s also an ideal morning stop for birders and kayakers. You’ll paddle alongside Anderson Marsh State Historic Park, a marshland set aside to protect artifacts of the Pomo people, while water fowl including ospreys, mallards, herons and grebes—which build floating nests in the early summer—glide past. On your way in or out, hit up Danny’s Roadside Kitchen for a delicious takeaway BBQ lunch, which you can feast on at the campground’s shaded, creekfront picnic tables.

Standup Paddleboarding_Blue Lakes_Lake County-California
Family on Blue Lakes in Upper Lake

In the afternoon, head north through the lakeside village of Nice for a stop at the famous and Clarke‘s Collectibles Lunchbox Museum. The former firehouse contains more than 700 vintage lunchboxes, along with old toys, dolls, carnival items and other memorabilia, and co-owner Deb Clarke loves to tell visitors about her collection, which she’s been building since 1985. If it’s a hot summer day, don’t hesitate to drive through Upper Lake and over to the Blue Lakes, a pair of deep spring-fed lakes where you can cool off. The Lodge at the Blue Lakes rents all sorts of water toys, including inner tubes, kayaks, paddleboards, hydrobikes, and even electric boats, which anyone can captain.

Conclude a perfect day with American fare at the Tallman Hotel restaurant, Blue Wing Saloon, where you can cozy up on the veranda and be serenaded by live music over dinner.

Day 2

Bird watching at Clear Lake State Park
Bird watching at Clear Lake State Park

Begin the day right with a stroll around a green space. There are nearly 30 parks in Lake County, along with two top-notch golf courses and innumerable farms and gardens, some of which are open to the public. At Peace & Plenty Farm, North America’s largest producer of saffron, you can wander the gardens and pick up farm flowers and other products at the honor-system farm stand. While you’re out that way, definitely check out Clear Lake State Park, a 560-acre lakefront park with a visitor center, a museum and lots to do, including camping, hiking, swimming and fishing. If you really want some tranquility, though, venture over to Mendocino National Forest, an expanse of nearly a million acres with no paved roads, where you can camp in a tent or cabin, hike rugged, primitive trails or off-road on an ATV.

Harbin Hot Springs Domes Pool
Harbin Hot Springs Domes Pool

Do lunch at the local favorite RED’S @ the Skyroom, an iconic airport restaurant featuring seasonal cocktail and salads and from-scratch California comfort food. Then cruise south through Lower Lake to the Calpine Geothermal Visitor Center, where you can tour the largest geothermal energy complex in the world and learn how its plants, The Geysers, generate clean, renewable energy for customers in 23 states (and also Canada and Mexico). Reward yourself for becoming informed with a dip in the thermal pools at Harbin Hot Springs, a clothing-optional institution with a spring-fed pool area, eight baths of varying temperatures, a sauna and a sundeck spread over 1700 acres. You can even stay the night in a tent or reserve a dome or hilltop cottage.

Alternatively, take the afternoon to visit wineries and vineyards, and taste some of the unique wines born of the region’s Mediterranean microclimates and rich volcanic soil. There are about 40 wineries dotting the hillsides around the lake, and their high-quality Cabernet and Sauvingon Blanc grapes often land in bottles with Napa labels on them. Around here the tasting fees are incredibly reasonable, though, and even those are usually waived if you purchase a bottle or two.

Group toasting wine at Wild Diamond
Group toasting wine at Wild Diamond

One of the most distinctive operations is Six Sigma, a historic ranch and winery spread across more than 4000 acres in Lower Lake, where you can sip on a full-bodied cab or an earthy tempranillo in the tasting room, mountain-bike the ranch’s trails or take the excellent vineyard tour in a converted military vehicle. Nearby Wild Diamond Vineyards and its new hilltop tasting village offer a collection of tables under shade canopies and surrounding what resembles a Las Vegas poolside cabana. The best part: you can sip astoundingly good reds while looking down on Napa (literally).

At Olof Cellars, the winemaker-led tastings are super informative and you can sample some of the excellent reds, or enjoy unique bottles of nebbiolo, barbera and petit Verdot. At Laujor Estate Winery, do the classic tasting and ask about what makes the relatively new grape-growing region, Red Hills AVA, so special. Continue on to Kelseyville proper, where Chacewater Winery & Olive Mill offers tastings of organic wine and olive oil, much of which is award-winning. Wrap the day up at the Shannon Mercantile, a buzzy new tasting room with 12 wines on tap, plus sandwiches, salads and charcuterie.

Saw Shop Dinner and Wine
Saw Shop Dinner and Wine

Take dinner at the Saw Shop Public House, where your farm-to-table California cuisine will pair perfectly with a mason jar cocktail. Then catch a drive-in flick at the Lakeport Auto Movies, or just saunter through the streets of downtown Kelseyville, the closest thing this old county has to an urban core. If you happen to be visiting during the Pear Festival, the streets will be alive with music, dancing, street vendors and agricultural exhibits, and you’ll have no choice but to catch the small-town magic.

Where To Stay

 

Exterior of Tallman Hotel
Tallman Hotel, Upper Lake

Tallman Hotel
An elegant Upper Lake hotel featuring a shady garden, walled-in pool, brick patios and classy porches.

Suites on Main
Two-story collection of bright, contemporary suites with full kitchens, a backyard garden and views of downtown Kelseyville.

Bed & Barrel at Stonehouse Cellars
Set on 145 acres of secluded countryside, this winery rents a room and a suite within a luxury home, as well as a stylish three-bedroom ranch.

Chacewater Farm House
A three-bedroom farmhouse—complete with a spacious enclosed porch and cozy fireplace—next door to the winery.

Huttopia Tent at night
Huttopia Wine Country

Huttopia Wine Country
A glamping resort with 95 luxury tent cabins, a café and a relaxing pool, all sprawled across the hillside of Six Sigma Ranch.

Book Your Trip