Johna’s San Francisco Bay Islands Guidebook

Johna
Johna’s San Francisco Bay Islands Guidebook

San Francisco Bay Islands

– a venue for accomplished musicians provide live music and fine dining – un lugar para músicos expertos que ofrecen música en vivo y buena comida – un lieu pour les musiciens accomplis fournir de la musique en direct et une cuisine raffinée
18 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Fenix Restaurant and Bar
919 4th St
18 現地メンバーのおすすめ
– a venue for accomplished musicians provide live music and fine dining – un lugar para músicos expertos que ofrecen música en vivo y buena comida – un lieu pour les musiciens accomplis fournir de la musique en direct et une cuisine raffinée
– Eat, drink, sport, and great food! – Comer, beber, hacer, deporte y buena comida! – Mange, bois, sport et bonne bouffe!
6 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Flatiron
724 B Street
6 現地メンバーのおすすめ
– Eat, drink, sport, and great food! – Comer, beber, hacer, deporte y buena comida! – Mange, bois, sport et bonne bouffe!
– excellent, modern Italian fare, great service, wonderful bartender – excelente, comida italiana moderna, excelente servicio, maravilloso barman – excellente cuisine italienne moderne, excellent service, excellent barman
34 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Il Davide
901 A St
34 現地メンバーのおすすめ
– excellent, modern Italian fare, great service, wonderful bartender – excelente, comida italiana moderna, excelente servicio, maravilloso barman – excellente cuisine italienne moderne, excellent service, excellent barman
– excellent sushi, sashimi, and udon – ask for Tina – excelente sushi, sashimi y udon - pregunta por Tina – sushi, sashimi et udon excellents - demandez Tina
6 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Kamikaze Sushi Bar & Cuisine
223 3rd St
6 現地メンバーのおすすめ
– excellent sushi, sashimi, and udon – ask for Tina – excelente sushi, sashimi y udon - pregunta por Tina – sushi, sashimi et udon excellents - demandez Tina
– 3 way fish tacos, the chicken mole enchilada's, and the chili rellano picadillo are delicious – los tacos de pescado de 3 vías, las enchiladas de mole de pollo y el picadillo de chili relleno son deliciosos – Les tacos au poisson à 3 plats, les enchiladas au poulet et au poulet, et le chili relleno picadillo sont délicieux
12 現地メンバーのおすすめ
LaVier Latin Fusion Restaurant
1025 C St
12 現地メンバーのおすすめ
– 3 way fish tacos, the chicken mole enchilada's, and the chili rellano picadillo are delicious – los tacos de pescado de 3 vías, las enchiladas de mole de pollo y el picadillo de chili relleno son deliciosos – Les tacos au poisson à 3 plats, les enchiladas au poulet et au poulet, et le chili relleno picadillo sont délicieux
– delicious Mexican dishes and an amazing selection of moles, all you can eat Saturday and Sunday brunch – deliciosos platillos mexicanos y una increíble selección de moles, todo lo que pueda comer el sábado y el domingo brunch – délicieux plats mexicains et une sélection incroyable de taupes, à volonté
Los Moles Hecho En Casa
912 Lincoln Ave
– delicious Mexican dishes and an amazing selection of moles, all you can eat Saturday and Sunday brunch – deliciosos platillos mexicanos y una increíble selección de moles, todo lo que pueda comer el sábado y el domingo brunch – délicieux plats mexicains et une sélection incroyable de taupes, à volonté
– a family-owned Indian eatery in downtown San Rafael with a vision to create contemporary Indian cuisine – un restaurante indio de propiedad familiar en el centro de San Rafael con la visión de crear cocina india contemporánea – un restaurant indien familial situé dans le centre-ville de San Rafael avec la vision de créer une cuisine indienne contemporaine
33 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Lotus Cuisine of India
812 4th St
33 現地メンバーのおすすめ
– a family-owned Indian eatery in downtown San Rafael with a vision to create contemporary Indian cuisine – un restaurante indio de propiedad familiar en el centro de San Rafael con la visión de crear cocina india contemporánea – un restaurant indien familial situé dans le centre-ville de San Rafael avec la vision de créer une cuisine indienne contemporaine
– Great food and "Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy" Ben Franklin – Buena comida y "La cerveza es una prueba de que Dios nos ama y quiere que seamos felices" Ben Franklin – Bonne bouffe et "La bière est la preuve que Dieu nous aime et veut que nous soyons heureux" Ben Franklin
25 現地メンバーのおすすめ
The State Room
1132 4th St
25 現地メンバーのおすすめ
– Great food and "Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy" Ben Franklin – Buena comida y "La cerveza es una prueba de que Dios nos ama y quiere que seamos felices" Ben Franklin – Bonne bouffe et "La bière est la preuve que Dieu nous aime et veut que nous soyons heureux" Ben Franklin
This California-Caribbean cuisine blends local farm fresh ingredients with Latin flavors. It features tapas, sangria, and organic specials. Open for lunch and dinner. Enjoy the back patio – it's a tropical oasis! – Esta cocina californiana-caribeña combina ingredientes frescos de la granja local con sabores latinos. Ofrece tapas, sangría y especialidades orgánicas. Abierto para el almuerzo y la cena. Disfruta del patio trasero, ¡es un oasis tropical! – Cette cuisine californienne et caribéenne allie les ingrédients frais de la ferme locale aux saveurs latines. Il propose des tapas, de la sangria et des spécialités bio. Ouvert pour le déjeuner et le dîner. Profitez de la terrasse arrière - c'est une oasis tropicale!
6 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Whipper Snapper Restaurant
1613 4th St
6 現地メンバーのおすすめ
This California-Caribbean cuisine blends local farm fresh ingredients with Latin flavors. It features tapas, sangria, and organic specials. Open for lunch and dinner. Enjoy the back patio – it's a tropical oasis! – Esta cocina californiana-caribeña combina ingredientes frescos de la granja local con sabores latinos. Ofrece tapas, sangría y especialidades orgánicas. Abierto para el almuerzo y la cena. Disfruta del patio trasero, ¡es un oasis tropical! – Cette cuisine californienne et caribéenne allie les ingrédients frais de la ferme locale aux saveurs latines. Il propose des tapas, de la sangria et des spécialités bio. Ouvert pour le déjeuner et le dîner. Profitez de la terrasse arrière - c'est une oasis tropicale!
a New Orleans style breakfast and lunch restaurant. Breakfast: beignets, waffles, pancakes, broiled grapefruit, bagel and lox, huevos rancheros, omelette, and great coffee. Lunch: salads with fried oysters, fresh fruit, gumbo, red beans and rice, Niman Ranch hamburgers, Prather Ranch hot dogs, roast beef po'boy, pesto chicken sandwich, fried green tomato blt, organic ice cream and shakes. – un restaurante de desayuno y almuerzo al estilo de Nueva Orleans. Desayuno: beignets, gofres, panqueques, pomelos a la parrilla, bagel y lox, huevos rancheros, tortilla y excelente café. Almuerzo: ensaladas con ostras fritas, fruta fresca, gumbo, frijoles rojos y arroz, hamburguesas Niman Ranch, perritos calientes de Prather Ranch, po'boy de carne asada, sándwich de pollo al pesto, blt de tomate verde frito, helado orgánico y batidos. – un restaurant de style déjeuner et déjeuner à la Nouvelle-Orléans. Petit-déjeuner: beignets, gaufres, crêpes, pamplemousse grillé, bagel et lox, huevos rancheros, omelette et bon café. Déjeuner: salades avec huîtres frites, fruits frais, gombo, haricots rouges et riz, hamburgers Niman Ranch, hot dogs Prather Ranch, po'boy au rôti de boeuf, sandwich au poulet pesto, blt de tomates vertes frites, crème glacée et shakes bio.
38 現地メンバーのおすすめ
The Hummingbird
57 Broadway
38 現地メンバーのおすすめ
a New Orleans style breakfast and lunch restaurant. Breakfast: beignets, waffles, pancakes, broiled grapefruit, bagel and lox, huevos rancheros, omelette, and great coffee. Lunch: salads with fried oysters, fresh fruit, gumbo, red beans and rice, Niman Ranch hamburgers, Prather Ranch hot dogs, roast beef po'boy, pesto chicken sandwich, fried green tomato blt, organic ice cream and shakes. – un restaurante de desayuno y almuerzo al estilo de Nueva Orleans. Desayuno: beignets, gofres, panqueques, pomelos a la parrilla, bagel y lox, huevos rancheros, tortilla y excelente café. Almuerzo: ensaladas con ostras fritas, fruta fresca, gumbo, frijoles rojos y arroz, hamburguesas Niman Ranch, perritos calientes de Prather Ranch, po'boy de carne asada, sándwich de pollo al pesto, blt de tomate verde frito, helado orgánico y batidos. – un restaurant de style déjeuner et déjeuner à la Nouvelle-Orléans. Petit-déjeuner: beignets, gaufres, crêpes, pamplemousse grillé, bagel et lox, huevos rancheros, omelette et bon café. Déjeuner: salades avec huîtres frites, fruits frais, gombo, haricots rouges et riz, hamburgers Niman Ranch, hot dogs Prather Ranch, po'boy au rôti de boeuf, sandwich au poulet pesto, blt de tomates vertes frites, crème glacée et shakes bio.
– fresh, familiar food, excellent Eggs Benedict and Huevos Rancheros – Comida fresca, familiar, excelentes Huevos Benedict y Huevos Rancheros – nourriture fraîche et familière, excellents œufs Benedict et Huevos Rancheros
28 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Half Day Cafe
848 College Ave
28 現地メンバーのおすすめ
– fresh, familiar food, excellent Eggs Benedict and Huevos Rancheros – Comida fresca, familiar, excelentes Huevos Benedict y Huevos Rancheros – nourriture fraîche et familière, excellents œufs Benedict et Huevos Rancheros
– Contemporary California Cuisine with Asian & Italian Fusion – Cocina contemporánea de California con fusión asiática e italiana – Cuisine californienne contemporaine avec fusion asiatique et italienne
7 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Jason's Restaurant
300 Drakes Landing Road
7 現地メンバーのおすすめ
– Contemporary California Cuisine with Asian & Italian Fusion – Cocina contemporánea de California con fusión asiática e italiana – Cuisine californienne contemporaine avec fusion asiatique et italienne
– seasonal menu items and French classics – menús de temporada y clásicos franceses – plats de saison et classiques français
44 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Left Bank Larkspur Brasserie
507 Magnolia Ave
44 現地メンバーのおすすめ
– seasonal menu items and French classics – menús de temporada y clásicos franceses – plats de saison et classiques français
– excellent breakfast and brunch offerings – excelente desayuno y brunch – excellent petit-déjeuner et brunch
14 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Marvin's Restaurant
1112 Grant Ave
14 現地メンバーのおすすめ
– excellent breakfast and brunch offerings – excelente desayuno y brunch – excellent petit-déjeuner et brunch
– creative menu with West Marin goodies like oysters – menú creativo con golosinas de West Marin como ostras – menu créatif avec des friandises West Marin comme des huîtres
9 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Due West
10005 CA-1
9 現地メンバーのおすすめ
– creative menu with West Marin goodies like oysters – menú creativo con golosinas de West Marin como ostras – menu créatif avec des friandises West Marin comme des huîtres
– the best fresh fish in the Bay Area, dedicated to sustainable seafood – el mejor pescado fresco en el Área de la Bahía, dedicado a los mariscos sostenibles – le meilleur poisson frais de la région de la baie, dédié aux fruits de mer durables
126 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Fish.
350 Harbor Dr
126 現地メンバーのおすすめ
– the best fresh fish in the Bay Area, dedicated to sustainable seafood – el mejor pescado fresco en el Área de la Bahía, dedicado a los mariscos sostenibles – le meilleur poisson frais de la région de la baie, dédié aux fruits de mer durables
– fine dining in a scenic location – buena comida en un lugar pintoresco – gastronomie dans un endroit pittoresque
27 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Scoma's of Sausalito
588 Bridgeway
27 現地メンバーのおすすめ
– fine dining in a scenic location – buena comida en un lugar pintoresco – gastronomie dans un endroit pittoresque
– beautiful views from the restaurant that is perched on piers over the San Francisco Bay on the waterfront – hermosas vistas desde el restaurante que se alza sobre muelles sobre la bahía de San Francisco en el paseo marítimo – belle vue depuis le restaurant qui est perché sur des piliers sur la baie de San Francisco au bord de l'eau
16 現地メンバーのおすすめ
The Spinnaker
100 Spinnaker Dr
16 現地メンバーのおすすめ
– beautiful views from the restaurant that is perched on piers over the San Francisco Bay on the waterfront – hermosas vistas desde el restaurante que se alza sobre muelles sobre la bahía de San Francisco en el paseo marítimo – belle vue depuis le restaurant qui est perché sur des piliers sur la baie de San Francisco au bord de l'eau
Delicious, carnivore delight. Excellent side dishes. good service!
Boiadeirus Brazilian Steakhouse
925 4th Street
Delicious, carnivore delight. Excellent side dishes. good service!
Delicious food, high quality, and excellent service in a relaxing environment.
62 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Hazel Restaurant
3782 Bohemian Hwy
62 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Delicious food, high quality, and excellent service in a relaxing environment.
Tasty breakfast and lunch offerings in a pleasant environment with good service.
18 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Crepevine Restaurant
1133 4th St
18 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Tasty breakfast and lunch offerings in a pleasant environment with good service.

Johna's San Francisco Bay Islands

San Francisco Bay has many islands to learn about & explore.
This 22-acre (8.9ha) island in San Francisco Bay once served as a lighthouse, a military fortification, a military prison, and as a federal prison until 1963. It is now part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. From the Golden Gate Bridge, this 12-acre island looks like a giant ship. “La Isla de las Alcatraces,” Island of the Pelicans, is still the No. 1 tourist draw in San Francisco even though it has been almost 40 years since the federal government closed its most notorious prison here, embarrassed by the unsolved 1962 escape of three prisoners and reluctant to continue patching up old buildings that were slowly dissolving in the salt air. The short boat trip here from Fisherman’s Wharf is one every visitor and local should make at least once. A tour of the old place impresses with its stories of convicts forced to spend most of their sentences in silence, and the memory of the 1946 uprising that took a company of Marines to quell. Perhaps most haunting is the small outdoor field where convicts would play baseball, looking out to a view of San Francisco’s hills and skyscrapers a tantalizing 1.25 miles away. Woe to him who hit a home run: game over if a ball went over the fence.
503 現地メンバーのおすすめ
アルカトラズ島
503 現地メンバーのおすすめ
This 22-acre (8.9ha) island in San Francisco Bay once served as a lighthouse, a military fortification, a military prison, and as a federal prison until 1963. It is now part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. From the Golden Gate Bridge, this 12-acre island looks like a giant ship. “La Isla de las Alcatraces,” Island of the Pelicans, is still the No. 1 tourist draw in San Francisco even though it has been almost 40 years since the federal government closed its most notorious prison here, embarrassed by the unsolved 1962 escape of three prisoners and reluctant to continue patching up old buildings that were slowly dissolving in the salt air. The short boat trip here from Fisherman’s Wharf is one every visitor and local should make at least once. A tour of the old place impresses with its stories of convicts forced to spend most of their sentences in silence, and the memory of the 1946 uprising that took a company of Marines to quell. Perhaps most haunting is the small outdoor field where convicts would play baseball, looking out to a view of San Francisco’s hills and skyscrapers a tantalizing 1.25 miles away. Woe to him who hit a home run: game over if a ball went over the fence.
Alameda Island – This 6-mile (9.7km) long island in San Francisco Bay is the main part of the City of Alameda. This almost rectangular island city of 11 square miles and 72,000 inhabitants lies across an estuary from Oakland and is accessed by several bridges and tunnels from the mainland. There’s a lot to savor and like here, from the city’s extensive collection of old Victorian homes and homey 4th of July parade to an attractive downtown and Crown Beach, a sandy strand that’s the best urban bay-side beach in the region, with great views of the Bay Bridge and the San Francisco skyline. The climate is tops in the Bay Area – think San Diego-mild, only five degrees cooler. At the northwest end of town, the decommissioned old Alameda Naval Air Station is slowly being recycled to accommodate housing and industry. A boat trip up the estuary that separates Alameda from Oakland is like riding an American version of Venice’s Grand Canal – the water swarms with small and large craft, hard at work or pleasure, with a backdrop of rambling houses, shanties and sheds, office buildings, warehouses and docks crowding the water’s edge.
Alameda
Alameda Island – This 6-mile (9.7km) long island in San Francisco Bay is the main part of the City of Alameda. This almost rectangular island city of 11 square miles and 72,000 inhabitants lies across an estuary from Oakland and is accessed by several bridges and tunnels from the mainland. There’s a lot to savor and like here, from the city’s extensive collection of old Victorian homes and homey 4th of July parade to an attractive downtown and Crown Beach, a sandy strand that’s the best urban bay-side beach in the region, with great views of the Bay Bridge and the San Francisco skyline. The climate is tops in the Bay Area – think San Diego-mild, only five degrees cooler. At the northwest end of town, the decommissioned old Alameda Naval Air Station is slowly being recycled to accommodate housing and industry. A boat trip up the estuary that separates Alameda from Oakland is like riding an American version of Venice’s Grand Canal – the water swarms with small and large craft, hard at work or pleasure, with a backdrop of rambling houses, shanties and sheds, office buildings, warehouses and docks crowding the water’s edge.
With an area of 1.2 square miles (3.1km), this island in San Francisco Bay processed approximately 1 million immigrants to the U.S. during 1910 to 1940. It is currently a state park. So much history and beauty on this one-square-mile island across Raccoon Strait from Tiburon. The main embarkation is at Ayala Cove, a sheltered little bay that attracted the Spanish for its 300-foot-deep river of fresh water, running from the Sacramento River Delta to the Golden Gate, that still surges through the strait. Two wide hiking and biking paths, one higher, one lower, circumnavigate the island. From either one the views are grand, especially the one that takes in a sweeping panorama of San Francisco from the Bay Bridge to the Golden Gate. It’s the kind of picture-window view that some people in neighboring Tiburon have paid $5 or $6 million for. Other views are closer in – the island’s west side has an extensive collection of restored barracks from the Civil War, and on the east side are the haunting remains of the prison-like buildings that were once used to hold Chinese immigrants, sometimes for years, while officials at this “Ellis Island of the West” dithered and dragged their feet rather than let them enter the U.S. Ayala Cove has a food concession, bike rentals and docents. The little beach, which looks out on a fleet of pleasure craft that often come to anchor out for an overnight or weekend stay, is backed by a grassy swath perfect for picnicking. Getting there is fun, too: A small ferry chugs its way over from Tiburon at convenient intervals. While you’re waiting for it on the mainland, check out old downtown Tiburon, a charming throwback to the days when the town was a gritty blue-collar railroad terminal.
51 現地メンバーのおすすめ
エンジェル・アイランド州立公園
51 現地メンバーのおすすめ
With an area of 1.2 square miles (3.1km), this island in San Francisco Bay processed approximately 1 million immigrants to the U.S. during 1910 to 1940. It is currently a state park. So much history and beauty on this one-square-mile island across Raccoon Strait from Tiburon. The main embarkation is at Ayala Cove, a sheltered little bay that attracted the Spanish for its 300-foot-deep river of fresh water, running from the Sacramento River Delta to the Golden Gate, that still surges through the strait. Two wide hiking and biking paths, one higher, one lower, circumnavigate the island. From either one the views are grand, especially the one that takes in a sweeping panorama of San Francisco from the Bay Bridge to the Golden Gate. It’s the kind of picture-window view that some people in neighboring Tiburon have paid $5 or $6 million for. Other views are closer in – the island’s west side has an extensive collection of restored barracks from the Civil War, and on the east side are the haunting remains of the prison-like buildings that were once used to hold Chinese immigrants, sometimes for years, while officials at this “Ellis Island of the West” dithered and dragged their feet rather than let them enter the U.S. Ayala Cove has a food concession, bike rentals and docents. The little beach, which looks out on a fleet of pleasure craft that often come to anchor out for an overnight or weekend stay, is backed by a grassy swath perfect for picnicking. Getting there is fun, too: A small ferry chugs its way over from Tiburon at convenient intervals. While you’re waiting for it on the mainland, check out old downtown Tiburon, a charming throwback to the days when the town was a gritty blue-collar railroad terminal.
Small Pacific island, about 0.2 miles (0.32km) long, near Año Nuevo (New Year's) Point, south of the Golden Gate. It is protected by the Año Nuevo State Reserve as an important habitat for seabirds and other coastal wildlife.
Año Nuevo Island State Park
Small Pacific island, about 0.2 miles (0.32km) long, near Año Nuevo (New Year's) Point, south of the Golden Gate. It is protected by the Año Nuevo State Reserve as an important habitat for seabirds and other coastal wildlife.
This 2,600-acre (1,100ha) island in San Francisco Bay near Redwood City is part of the Don Edwards San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge.
Bair Island Wildlife Refuge & Trail
3 Uccelli Dr
This 2,600-acre (1,100ha) island in San Francisco Bay near Redwood City is part of the Don Edwards San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge.
This former island in San Francisco Bay has been connected to the mainland. It is part of the City of Alameda.
Bay Farm Island
This former island in San Francisco Bay has been connected to the mainland. It is part of the City of Alameda.
This former island in Richardson Bay has been connected to the mainland. It is part of the City of Belvedere.
Belvedere Island
This former island in Richardson Bay has been connected to the mainland. It is part of the City of Belvedere.
Small Pacific island between Point Bonita and Rodeo Cove.
Bird Island
Small Pacific island between Point Bonita and Rodeo Cove.
Small Pacific island west of Tomales Point, primarily a seabird colony. It covers 2 acres (0.81ha).
Bird Rock
Small Pacific island west of Tomales Point, primarily a seabird colony. It covers 2 acres (0.81ha).
A 65-acre (26ha) island in San Francisco Bay south of Richmond, protected as part of the Brooks Island Regional Shoreline. The Bay’s least known island is a 373-acre, mostly flat strip of land just off the Richmond shoreline in East Bay. It’s now a natural preserve that’s home to two caretakers and much avian wildlife. Before the arrival of the Spanish and the Americans, native peoples lived on the island for about 2,000 years, subsisting on the abundance of fish and shellfish in the tidal flats between it and the mainland. Through the years Brooks also functioned as a quarry, sheep farm, and shrimp factory. It’s now a part of the East Bay Regional Parks District, perhaps the best park system of its kind in North America. Visits to Brooks are permitted, although you have to make your own arrangements to get there. Things to see include the island’s salt marshes, tidal flats, sandy shoreline and the fine panoramic view from atop its tallest place, a 163-foot rise.
Brooks Island Regional Preserve
1316 Canal Blvd
A 65-acre (26ha) island in San Francisco Bay south of Richmond, protected as part of the Brooks Island Regional Shoreline. The Bay’s least known island is a 373-acre, mostly flat strip of land just off the Richmond shoreline in East Bay. It’s now a natural preserve that’s home to two caretakers and much avian wildlife. Before the arrival of the Spanish and the Americans, native peoples lived on the island for about 2,000 years, subsisting on the abundance of fish and shellfish in the tidal flats between it and the mainland. Through the years Brooks also functioned as a quarry, sheep farm, and shrimp factory. It’s now a part of the East Bay Regional Parks District, perhaps the best park system of its kind in North America. Visits to Brooks are permitted, although you have to make your own arrangements to get there. Things to see include the island’s salt marshes, tidal flats, sandy shoreline and the fine panoramic view from atop its tallest place, a 163-foot rise.
Two small islands, East Brother and West Brother, located west of Point San Pablo. Each is about 300 feet (91m) long. East Brother has a lighthouse and a bed and breakfast. Ships making their way inland toward Sacramento through the strait that separates San Francisco and San Pablo bays had to contend with small islands and an indented shoreline that could be treacherous at night or in foggy weather. In 1874, a lighthouse began operating on East Brother Island, the bigger of two small islands located about a mile north of the present day Richmond San Rafael Bridge. Several families moved to the island, crammed into a .75-acre area and dependent on cistern water and supplies from the mainland. The lighthouse, also equipped with a foghorn that could be heard for miles, functioned well into the 20th century, finally closing down in 1969 as more modern technologies supplanted it. The Coast Guard wanted to raze the lighthouse, but a group of preservation-minded locals talked it into leasing the island to them under the aegis of a non-profit organization. The Coast Guard approved, and the group began an extensive restoration of the island’s Victorian-era buildings in the 1980s that led to the creation of the East Brother Light Station Bed and Breakfast. It is one of the most unusual B&Bs in the West. Guests at the four-room B&B must first drive to a funky small-craft harbor at Pt. San Pablo (the café there serves a pretty good breakfast), then ride to the island on a small power boat. Once there, they enjoy a 360-degree view of San Pablo Bay and the waters leading down to San Francisco, and watching marine traffic ply its way up to the ports at Sacramento and Stockton. Though officially retired, the steam-powered foghorn here still works. Many an unsuspecting visitor, sitting on the innocent-looking structure that houses the horn, has been blasted out of his skin and several feet into the air when the horn has suddenly sounded. Stays at the B&B are pricey: Rates run from $290 to $420 for a one-night stay, but the meals use gourmet ingredients and are poured with fine wines. Bedding and furniture are opulent, and the sense of isolation is romantic. Day-trippers are welcome, too. You can bring a picnic, enjoy the view and then leave before nightfall.
The Brothers
Two small islands, East Brother and West Brother, located west of Point San Pablo. Each is about 300 feet (91m) long. East Brother has a lighthouse and a bed and breakfast. Ships making their way inland toward Sacramento through the strait that separates San Francisco and San Pablo bays had to contend with small islands and an indented shoreline that could be treacherous at night or in foggy weather. In 1874, a lighthouse began operating on East Brother Island, the bigger of two small islands located about a mile north of the present day Richmond San Rafael Bridge. Several families moved to the island, crammed into a .75-acre area and dependent on cistern water and supplies from the mainland. The lighthouse, also equipped with a foghorn that could be heard for miles, functioned well into the 20th century, finally closing down in 1969 as more modern technologies supplanted it. The Coast Guard wanted to raze the lighthouse, but a group of preservation-minded locals talked it into leasing the island to them under the aegis of a non-profit organization. The Coast Guard approved, and the group began an extensive restoration of the island’s Victorian-era buildings in the 1980s that led to the creation of the East Brother Light Station Bed and Breakfast. It is one of the most unusual B&Bs in the West. Guests at the four-room B&B must first drive to a funky small-craft harbor at Pt. San Pablo (the café there serves a pretty good breakfast), then ride to the island on a small power boat. Once there, they enjoy a 360-degree view of San Pablo Bay and the waters leading down to San Francisco, and watching marine traffic ply its way up to the ports at Sacramento and Stockton. Though officially retired, the steam-powered foghorn here still works. Many an unsuspecting visitor, sitting on the innocent-looking structure that houses the horn, has been blasted out of his skin and several feet into the air when the horn has suddenly sounded. Stays at the B&B are pricey: Rates run from $290 to $420 for a one-night stay, but the meals use gourmet ingredients and are poured with fine wines. Bedding and furniture are opulent, and the sense of isolation is romantic. Day-trippers are welcome, too. You can bring a picnic, enjoy the view and then leave before nightfall.
Beneath the Richmond – San Rafael Bridge.
Castro Rocks
Beneath the Richmond – San Rafael Bridge.
Located in the Oakland Estuary, this 67-acre (27ha) artificial island is part of the City of Alameda. It is home to various United States Coast Guard facilities.
Coast Guard Island Alameda
Located in the Oakland Estuary, this 67-acre (27ha) artificial island is part of the City of Alameda. It is home to various United States Coast Guard facilities.
This former island was joined to the mainland in the 1980s. It is split between the city of Belvedere and the town of Tiburon.
Corinthian Island
This former island was joined to the mainland in the 1980s. It is split between the city of Belvedere and the town of Tiburon.
Technically these small islands 27 miles west of the Golden Gate are not part of the San Francisco Bay. But if the Ice Age had never ended, thereby raising the level of the oceans, these islands would have been the entrance to the Bay and the likeliest place that people would have chosen to build a “Farallon City.” The islands teem with birds – gulls, cormorants, pelicans – as well as seals, sea lions and scientists (there to study the birds and sea life). The waters around the islands support plenty of salmon and sharks, including seal-eating Great Whites – the waters off the Bay Area are the world’s most dangerous interface between humans and Great Whites. A wilderness preserve protects 141 acres of the islands, including maintop, the second largest island of the group. Seventy-acre Southeast Farallon island, the biggest, is where the scientists live. Visiting here casually just isn’t done. Unless you’ve filed a detailed wilderness use request, the best you can do is head on out to the islands on one of the many charter fishing boats that come out seeking salmon.
Farallon Islands/Fanny Shoal Essential Fish Habitat Conservation Area
Technically these small islands 27 miles west of the Golden Gate are not part of the San Francisco Bay. But if the Ice Age had never ended, thereby raising the level of the oceans, these islands would have been the entrance to the Bay and the likeliest place that people would have chosen to build a “Farallon City.” The islands teem with birds – gulls, cormorants, pelicans – as well as seals, sea lions and scientists (there to study the birds and sea life). The waters around the islands support plenty of salmon and sharks, including seal-eating Great Whites – the waters off the Bay Area are the world’s most dangerous interface between humans and Great Whites. A wilderness preserve protects 141 acres of the islands, including maintop, the second largest island of the group. Seventy-acre Southeast Farallon island, the biggest, is where the scientists live. Visiting here casually just isn’t done. Unless you’ve filed a detailed wilderness use request, the best you can do is head on out to the islands on one of the many charter fishing boats that come out seeking salmon.
A Pacific island near Mount Tamalpais, about 200 feet (61m) long.
Gull Rock
A Pacific island near Mount Tamalpais, about 200 feet (61m) long.
There are two: 1) Island in the Petaluma River wetlands, 2) A 2-acre (0.81ha) island in Tomales Bay.
Hog Island
There are two: 1) Island in the Petaluma River wetlands, 2) A 2-acre (0.81ha) island in Tomales Bay.
An island in Bolinas Lagoon, near the town of Bolinas. About 0.5 miles (0.80km) long.
Kent Island
An island in Bolinas Lagoon, near the town of Bolinas. About 0.5 miles (0.80km) long.
An island in San Pablo Bay near Vallejo. About 3.5 miles (5.6km) long, site of a major shipyard. For almost 150 years, Vallejo’s Mare Island (about three square miles in size) was the West Coast center of U.S. naval power. Its great dry docks maintained the entire Pacific Fleet, built 512 ships over the years and later home ported nuclear attack submarines. In its heyday in WWII, 46,000 people worked on the island. In 1993, at the end of the Cold War, the Navy decommissioned the island and turned it over to civilian uses. The Navy left some nice things behind. For one, the 18-hole Mare Island Golf Club, whose greens fees approach the sublime: $55 on weekends; as low as $25 on weekday afternoons. St. Peter’s Chapel contains a world-famous collection of Tiffany windows, and “Officers Row” preserves a neighborhood of Victorian-era mansions that were among the most opulent ever built for military men on the West Coast. The industrial remnants of the island also fascinate: a stone dry dock that took 20 years to build and was the construction site of some of the most important ships launched from Mare Island; the abandoned cranes and workshops in some ways are a western version of Ford’s great River Rouge plant. Eventually those reminders will be removed as the City of Vallejo makes the island a residential and high-tech center. You still have to pass through a guard gate to access Mare Island, but guided tours are available and easily arranged. Contact the Mare Island Historic Park Foundation at (707) 557-1538 for information. Tours of downtown Vallejo, which is drawing a lot of sophisticated former San Franciscans to its neighborhoods, or a visit three miles up the road to Six Flags Marine World can round out a tour here.
32 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Mare Island Museum
1100 Railroad Ave
32 現地メンバーのおすすめ
An island in San Pablo Bay near Vallejo. About 3.5 miles (5.6km) long, site of a major shipyard. For almost 150 years, Vallejo’s Mare Island (about three square miles in size) was the West Coast center of U.S. naval power. Its great dry docks maintained the entire Pacific Fleet, built 512 ships over the years and later home ported nuclear attack submarines. In its heyday in WWII, 46,000 people worked on the island. In 1993, at the end of the Cold War, the Navy decommissioned the island and turned it over to civilian uses. The Navy left some nice things behind. For one, the 18-hole Mare Island Golf Club, whose greens fees approach the sublime: $55 on weekends; as low as $25 on weekday afternoons. St. Peter’s Chapel contains a world-famous collection of Tiffany windows, and “Officers Row” preserves a neighborhood of Victorian-era mansions that were among the most opulent ever built for military men on the West Coast. The industrial remnants of the island also fascinate: a stone dry dock that took 20 years to build and was the construction site of some of the most important ships launched from Mare Island; the abandoned cranes and workshops in some ways are a western version of Ford’s great River Rouge plant. Eventually those reminders will be removed as the City of Vallejo makes the island a residential and high-tech center. You still have to pass through a guard gate to access Mare Island, but guided tours are available and easily arranged. Contact the Mare Island Historic Park Foundation at (707) 557-1538 for information. Tours of downtown Vallejo, which is drawing a lot of sophisticated former San Franciscans to its neighborhoods, or a visit three miles up the road to Six Flags Marine World can round out a tour here.
Kayakers especially love these two islands, which cover a total of 11 acres and sit a few hundred yards off the Point Lomond Yacht Harbor in San Rafael. East Marin Island, the larger of the two, has eucalyptus groves and several structures on it, including one with large windows that once functioned as a day facility for conferences and corporate getaways. Except for some shrubs and low trees, West Marin island is mostly bare. But it is also the largest heron and egret rookery in the Bay Area, as well as a favored layover for migrating birds. The islands’ popularity with the avian set has made them the core of a 340-acre national wildlife refuge, a status that forbids landings by anybody who doesn’t have official permission. Still, the larger island’s buildings and woodsy profile conjure images in the minds of passersby of a cozy island refuge, only minutes from metropolitan bustle but far removed in mood.
Marin Island National Wildlife Refuge
99 Loch Lomond Drive
Kayakers especially love these two islands, which cover a total of 11 acres and sit a few hundred yards off the Point Lomond Yacht Harbor in San Rafael. East Marin Island, the larger of the two, has eucalyptus groves and several structures on it, including one with large windows that once functioned as a day facility for conferences and corporate getaways. Except for some shrubs and low trees, West Marin island is mostly bare. But it is also the largest heron and egret rookery in the Bay Area, as well as a favored layover for migrating birds. The islands’ popularity with the avian set has made them the core of a 340-acre national wildlife refuge, a status that forbids landings by anybody who doesn’t have official permission. Still, the larger island’s buildings and woodsy profile conjure images in the minds of passersby of a cozy island refuge, only minutes from metropolitan bustle but far removed in mood.
A stack in the Pacific Ocean near Daly City. About 200 feet (61m) long.
26 現地メンバーのおすすめ
マッスルロック公園
Westline Drive
26 現地メンバーのおすすめ
A stack in the Pacific Ocean near Daly City. About 200 feet (61m) long.
An 18-foot (5.5m) tall rock north of China Camp.
Rat Rock Island
An 18-foot (5.5m) tall rock north of China Camp.
A Pacific island near the city of Pacifica. About 800 feet (240m) long.
San Pedro Rock
A Pacific island near the city of Pacifica. About 800 feet (240m) long.
A series of large rocks in the Pacific Ocean that host a sea lion colony.
Seal Rocks
A series of large rocks in the Pacific Ocean that host a sea lion colony.
A rock in the Centissima Reef. Centissima Reef is the reef which surrounds Sears Rock west of Rodeo Beach in the Pacific Ocean off Marin County, California. Some early reports refer to Centissima Rock and Sears Rock as separate sub-surface navigation hazards, but present-day nautical charts show Sears Rock as part of the larger Centissima Reef.
Sears Rock
A rock in the Centissima Reef. Centissima Reef is the reef which surrounds Sears Rock west of Rodeo Beach in the Pacific Ocean off Marin County, California. Some early reports refer to Centissima Rock and Sears Rock as separate sub-surface navigation hazards, but present-day nautical charts show Sears Rock as part of the larger Centissima Reef.
A pair of small islands in San Pablo Bay, 2,000 feet (610 m) south of Point Saint Pedro.
The Sisters
A pair of small islands in San Pablo Bay, 2,000 feet (610 m) south of Point Saint Pedro.
This creek-bound 4,300-acre island at the top of San Pablo Bay is a haven for migratory birds and a major stop on the Pacific Flyway. It’s part of a relatively intact delta estuary system that did not suffer the fate of the mudflats and marshes rimming San Francisco Bay, which long ago were turned into landfill and salt evaporators. As a remnant of a once much larger eco-system, Skaggs and its neighboring delta islands show just how fecund and rich the shores of the Bay Area once were. Skaggs itself is closed to visitors as non-profit volunteers continue working on breaching dykes to restore its natural qualities on its north side, as well as dismantling buildings left onsite from when the island was a naval communications center.
Skaggs Island
This creek-bound 4,300-acre island at the top of San Pablo Bay is a haven for migratory birds and a major stop on the Pacific Flyway. It’s part of a relatively intact delta estuary system that did not suffer the fate of the mudflats and marshes rimming San Francisco Bay, which long ago were turned into landfill and salt evaporators. As a remnant of a once much larger eco-system, Skaggs and its neighboring delta islands show just how fecund and rich the shores of the Bay Area once were. Skaggs itself is closed to visitors as non-profit volunteers continue working on breaching dykes to restore its natural qualities on its north side, as well as dismantling buildings left onsite from when the island was a naval communications center.
Nearby and similar to Skaggs in almost every respect, Tubbs is accessible via a gate located on the south-facing, Vallejo-bound lane of Highway 37 just east of where it intersects Highway 121 at Sears Point.
Tubbs Island
Nearby and similar to Skaggs in almost every respect, Tubbs is accessible via a gate located on the south-facing, Vallejo-bound lane of Highway 37 just east of where it intersects Highway 121 at Sears Point.
This 403-acre (163ha) artificial island in San Francisco Bay is tied to Yerba Buena Island. It was dredged out of the bay to house the Golden Gate International Exposition of 1939-40. At 1,000 acres (about 1.5 square miles) Treasure Island is one of the Bay’s more ambitious man-made features. Joined to hilly Yerba Buena Island, the island was built in the 1930s by pouring millions of rocks into a shallow part of the Bay to produce a rectangular plot of land. Within months of its creation, the new island was the site of San Francisco’s 1939-40 World’s Fair, which housed exhibits and attractions in a fantastical collection of buildings based on imaginary “Pacific” architecture. War clouds and the Depression kept the fair from achieving box-office success, but for years afterward locals happily reminisced about the aquacades, the over-the-top buildings, and the naughty feather dances by Sally Rand’s showgirls that produced a few private war clouds of their own. After Pearl Harbor, Treasure Island immediately became a naval base. Post-war plans called for it to become San Francisco’s new international airport, but the development of giant airplanes and the looming arrival of the passenger jet showed up the island's lack of size for that purpose. Following the collapse of the USSR, almost all naval facilities in the Bay Area were decommissioned. Treasure Island is now a new mixed-income neighborhood of people living in old Navy housing (much of it detached single homes) with a splendid view of San Francisco’s skyline. Future plans call for the construction of dense housing and possibly conference facilities, a development that could make it a West Coast version of New York’s Roosevelt Island. The Treasure Island Museum, housed in one of the two buildings left from the world fair, may look familiar since it often served as a backdrop in the “Nash Bridges” TV series.
65 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Treasure Island
65 現地メンバーのおすすめ
This 403-acre (163ha) artificial island in San Francisco Bay is tied to Yerba Buena Island. It was dredged out of the bay to house the Golden Gate International Exposition of 1939-40. At 1,000 acres (about 1.5 square miles) Treasure Island is one of the Bay’s more ambitious man-made features. Joined to hilly Yerba Buena Island, the island was built in the 1930s by pouring millions of rocks into a shallow part of the Bay to produce a rectangular plot of land. Within months of its creation, the new island was the site of San Francisco’s 1939-40 World’s Fair, which housed exhibits and attractions in a fantastical collection of buildings based on imaginary “Pacific” architecture. War clouds and the Depression kept the fair from achieving box-office success, but for years afterward locals happily reminisced about the aquacades, the over-the-top buildings, and the naughty feather dances by Sally Rand’s showgirls that produced a few private war clouds of their own. After Pearl Harbor, Treasure Island immediately became a naval base. Post-war plans called for it to become San Francisco’s new international airport, but the development of giant airplanes and the looming arrival of the passenger jet showed up the island's lack of size for that purpose. Following the collapse of the USSR, almost all naval facilities in the Bay Area were decommissioned. Treasure Island is now a new mixed-income neighborhood of people living in old Navy housing (much of it detached single homes) with a splendid view of San Francisco’s skyline. Future plans call for the construction of dense housing and possibly conference facilities, a development that could make it a West Coast version of New York’s Roosevelt Island. The Treasure Island Museum, housed in one of the two buildings left from the world fair, may look familiar since it often served as a backdrop in the “Nash Bridges” TV series.
This island in San Francisco Bay is home to a Coast Guard station. The San Francisco – Oakland Bay Bridge passes through it by means of a tunnel. Joined to the man-made Treasure Island, the Bay Bridge tunnels through Yorba Buena Island as it spans the waters between Oakland and San Francisco).
Yerba Buena Island
This island in San Francisco Bay is home to a Coast Guard station. The San Francisco – Oakland Bay Bridge passes through it by means of a tunnel. Joined to the man-made Treasure Island, the Bay Bridge tunnels through Yorba Buena Island as it spans the waters between Oakland and San Francisco).