Big Sur
"Highway 1 through Big Sur is one of the few roads that deserves to be driven slowly."
I had been warned about Big Sur the way people warn you about things they secretly hope you’ll fall in love with. We drove up from Los Angeles on a Tuesday in October, and by the time we crossed the Bixby Creek Bridge — that elegant concrete arc suspended over a canyon that drops straight to the sea — I understood why Kerouac came here and never quite recovered.
The Road as the Point
Highway 1 north of San Simeon stops being a means of getting somewhere and becomes the destination itself. The asphalt clings to cliffs so sheer that there are stretches where the guardrail is the only thing separating the car from a two-hundred-foot fall into cold water. Lia kept pressing her hand to the window as if she could touch the kelp beds floating just offshore. We stopped at every pullout we could find — Vista Point, Hurricane Point, the unmarked gravel shoulders where other travelers had stopped for the same wordless reasons.
The light here does something I have not seen it do anywhere else on the Pacific coast. In the late afternoon it turns amber and thick, pouring sideways across the headlands, and the sea grass goes gold against the dark water. It smells of salt and Douglas fir and something mineral, like wet stone baking in a sudden patch of sun.
McWay Falls and the Surprise Below
I had expected McWay Falls to be crowded and overrated. Instead, walking the short trail through Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park, I came around a bend and stopped moving entirely. An eighty-foot waterfall drops directly onto a beach — not into a pool, not onto rocks, but onto a perfect crescent of sand that is completely inaccessible to visitors. The beach exists only to receive the water. There is something almost theological about it, a beauty that asks nothing of you except to stand there and be diminished by it.
We ate that evening at Nepenthe, perched on the cliffs above the coast on Cabrillo Highway, ordering the Ambrosia burger — a house legend since 1949 — and watching the fog bank roll in from the south until the headlands vanished one by one into grey.
Staying in the Trees
The cabins at Fernwood Resort sit in a redwood canyon off Highway 1 where the Big Sur River runs shallow and cold. Sleeping there, you hear the river through the screen door all night. In the morning the light comes through the canopy in long, slow columns, and for a moment I forgot entirely which direction the ocean was.
When to go: September and October bring the clearest skies and the least traffic — the summer marine layer has burned off but the winter storms have not yet arrived. Avoid holiday weekends at any cost; Highway 1 turns into a parking lot and the whole spell breaks.