Travel Gems: Best Places to Visit California

California has more than its headline cities. The places below are the ones worth a detour — a volcanic park, a foggy stretch of Mendocino coast, a Gold Country wine town, a scenic Sierra byway, a theme park built around trees, a Bakersfield honky-tonk, an alpine lake, a dark-sky desert, and two overlooked coast towns.

Lake Almanor and Lassen Volcanic National Park

In the Shasta Cascade region, about 160 miles north of Sacramento, Lake Almanor is a large reservoir backed by forest — boating, fishing, and quiet beaches. Next to it, Lassen Volcanic National Park is the only place in the lower 48 where all four types of volcano exist (plug dome, shield, cinder cone, stratovolcano). It has hydrothermal features — boiling springs, fumaroles, mud pots — and a road that usually opens late June once snow clears. Lassen Peak is a half-day hike; the park is far quieter than Yosemite.

Lake Almanor and Lassen Volcanic National Park

Point Arena–Stornetta Public Lands

Part of the California Coastal National Monument, about 140 miles north of San Francisco in Mendocino County, this is a rugged headland with tidepools, a colony of harbor seals, and gray-whale migration views in season. The Point Arena Lighthouse sits on the cliffs and is open to climb. It is one of the few places you can walk to the ocean edge of the monument.

Murphys (Gold Country wine)

In the Sierra foothills, Murphys has two dozen-plus small wineries and tasting rooms along a walkable Main Street, without Napa prices. Nearby: Calaveras Big Trees State Park (giant sequoias) and Moaning Cavern. Stay in a B&B and make it a weekend.

Murphys Wine-Tasting

Sierra Vista Scenic Byway

A roughly 100-mile loop through the Sierra Nevadas east of Fresno, linking Yosemite and Sequoia & Kings Canyon via Highway 41 and forest roads. Highlights include the Jesse Ross Cabin and Bass Lake. Best in summer when the high-forest road is snow-free; wildflowers peak in June–July.

Sierra Vista Scenic Byway

Gilroy Gardens

A theme park in Gilroy (south of the Bay Area) built around circus trees — live trees grafted into loops and shapes — plus 40 rides. Unlike the big theme parks, it is aimed at families with younger kids and is shaded by actual gardens. Open seasonally, spring through fall.

Gilroy Gardens

Buck Owens’ Crystal Palace (Bakersfield)

A country-music hall and museum in Bakersfield opened by Buck Owens, the center of the Bakersfield Sound (the twangy counterpoint to Nashville). Live country most nights, a dance floor, and memorabilia. Pair it with Bakersfield’s Basque restaurants.

Big Bear Lake

Big Bear Lake

In the San Bernardino Mountains, about 100 miles east of LA, Big Bear Lake is the region’s main mountain resort — summer boating and hiking, winter skiing and snowboarding at Bear Mountain and Snow Summit. It is cold enough in winter that locals joke about skiing and it is the rare spot where you could snowboard in the morning and be near the beach by afternoon, though that is a long drive.

Anza-Borrego Desert State Park

Anza-Borrego Desert State Park

California’s largest state park, in Borrego Springs about 90 miles northeast of San Diego and the state’s first International Dark Sky Community. The spring wildflower bloom (March, in wet years) draws crowds; year-round you can see metal dinosaur and beast sculptures by Ricardo Breceda scattered in the desert. Summer is dangerously hot.

Fort Bragg and Pismo Beach

Fort Bragg, on the Mendocino Coast, is known for Glass Beach (sea glass on a former dump site), the Skunk Train through redwoods, and MacKerricher State Park whale watching. Pismo Beach, on the Central Coast, has a wide beach, the Dinosaur Caves Park bluffs, and a clambake tradition. Both are real towns, not just stops.

Fort Bragg

Conclusion

The through-line is that California’s best stops are often the ones off I-5 and away from the theme-park corridor. Pick by season: Lassen and the Sierra byway in summer, Anza-Borrego in spring, the coast towns in fall. Check each park’s road and fire status before you go — several of these close or limit access after wet winters or during fire season.

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