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In-Depth Information
Eat at the tables in the shady courtyard, and have a rummage through the Free Box, a shed
full of clothes and other waiting-to-be-reused items.
Coast Café AMERICAN
( www.bolinascoastcafe.com ; 46 Wharf Rd; mains $10-22;
11:30am-3pm & 5-8pm Tue-Thu, to 9pm
Fri, 8am-3pm & 5-9pm Sat, to 8pm Sun; )
The only 'real' restaurant in town, everyone jockeys for outdoor seats among the flower-
boxes for fish and chips, barbecued oysters, or buttermilk pancakes with damn good cof-
fee. Live music Thursday and Sunday nights.
Getting There & Away
Route 61 of the West Marin Stagecoach ( 415-526-3239; www.marintransit.org/stage.html )
goes daily ($2) from the Marin City transit hub (weekend and holiday service from the
Sausalito ferry) to downtown Bolinas. By car, follow Hwy 1 north from Stinson Beach and
turn west for Bolinas at the first road north of the lagoon. At the first stop sign, take anoth-
er left onto Olema-Bolinas Rd and follow it 2 miles to town.
Olema & Nicasio
About 10 miles north of Stinson Beach near the junction of Hwy 1 and Sir Francis Drake
Blvd, Olema was the main settlement in west Marin in the 1860s. Back then, there was a
stagecoach service to San Rafael and there were six saloons. In 1875, when the railroad
was built through Point Reyes Station instead of Olema, the town's importance began to
fade. In 1906 it gained distinction once again as the epicenter of the Great Quake.
The Bolinas Ridge Trail , a 12-mile series of ups and downs for hikers or bikers, starts
about 1 mile west of Olema, on Sir Francis Drake Blvd. It has great views.
In the former Olema Inn, a creaky 1876 building, hyper-local Sir & Star (
415-663-1034; www.sirandstar.com ; cnr Sir Francis Drake Blvd & Hwy 1; mains $20, prix fixe Sat/other
nights $75/48; 5-9pm Wed-Sun, plus earlier hours in summer; ) restaurant delights with
Marin-sourced seasonal bounty like Tomales Bay oysters, Dungeness crab and duck 'faux'
gras. Reservations recommended.
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