Travel Reference
In-Depth Information
One of Northern California's most technically challenging trails, OHM Trail draws hard-
core mountain bikers and hikers. Softcore walkers, take heart: a moderately strenuous half-
mile up from town, there's a bench with incredible valley views. The trailhead is at the in-
tersection of Hwy 29 and Silverado Trail.
Calistoga Bike Shop BICYCLE RENTAL
( MAP GOOGLE MAP ;
707-942-9687, 866-942-2453; www.calistogabikeshop.com ; 1318 Lincoln
Ave; 10am-6pm)
Rents full-suspension mountain bikes ($75 per day) and hybrids ($12/39 per hour/day),
and provides reliable trail information. Wine-touring packages ($90 per day) include wine-
rack baskets and free wine pickup.
Spas
Calistoga is famous for hot-spring spas and mud-bath emporiums, where you're buried in
hot mud and emerge feeling supple, detoxified and enlivened. (The mud is made with vol-
canic ash and peat; the higher the ash content, the better the bath.)
Packages take 60 to 90 minutes and cost $70 to $90. You start semi-submerged in hot
mud, then soak in hot mineral water. A steam bath and blanket-wrap follow. A massage in-
creases the cost to $130 and up.
Baths can be taken solo or, at some spas, as couples. Variations include thin, painted-on
clay-mud wraps (called 'fango' baths, good for those uncomfortable sitting in mud), herbal
wraps, seaweed baths and various massage treatments. Discount coupons are sometimes
available from the visitors center. Book ahead, especially on summer weekends. Reserva-
tions are essential everywhere.
Most spas offer multi-treatment packages. Some offer discounted spa-lodging packages.
Indian Springs Spa SPA
( MAP GOOGLE MAP ;
707-942-4913; www.indianspringscalistoga.com ; 1712 Lincoln Ave;
by
appointment 9am-8pm)
California's longest continually operating spa, and original Calistoga resort, has concrete
mud tubs and mines its own ash. Treatments include use of the huge, hot-spring-fed pool.
Great cucumber body lotion.
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