Travel Reference
In-Depth Information
Big Sur three times daily between late May and early September, and twice daily on
Saturday and Sunday only the rest of the year.
Big Sur
Big Sur
PGIAM / GETTY IMAGES ©
Big Sur is more a state of mind than a place you can pinpoint on a map. There are no
traffic lights, banks or strip malls, and when the sun goes down, the moon and the stars are
the only streetlights - if summer's dense fog hasn't extinguished them, that is. Much ink
has been spilled extolling the raw beauty and energy of this precious piece of land shoe-
horned between the Santa Lucia Range and the Pacific Ocean, but nothing quite prepares
you for your first glimpse of the craggy, unspoiled coastline.
In the 1950s and '60s, Big Sur - so named by Spanish settlers living on the Monterey
Peninsula, who referred to the wilderness as el país grande del sur ('the big country to the
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