Page 73 - 2020 Travel Guide to California
P. 73

weather, spectacular geography and mineral
springs. The 1950s brought yoga to the state,
and the 1960s ushered in a wave of young
hippies passionate about all-natural food
and intentional living. Today, California is
the nation’s vortex of personal health and
self-improvement, with spas and wellness
centers almost as ubiquitous as scenic
views. From five-star luxury resorts and
posh day spas to holistic healing programs
and “hippie hot springs,” the array of
retreats will dazzle even the most experi-
enced serenity seeker. Here are some of our
favorite spots for the ultimate escape.
Taking the Waters
Home to numerous large geothermal areas,
California has for centuries been a cele-
brated mineral springs destination, with
myriad spas statewide. Two hours inland
from Los Angeles, Desert Hot Springs offers
dozens of options, from the glamorous,
sprawling Two Bunch Palms (featured in
the movie The Player) to cozy boutique inns
like The Good House. The Central Coast
also boasts famous baths, such as Tassa-
jara, the first Zen monastery built outside
of Asia. But small, funky Calistoga in the
north is the state’s oldest spa town,
renowned not only for hot springs but also
abundant volcanic ash used for therapeutic
mud treatments.
Eight thousand years ago, the Wappo
Indians named the area “Ta La Ha Lu Si,”
meaning “Beautiful Land” or “Oven Place,”
and today spa facilities run the gamut from
luxurious to laid-back. The oldest in Calis-
toga—and likely California—is Indian
Springs, opened in 1862 by Sam Brannan,
the first Gold Rush millionaire. Today the
17-acre property remains a refuge, featuring
a 1913 Olympic-size mineral pool heated to
92-102 degrees depending on the season
($25 extra on weekdays, $50 extra on week-
ends and holidays), an adults-only pool
with dining and beverage service, plus mud
baths, eucalyptus-steeped steam rooms
and a meditation pond.
Wine Country Wellness
Though Napa Valley and Sonoma are
known for some of the world’s best grapes,
you can soak up much more than wine in
this beautiful region. Residents and visitors
alike have long enjoyed the area’s natural
mineral waters, and today’s spa menus
overflow with therapeutic ingredients such
as grape seeds and skins, rich in antioxi-
dants and polyphenols.
For first-class accommodations, a
three-star Michelin dinner and extreme
pampering, visit the 14,000-square-foot
all-suite Meadowood Resort. At the spa,
choose a curated treatment package such as
the three-and-a-half-hour “From the Vines,”
vinotherapy using free-radical-fighting
INDIAN SPRINGS RESORT & SPA, Calistoga, opposite;
spa pool at Terranea Resort, bottom.
grape extracts, which includes a massage
and facial. Located on a private, two-hun-
dred-fifty-acre estate, Meadowood also
offers golf, tennis, croquet, hiking and
swimming.
Many spas offer vineyard views, but at
Spa Terra at the Meritage Resort, treatments
take place below the vineyard in an under-
ground wine cave. Treat yourself to the
fifty-minute “uncork”: a grape-seed scrub
followed by a skin-regenerating wine and
rosehip mud wrap (rich in minerals and
antioxidants) and a sumptuous application
of cabernet grape-seed lotion. (Add on foot
and scalp treatments for an extra $25 each,
or two for $40.) Use of the Jacuzzi and
steam room is included with services.
But it’s not all about grapes in wine
country. At Solage, a 20,000-square-foot
Auberge spa, the signature treatment is “the
mudslide,” which combines a lavish mud
application with customized essential oils
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