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Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Wine Country: Healdsburg, CA

I'm bringing it back 3+ years here and recapping a trip that I took to Healdburg in California in August 2015. Healdsburg is approximately 2 hours north of where we live in California, and it is one of the lesser known wine towns in the Napa/Sonoma area. In my opinion, Napa and to a certain extent, Sonoma, has become overly commercialized (think gift shops, valet service, guided tours... yuck); but, the good news is that there are still smaller towns such as Healdburg that maintain the charm of wine country without succumbing to the ritzy tourist crowd.

My friend Mary visted me shortly after I moved to the US and we decided to drive up to Healdsburg for the weekend to check it out. We rented bikes and biked down Dry Creek Road, which is the street  that is lined with wineries on either side. I highly recommend checking out this area of wine country on a bike, it forces you to get some exercise, slow down, and enjoy the sites and journey (and you don't have to worry about driving and driving!).

On to the pictures! We first picked up our bikes in town and did a tasting at Lambert Bridge Winery.




Old fire truck in front of the vineyard



We then biked over to the Dry Creek General Store, which is an adorable country store where you can pick up picnic essentials.


We took our picnic goods and biked down to Preston Winery, an organic and biodynamic winery with a great picnic area and a relaxed environment. You can purchase a bottle of wine and picnic on their lawn. This vineyard is my #1 recommendation in wine country. Its just plain relaxing and not pretentious.


Picnic delights!



After our lunch, we biked down to Quivira Winery and checked out their gorgeous gardens.





On Sunday, we stopped by for a tasting at Duckhorn, a fancier yet nice contrasting experience to the smaller vineyards of Healdsburg.




Here are my recommendations for the Healdsburg area:

EAT: eat at Shed for breakfast, Dry Creek General Store for picnic lunch essentials, Flying Goat for coffee, Spoon Bar for dinner

STAY: We stayed at the Hampton Inn in Windsor, it was a 15 min drive to Healdsburg, but a nice hotel and cheaper than staying in town and one of the only options available due to our last minute booking

PLAY: Rent bikes from Wine Country Bikes... the bikes come with attached bags to store wine bottle purchases :) Note that for most large vineyards you can walk in and pay for a tasting fairly easily, but most small vineyards require appointments made in advance. Also, its rare to find a US winery that won't charge you for a tasting, prepare to pay approx $15 per tasting, sometimes more or less.



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