Napa: All the luxuries at half the price

Advice on how to get the most out of your travels!

  • Couple
  • Summer 2014

Objectives

  • Calistoga hot springs
  • Enjoy fine food and wine
  • Romance!
  • $500-$750
  • 2 days/nights

Trip Cost Details

Transportation $50
Accomodations $140
Food and Wine $305
Activities $200
Total $695
I love to splurge just as much as the next one, but when I splurge, I like to be strategic about it. I like to make sure that I am spending money to upgrade the items from which I truly get upgraded value. In some cases, I find that I get just as much value from a mid-range option as I do from the high-end option. There are even occasions where I will ultimately enjoy the cheapest version the best! A recent weekend trip that my husband and I took to Calistoga highlights this “Tripimization” strategy.

Accomodations

While the two of us often frequent wine country, we usually go to Sonoma, do not go in the summer and do not stay over night. I was in for a rude awakening when I saw that even the most basic motel-esque accomodations in Napa were over $300/night at this time of year. Any hotel that had the level of service that I typically find worth a splurge was in the $800+ range. And the sky is the limit for that “+”.  When I think of hotel cost, I’m willing to spend up to $200/night for “basic” accomodations depending on the local market conditions. My husband would argue that my definition of “basic” is actually luxury, but I’m talking about the type of service you get in a Sheraton or Courtyard Marriott meeting “basic”.  Sorry honey, no more Motel 6’s with me in tow. I am only willing to spend more than that if we are absolutely desperate (i.e. attending a wedding in the middle of nowhere and the only options are a $300/night Holiday Inn or sleeping in the car) or if I think the price is reflective of the added services and luxury I will receive. Given that Calistoga is not in the middle of nowhere, and the $400/night options felt like dark motel rooms to me, it was time to get creative!

 

That is when I discovered Bothe-Napa State Park and their newly built collection of 10 yurts. Located 3 miles south of Calistoga, on HWY 128, the State Park has a series of hikes and trails, several campgrounds, a few cabins, and 10 yurts. For $70/night, we reserved a clean, simple yurt consisting of a queen bed and mattress (bring your own sheets), two folding cots, a desk and a locking door. Outside the yurt we had our own parking space, a picnic table and a metal fire stove/pit.

IMG_1208 IMG_1209

 

I was very impressed with the cleanliness of the yurt, it even still had a fresh wood smell. Only downside was that there is no plumbing, so yes, you need to use a port-o-john. The bathroom was surprisingly not terrible, it was clear that the park cleans it often and uses a very effective odor eliminator. A live-in camp ground keeper lives next to Yurt #7 and is there to sell you firewood at $8/bundle and answer any questions you may have 24/7.

IMG_1211 IMG_1214

Food and Wine

Napa is notorious for having amazing food at amazingly high prices and amazingly hard to get reservations. The good thing about having such stiff foodie competition is that even the little guys need to perform. Our strategy was to hit up a fancy meal at lunch time, when the prices are slightly cheaper and there is no problem getting a reservation. For dinner, we got gourmet, “prepared” food and wine from the local grocery to enjoy on our private picnic table.

IMG_1243IMG_1239

Using our fire pit, we successfully grilled pineapple pork sausages and a cornmeal crusted mushroom pizza; we finished with S’mores (made with Ghirardelli chocolate) for dessert! Oh, one last issue with the yurt was that apparently August in Napa is bee season, it would have been challenging to eat lunch in the park, but once the sun went down, the bees went to sleep.

IMG_1247 IMG_1222

There was no substitute for morning coffee so we hit up coffee places in downtown Calistoga. On Saturday morning we were very impressed by the friendliness of the staff at Yo el Rey and the tastiness of the coffee! We definitely recommend them to anyone looking for quality espresso or drip coffee made with great care!

Activities

A spa treatment is a splurge, no way around it. One can usually draw a pretty clear correlation between cost of service and value/luxury when it comes to spa treatments. So, no big-time savings in this category. I simply did research to determine which spa would have the best mud bath experience. That is what you are supposed to do in Calistoga right? Sit in mud? Thanks to TripAdvisor and Yelp, my usual, go-to, on the run sources, Indian Springs Resort popped to the top.

For $85 each, my husband and I got the mud bath experience. I was very happy with the service at Indian Springs. They thought of everything, down to the fresh hair tie waiting in my personal locker. The treatment begins with a 12-minute soak in a vat of mud in their gender split bathhouse. I loved the feel of the bathhouse, it looked as if it was the same structure and architecture from the early 1900’s. After the 12-minute semi-buried alive experience, you rinse off and then sink into a 15-minute mineral bath. While in the bath, the staff provides you with a pick to clean the mud out from under your fingernails and refreshing cucumber water. Once you are finished soaking, you are escorted into a eucalyptus steam room and given a cool towel for your face. The steam is intense and after 5-10 minutes you enter the final stage of your treatment: a comfy towel wrap on top of a soft massage table where you cool down and drift off to bliss with cucumbers and a cool towel over your eyes.

There is an option to get a day pass for the mineral pools at the resort but we didn’t have the full day to spend at the spa. In the future I’d like to try the spa at the Solage, which is priced similarly but typically requires making a reservation well in advance.

In terms of wine tasting, we stopped by a couple of wineries in Napa on Saturday but when Sunday rolled around we bee-lined it over to Sonoma where the tasting rooms are more intimate/casual and the prices more reasonable.

Wrap Up

The weekend overall was relatively easy on the pocket book and very memorable! Did I mention that the Yurt turned out to be the safest place to be during the 6.1 earthquake we experienced that weekend? And with all being said and done, I can’t wait to start planning our future $1,300/night getaway to Calistoga Ranch…but until then, see the table below for a summary of this Napa weekend at half the cost!

Expenditure Tripimize: Description Tripimize: Cost Luxury: Description Luxury: Cost
Accomodations (2 nights) Yurt $140 Mid-level Hotel $800
Spa Day Mud bath for 2 $170 Mud bath for 2 $170
Luxury Meal Lunch at Solage $120 Dinner at Solage $160
Other food & wine Assorted gourmet groceries, wine, morning coffee, wine tasting $214 2 bkfts, 1 lunch, 1 dinner, wine tasting $250
Transportation Gas and tolls $50 Gas and tolls $50
Total Trip Cost $695 $1,430

Click here for more information on renting a Yurt in Northern California

What cost-cutting but luxury-preserving tips do you have?

One Reply

  1. Pingback: Sol Bar (Calistoga, CA) | Tripimize

Comments are closed.