Saltbluff is remote by design. Exactly how your group gets here, what the road asks of you, and what each season looks like when you arrive.
The last stretch is Highway One along the coast — spectacular, but slow and winding. Allow extra time. It's part of the arrival.
CA-128 from Boonville to the coast is thirty miles of two-lane road through the redwood river canyon. Narrow, winding, no shoulders in places — forty to fifty minutes on this stretch. Trucks, RVs, and trailers run slow; do not plan for sixty miles an hour. The payoff is enormous.
Highway One north from Jenner is beautiful but even slower — coming from the south, 128 is the faster road. We send every group a detailed turn-by-turn PDF with the booking confirmation.
Coastal Van Co. runs group van service from SFO, OAK, and STS directly to the house — ten- and fourteen-passenger vans, one-way or round trip. Advance booking required; they fill in peak season. We share the contact with your booking.
For groups arriving at different hours, we suggest a self-drive carpool from STS — the drive from Sonoma County is scenic and manageable, and your welcome letter includes a carpool map.
Uber and Lyft operate minimally on the Mendocino coast. Do not plan on rideshare for arrival or departure. Some guests ride from SFO or OAK as far as Ukiah or Cloverdale on 101, and pick up a rental car there.
Rental cars are available at SFO, OAK, STS, and in Santa Rosa. Book early — they sell out on summer weekends.
The Mendocino coast is beautiful and not flat. Here is what the property actually looks like for guests with mobility concerns.
Questions about specific needs? Tell us on the inquiry form, under "Anything we should know?" Most mobility needs are easy here — the house was built that way — and we'll be honest about the parts of the headland that aren't.
Honest. We love every season here. The fog is not a bug.
November–February. Storms roll in from the North Pacific. The coast empties. Fog sits on the bluff for days at a time. Between storms: extraordinary light, 55–62°F, whales offshore. The great room is warmest in winter.
The quiet season · lowest rates · writers & contemplativesMarch–May. Wildflowers on the headland. Fog lifts earlier, returns in the afternoon. 58–66°F. Whale migration peaks in March. The landscape is visibly alive, and the crowds haven't come.
Wide open · shoulder ratesJune–August. The morning fog burns off by ten — or it doesn't, and the light is silver all day. 60–72°F, evenings cool. This is why people think Mendocino doesn't get warm. It doesn't, and most groups love it.
Peak season · books firstSeptember–October. The clearest skies. The Anderson Valley harvest. The summer crowds gone. 62–70°F. Arguably the best weather on the coast — still at shoulder rates.
Wide open · shoulder rates