Travel Guide to California

2017 Travel Guide to California

Issue link: http://globelitetravelmarketing.uberflip.com/i/782043

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 32 of 179

marshmallows and hot cocoa for dessert. Cross-country skiing and snowshoeing courses dot the Tahoe area, offering a brisk aerobic workout amidst pine forests and sweeping mountain scenery. South of Tahoe, Mammoth Mountain boasts a world-class ski resort, while Bear Mountain offers skiing within a reasonable commute from Los Angeles, enabling the highly motivated to surf and ski in a single day. Outside of the ski resorts, snowmobiling provides high-octane motor sport fun, while dogsledding is a way to enjoy a different sort of ride with some furry friends. For the adventurous, remote backcountry skiing, the increasingly popular "sidecountry" Alpine Touring connected to the ski resorts, ice climbing and hut-to-hut hiking in the Sierra Nevada mountains can feed one's winter hunger for adrenaline. The Great Outdoors Step away from organized resort sports and there's still a wealth of winter outdoor activities in California. The bears may be hibernating but that doesn't mean you have to as well. Avoiding the hot summer months means visitors can enjoy temperate winter hiking and camping opportunities in desert parks such as Death Valley, Joshua Tree and around Palm Springs (but be fore- warned that the nights can still get frigid). Prior to snowfall, the Sierra Nevada moun- tain forests are ablaze with colorful fall foliage, making a hike through the hills a prime "shoulder season" activity. Wintertime provides an escape from the summer crowds often found in Yosemite National Park. Visit the near-empty wilder- ness to enjoy a quiet blanket of snow covering towering cliffs, the sun glistening off frozen waterfalls and the muffled clomping sound of guided snowshoe tours— and then retire to one of their lodges for spe- cial winter food and wine events. Hot springs around Mammoth Lakes provide toasty out- door relaxation with a view of snowcapped mountains. Or, perhaps bundle up and climb a mountain for prime star-gazing opportuni- ties in the crisp and clear mountain air, then add a few more layers and try some ice fishing on a high alpine lake. Winter also is the time when visitors can spot many animals migrating south to follow the sun. From massive gray whales to miniature monarch butterflies, flocks of birds in the central wetlands and pods of seals come to mate on the shores of the Pacific, the world's wildlife also seems to think that California's outdoors is a great place to visit in winter. 2 0 1 7 T R A V E L G U I D E T O C A L I F O R N I A 31 SKATERS ENJOY the ice in Yosemite Valley, right; a snowboarder gets some air above Lake Tahoe, boXom. » FIND YOUR SPORT Skiing skilaketahoe.com mammothmountain.com bearmountain.com xcski.org Hiking/Camping travelyosemite.com nps.gov/state/ca www.parks.ca.gov Wildlife whalewatching.com/california audubon.org/news/birding-california wildlife.ca.gov

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Travel Guide to California - 2017 Travel Guide to California