Tomales Hotel has new owners, Bill and Rachel Bonini. Bill grew up in the tiny coastal hamlet of Tomales and has a special place in his heart for the Gold-Rush-era main street and its Victorian architecture.
As I've written about Tomales and the Marin-meets-Sonoma (Fog Valley) coastal history at length over the past decade or so, in my non-fiction, reporting and also in my fictional stories, I too have a fondness for this remote little coastal treasure.
And so when an invite popped into my inbox last week alerting me to the recent upgrades to the storied Tomales Hotel, I jumped in my car and headed out west to check it out for myself.
If you're a local and a Dillon Beach-goer you too most likely share my experiences of having driven by the hotel on many occasions and wondered at its historic austerity. I couldn't imagine booking an overnight, even though I love its proximity to the beach, the bakery across the road, neighbor bar The William Tell before its recent closure.
But it was crying out for attention and since the call was heard by a former local, it's really cool to see the authenticity of a mid 1800s hotel paired with modern amenities such as wifi and its own authentic and rustic event/party space across the street.
Bill and Rachel have refreshed all of the rooms, which are all super spacious. There's a wheelchair accessible suite on the ground floor too. If you'd like to experience staying overnight in a western coastal hotel that hasn't altered all that much since its inception during the mid Victorian era, then this is the place for you. And it's well priced compared to most other properties along Tomales Bay and the coast. If you don't know the area well, Tomales is about four miles inland from Dillon Beach.
The Bonini's also own the lot across the street from the hotel, recently rebranded as The Lot 95. I took a few photos of it staged for visitors and I can imagine some fun and original parties for small-sized celebrations with the hotel taken over by wedding and big birthday parties. Don't you love the table linen? Apparently it was sourced from downtown Petaluma's iLeoni.
Click here for more info on Tomales Hotel
TOMALES HOTEL
26985 Highway One
Tomales California 94971
Tel: 707-888-9991
[email protected]
A couple of days later I was back out at the coast, this time to Doran Beach and up to Bodega Harbor and north to Jenner and back. I'm getting stuck into my physical research for my new novel Floating in the Middle, set along the Sonoma Coast.
I keep thinking I'll cast my net a little wider for the next story, but if a story is calling my name and it's set in Sonoma County, then I can't very well hang up and head elsewhere, can I? I hope you're ready for another one. It'll take me at least a year but I have this one well thought out so I am hoping it doesn't take me as long as the last one to complete. We'll have to see. The characters will tell me if they think I need to explore deeper.
One thing I can tell you is that one of the characters arrives in a boat moored in Bodega Harbor. I stopped by to check out where he would have one of the other main character's pick him up for a long weekend reunion on the coast.
If you drive the Sonoma Coast regularly, you'll be aware of the reconstruction of the highway in parts due to cliff erosion. It's this that sparked my intrique initially. I drove up and down and in and out of the various beach parking lots to figure out in my mind's eye where all the action takes place in my new story. It remains a figment of my imagination however, so don't go looking for any specific house as I truly am building it from the ground-up as a made-up-place.
I've been thinking a lot about where my stories come from. There's a distinctive thread through all my writing that ties together my connectedness to this place, my sense of being an immigrant, even after more than three decades. I write about where I am. I'm here for longer periods of time than anywhere else, though I'm equally at home back in my native England. This time I have a British protagonist. Not me, but someone I understand for her attachment to two countries, two cultures and two coastal regions.
Thanks for sticking with my Southern Sonoma Country Life posts. They've been few and far between of late with my book endeavors and my extended family time in the UK. I hope to keep you posted on things that spark my interest in the area this summer.
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