Well, perhaps it wasn't that plush... we had an "inland view" rather than a "bay view" but we loved it just the same. This is our room.
And this is a view from the plaza behind the hotel. A dolphin fountain on the right.
Old Fisherman's Wharf in Monterey is a touristy place ...
We checked out a number of restaurants on the wharf. This one right out on the end had an observation deck looking out over the bay. This old guy was holding up his lantern to light the way. The old Monterey Fish Company is located on the pier to the right in the background.
Well, after checking out a lot of the restaurants and trying all their clam chowder samples, we picked Old Fisherman's Grotto (you like the guy out front welcoming us in?) ...

The canneries failed after the collapse of the fishing industry in Monterey Bay in the mid-1950s. Before that, the fishery was one of the most productive in the world due to the rising of cold, nutrient-rich water from the bottom of the Pacific Ocean that is funneled to the surface via the vast underwater Monterey Canyon. In 1945, John Steinbeck wrote his famous book "Cannery Row" whose characters were based on the lives of many of his acquaintances and conditions in the fishing industry. Here is a view of modern Cannery Row with the street overcrossings for the canneries now preserved but with modern markings.
But even though this is a touristy spot, there is a lot of history preserved in places such as this "Wax Museum" where a history is told of this part of California in a very well done presentation.
In Steinbeck's book, one of the characters was Lee Chong, a shrewed Chinese owner and operator of the neighborhood grocery store. Lee Chong and his store were modeled after the Wing Chong market. The building still exists today and is still owned by the Chong family.
A star fish in a tide pool.One of our unique and fun things was to take a Hollywood Movie Tour bus around Monterey where we saw the places, heard the stories behind, and watched movie clips from movies made in the Monterey area over the years. Part of this movie tour took us on the famous 17-Mile Drive.
Of course there were the normal scenic things to stop at beside learning about the movies. This is the Lone Cypress growing out on the rocks. This tree has been around for along time. They estimate it will last for another 40 years at least and then they'll have to come up with another tree to plant in its place (maybe plastic the next time :)
By the way, this is picture of what it looked like 76 years ago. My dad, J.T. Lindsey, took this picutre in 1923 when he made a tour of California from Utah. Not much has changed.
While we were at Cypress Point we found these to crows getting rather cozy in an old dead tree. Love is blind. [I've got an 18x lens on my digital camera that makes these shots possible. Just incredible!]
This is the back of the Pebble Beach Lodge. We wanted to do this picutre especially because we had just watched scene (on the Movie Tour bus) from a 1956 movie named "Julie" (with Doris Day playing Julie). In the movie, Doris ran up these stairs and into the lodge. Here here is a modern-day Julie going up the same stairs and into the Lodge.Just for your information, The Pebble Beach Company owns all the land within the 17 Mile Drive, in the last few years was sold by a Japanese company [who were very good stewards of the property, by the way] to three well known people (Clint Eastwood, Arnold Palmer and Peter Uberroth) and about a hundred other lesser known, but wealthy individuals.
Whike at the Lodge we ate lunch at The Tap Room. Great sandwiches!From the back of the Lodge we have this famous view of the 18th hole at the Pebble Beach golf course. Green fees on this course are $495... but that's not all. In order to play golf here, they also require that you stay at least TWO NIGHTS at the lodge!
Don't you just love the crutch on this oak tree?
We just had to show you one more restaurant scene. This is Domenico's at Fisherman's Wharf. We loved the food there, too. Julie had a shrimp pasta and I had tilapia.
On Sunday, we decided to go to church at the Monterey Ward (real close to the 17 Mile Drive). When we got there the parking lot was just jam-packed and out onto the street. Turns out they were creating a new ward that day. Now there are the Monterey 1st and 2nd Wards. The bishop of the Monterey Ward (now 1st Ward) was retained. His name is Bishop Fazal Hussein from the Middle East. It would be interesting to hear how he joined the church and how he came to be in Monterey. A very good meeting and some very spiritual thoughts from the stake president and the two bishops. We even saw three people there we knew in San Jose.We had a wonderful weekend.