Santa Cruz Good Times

Friday
Jul 30th
Text size
  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Good Times Home Visitor Guide SC Skating, Climbing, Biking, Boating, Kayaking, SCUBA

SC Skating, Climbing, Biking, Boating, Kayaking, SCUBA

skate_santacruzSkating, Biking, Boating
Rock Climbing, Kayaking
Stand up Paddling
SCUBA, Rentals

 

Skating

Ken Wormhoudt Skate Park 225 San Lorenzo Blvd. at Riverside Avenue (in Mike Fox park), Santa Cruz  Open from 9am to sunset, you can find pro skaters here and amateurs. Wildly inventive in its design and perfectly situated near Downtown Santa Cruz and the Boardwalk.

Scotts Valley Skate Park 361 King’s Village Road, Scotts Valley Considered one of the best skateparks in the county, this portal for skaters offers the most dynamic angles for seasoned skateboarders. But newbies shouldn’t shy away.

Santa Cruz Bike Park 35 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz, Across the street from the entrance to the Santa Cruz Municipal Wharf BMX riders unite. The park boasts a bowed 8-foot-high wall ride and 2- and 4-foot jumps in addition to street obstacles and a total absence of inline skaters.

 

Stand up Paddling

Covewater Paddle Surf 726 Water Street, Santa Cruz,  831-600-7230, Covewater.com  Covewater is Northern California’s only fully dedicated stand up paddleboard (SUP) shop. Providing stand up paddleboards, equipment, rentals and friendly classes is their sole focus. Stand up and see the ocean from a whole new perspective!

 

Rock Climbing

Castle Rock State Park Located in the Santa Cruz Mountains, perched along Skyline Boulevard is a premiere bouldering destination and sport climb heaven. Formed from ancient beaches, the sandstone crags have enticing wind-made caves and a variety of bolted routes for about every skill level. Castle Rock proper has a bomber top rope anchor with a variety of routes to challenge the uninitiated.

Pacific Edge Rock Climbing Gym 104 Bronson St. #12, Santa Cruz, 831-454-9254, pacificedgeclimbingym.com  What a wild time you can have here! And all for about the same price of a health club. Pacific Edge, a local favorite, offers an impressive variety of indoor climbing. Bouldering, face climbs from 5.2 to 5.13, a roof, weight room, even a crack climb, make this one of the premiere rock gyms in the country. It’s also a great place to learn the ropes, practice and keep in shape for the real outdoor adventures.

Pinnacles National Monument Ninety minutes south of Santa Cruz, 831-389-4485 It gets two or three inches closer to Santa Cruz a year thanks to the San Andreas Fault slip-sliding north. Twenty-three million years ago, this volcanic formation was in the Mojave Desert, hence the sometimes dicey holds. This is a sport climber’s paradise.

Yosemite Perhaps the reason why climbers really live here is because of the granite of Yosemite—a mere four-hour drive from here. Another two hours over Tioga Pass and the East Side of the High Sierra.

 

Boating

Capitola Boat and Bait 1400 Capitola Wharf Road, 831-462-2208  Be the captain of your boat when you rent a 16-foot skiff and 8 HP motor. Nothing quite beats a day motoring around the bay with a fishing rod at your whim and command.

chardonnayChardonnay Sailing Charters 704 Suite A, Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz 831-423-1213 or chardonnay.com This magnificent charter offers luxury at a great price. Wine tasting, private charters, whale watching (gray whales in spring, humpbacks in summer) and bay cruises.

Lighthall Yacht Charters Santa Cruz Yacht Harbor, lighthallcharters.com, 831-429-1970  It’s easy to feel like an aristocrat even on a budget, with a luxurious sailing yacht. Up to six passengers can enjoy a voyage on one of the 34-to-47 foot yachts for an affordable price. Yachts may be booked for private charters, lessons, corporate events or spreading the remains of a loved one at sea.

O’Neill Yacht Center 2222 East Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz 831-476-5202  Offering sailing lessons, rentals and charters on their giant catamaran, O’Neill is tops when it comes to experiencing the Bay firsthand.

Pacific Yachting Sailing School & Charter Boating 790 Mariner Park Way, Santa Cruz  831-423-7245 or pacificsail.com Pacific Yachting incorporates team building and more. Eighteen sailboats are on hand and the company will charter sailing beauties from 22 to 43 feet.

Santa Cruz Sportfishing, Inc. 831-426-4690 or Santacruzsportfishing.com Fifty feet of pure fishing pleasure greets you onboard the Makaira. Offering some of the best in deep-sea fishing and whale watching.

Santa Cruz Boat Rentals 15 Santa Cruz Municipal Wharf 831-423-1739 or santacruzboatrentals.net Some of the best variety is found here. Featuring 24 wooden skiffs, 17 feet long with six HP motors.

MTM Sport Fishing 2210 East Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz, 831-476-2648, shamrockcharters.com  Fishing and whale watching outfit with years of experience plying the Monterey Bay.

Stagnaro’s Fishing Trips 32 Santa Cruz Municipal Wharf 831-427-2334 or stagnaros.com One of the original Italian fishing families in Santa Cruz, Stagnaro’s offers fishing trips, whale watching and cruises on the bay that will take your breath away.

 

kayak_waveKayaking

Adventure Sports Unlimited 303 Potrero St., Santa Cruz 831-458-3648, asudoit.com Adventure Sports is the aquatic fun center for kayaking and diving in the Monterey Bay Marine Sanctuary. Certified dive masters and instructors teach SCUBA in a pool heated to tropical temperatures and lead dive trips in the bay. Adventure Sports also offers kayak rental and instruction.

Kayak Connection 413 Lake Ave., No. 4, Santa Cruz, 831-479-1121, kayakconnection.com  Expect kayaking tours of Elkhorn Slough and Monterey Bay, local open coast paddling tours and local overnight sea kayaking trips. Elkhorn Slough is one of 17 estuarine reserves in the United States, and home to saltwater, freshwater and marshland wildlife—you’ll see a lot of seals, otters, loons, egrets, pelicans and other birds there.

Venture Quest Kayaking 2 Santa Cruz  Municipal Wharf , 831-425-8445,  kayaksantacruz.com Bring your kayak or rent one here and explore the Monterey Bay. If you want to perfect your surf kayaking skills, take a lesson. Venture Quest also offers basic sea kayaking instruction, and sea kayaking tours of the bay are available from just off the Wharf.

 

scuba_jefSCUBA Diving

Aqua Safaris SCUBA Center 6896 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz  831-479-4386, aquasafaris.com Aqua Safaris offers complete lines of top-quality equipment, diving and safety instruction, tank gas fills, exotic dive travel adventures and Monterey Bay excursions. The center has a classroom on site as well as rental and retail centers.

Rentals

CruzCarz 131 Center St., Santa Cruz, 831-423-9666, cruzcarz.com See Santa Cruz at your own pace in a two-seat miniature scooter coupe. You get about 75 miles per gallon and  a GPS, which tells the driver about local sights as the vehicle nears them. Choose a planned tour or choose your own.

Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment

busy
 

More Good Times

 

Santa Cruz Area Events

BLUE Ocean Film Festival      

 

Music Calendar

GT Weekly Club Grid PDF >

 

Memory Matters

Twenty years after the fact, a geologist and a historian say we must not forget “Loma Prieta was a humbling experience for most of us. a reminder of our diminutive stature in the grand scheme of things. I think that remembering events like that is a perfect antidote for our collective hubris; it keeps us honest.” —Sandy Lydon, ‘History Dude’  

 

Ocean Advocacy Goes Federal

You don’t need to tell a Santa Cruzan how important the ocean is. From our economy to our natural beauty to our hard-fought-formoniker as “Surf City,” Santa Cruz is defined by its relationship to the ocean as much as Colorado is to its Rockies. So when President Barack Obama signed an Executive Order on July 19 creating a national ocean policy for the first time in history, it was like hearing about a big break for an old friend who’s been going through a tough time lately.

 

Rearranging Rape

“As of next school year, Rape Prevention Education as you know it will no longer exist.” This is what UC Santa Cruz administrators told Rape Prevention educator Gillian Greensite last month, explaining a decision to “reorganize” the program. Greensite was told that, starting in the 2010/2011 school year, Rape Prevention Education would no longer be a separate effort, but would be absorbed into the Student Health Outreach and Promotion program (SHOP), and that she would no longer be a rape educator, but a sexual health educator through SHOP. She promptly retired.

 

Overall, how would you rank the local club scene? What could be improved?

I'd say it's average. I like a lot of dub step and electronic music. Most of the hip-hop and K-DON and stuff—I really get over those kind of songs. More DJ's and what not would be nice. Nesta LoniSanta Cruz | Prep Chef

 

Perfect Palm

The Glaum family is adored for their locally fresh cage-free eggs. For the past year, these eggs have been served in breakfast burritos and sandwiches at the Glaums’ new deli where Piggie Market has nurtured Redwood Village neighbors for 25 years. The central, thatched-roof, hexagonal open kitchen mimics the unusual shape of the extensively renovated building. Textured stone flooring winds around the kitchen, leading to an extensive wine selection. From the wall of refrigerators you can still pick up your milk and eggs, as well as beer, numerous brands of beverages, and locally made Massimo gelato.

 

From the Editor

Club much? Sometimes, it’s a good thing, and if you’ve moseyed to any of the local nightclubs in Santa Cruz County over the years, you more than likely have been greeted by a powerful presence—a bouncer. This week, writer J.D. Ramey takes readers behind the scenes and uncovers, well, let’s say the more embraceable side of some of our area’s favorite greeters and, at times, protectors. These guys are an enigmatic bunch.

 

Nordic Forge

“Man is wolf to man.” Not only is this a quote from the Roman playwright Plautus, one of the earliest known Latin authors, but it is also the title of the earliest known demo recording from local metal slayers Nordic Forge. “[The title track] is a song Jimi wrote almost all at once,” explains the vocalist, Rueben. “Then, I wrote the lyrics after listening to the hymn ‘O Rubor Sanguinis’ by Saint Hildegard Von Bingen.” Determined not to be just another scrawled name in the metal world, the guys in Nordic Forge draw their creativity from classics such as Shakespeare (“Throne of Blood”) and saintly hymns, to an array of bands from the early days of thrash metal and the extremes in Scandinavia. Mario, the act’s guitarist, cites atmospheric and melodic groups like Dissection, At the Gates, and Darkthrone as influences. “Always Darkthrone,” he emphasizes. Only known by their first names, the band of intellectual malcontents consists of Reuben on flesh-curling vocals, brothers Mario and Jimi decimating the guitar scales, Ben on thunderous bass, and Andrew manning the rapid-firing drums.

 

Place Your Vote

Author, musician, sometime-politician and all-around American raconteur, Kinky Friedman doesn’t mince words when it comes to pontificating on just about any subject near and dear to his heart. His takes on life are often delivered in a humorous, satirical manner, but the 65-year-old tackles a lot of serious issues and themes, much like the manner in which Mark Twain presented his opinions and views to readers. Still, Friedman is clearly on a level all his own today.

 

Storrs Winery Chardonnay 2008

One of the most popular wines round these parts is Storrs Chardonnay. It’s probably one of the most-requested wines at any given restaurant. And the reason is simple – it’s an excellent wine. It turns out that many judges at this year’s California State Fair think so, too. They named the Storrs 2008 Santa Cruz Mountains Chardonnay as the Best Wine of the Region. As the top wine of the greater Bay Area, this wine also garnered a Best Chardonnay of Region distinction, and a gold medal. When you think of all the wines submitted in this competition, this is truly an impressive achievement.

 

Meet the Bouncers

Wherever there’s a crowd of people drinking, there’s bound to be a jackass or two. Much as we might wish we could just hit the “Eject” button and send the rabble-rousers flying, it takes a living, breathing human to get rid of that unwanted guest who’s had one too many. Which, of course, is where bouncers come in. The doorman is a figure who appears throughout history and throughout nature: The Old Testament makes mention of “gatekeepers” whose duty was to keep things copasetic at the Levitical Temple, and even certain species of ants have their own peacekeepers whose duty is to chuck out unwelcome parties. Clearly, this is an essential service, but few people have the stones for it, let alone the physical power.

 

Bad Faith

Searing tragedy of intolerance reduced to melodrama in 'Agora' | There's a fascinating, heartbreaking, infuriating true story at the center of Agora, a sumptuous drama of ancient Alexandria from Spanish filmmaker Alejandro Amenábar. But even as the female scholar protagonist lectures her students that every system in the universe must revolve around a center or it will collapse, Amenábar clutters up his narrative with so much bombast and portent, it's own center finally cannot hold.
Sign up for our weekly events newsletter
you can unsubscribe any time.
  • Login
    Log in to post comments, add Community Calendar events & get access to web-exclusive content
  • Create an account
    Registration
    *
    *
    *
    *
    *
    REGISTER_REQUIRED

  • Bookmark and Share