Things to do in Napa Valley, CA

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Get Your Bearings in Napa Valley

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Take It or Leave It: Forget about fashion if your winery visits include treks through a vineyard. Good, practical shoes are the way to go.

Caution: Wine tasting on any day of the work week comes with smaller crowds than weekends.

Hot Tips: Visit mid-week if you can. Hotel rates may be lower.

Caution: Book as soon as you know your dates. Napa Valley hotels can fill quickly.

Be Sure to Sample: The Candy Cap Churros at Sam's Social Club, and the Beer Can Chicken at Bounty Hunter Wine Bar & Smokin' BBQ.

Hot Tips: Try the locally made goodies at the Cameo Cinema concession stand.

Take It or Leave It: If you buy your tickets at the Uptown Theatre box office, employees will sometimes take you inside so you can check out your seats.

Best Local Souvenir: Wine, obviously.

Avoid: Visiting Woodhouse Chocolate on an empty stomach.

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Napa Valley Neighborhoods

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Things to do in Napa Valley


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Napa Valley is known for...

Five of Napa Valley's most unique features and characteristics.

1. Wine:

It's no secret that Napa is the center of wine production in the United States. With plenty of daytime sunshine and cool nights, it's the perfect terroir for growing perfectly quaffable wines. With over six-hundred wineries and vineyards in Napa Valley (and that doesn't even include any in neighboring Sonoma!) they run the spectrum from small and family-owned (like Neyers Winery) to massive (think Mondavi). Unlike some of the older wine-making regions in France and Italy, Napa has nearly every kind of varietal, making it the perfect place to taste and learn.

2. Michelin Stars:

The same climate that allows Napa to grow excellent grapes makes it possible for the region to grow nearly anything, all year round. This good fortune has drawn many notable chefs to the valley (along with the Culinary Institute of America) to make it one of the best places in the world to eat, period. Two restaurants, Thomas Keller's The French Laundry and the restaurant at Meadowood have both been awarded three Michelin stars, while eight other restaurants in Napa have one star. Whether you prefer to call it 'farm to table,' or 'field to fork,' the great ingredients mean that even the simplest food is top notch.

3. Outdoors:

Rolling hills and acres of picturesque vineyards make Napa Valley a destination for outdoor enthusiasts. It's common to see cyclists clad in bright spandex zipping through the serene stretches of green, and less intense peddlers ambling their way from one winery to the next. Surrounded by the Mayacama Mountains to the west and north and the Vaca mountains to the south, there's no shortage of hiking, mountain biking and horseback riding trails that afford great views of the Valley. For the more adventurous, hot air balloons regularly take to the skies. 

4. Relaxation:

The combination of Napa's Mediterranean climate, the easy-going pace of wine tasting days and decadent, leisurely meals and many, many outdoor fire places already makes it the perfect place to get away from the bustle of the city. Add in quietly luxurious hotels with Frette-sheeted beds and award-winning spas featuring wine-inspired treatments and mud body masque bars and it's the perfect place to turn off the phone, forget about the internet and simply unwind for a few days. 

5. Art:

Drawn to the area by the beautiful scenery and peace and quiet, Napa Valley is home to numerous artists, many of whom draw inspiration from the landscape and light. Local galleries (there seem to be more and more of them popping up all the time), wineries and vineyards in each one of Napa's towns feature the paintings, sculpture and handcrafted furniture of these neighboring artists and artisans as well as others. Additionally, the former di Rosa estate, now turned museum, has arguably the world's most important collection of Northern Californian artists throughout the twentieth century.