Monterey is a town that thrives on tourism, so if you're planning a visit, you've got lots of choices: everything from the five-star opulence of world-famous resorts at Pebble Beach down to one-star motels.
Selecting one depends as much upon your vacation plans as it does your budget. Well, almost as much -- even though the Convention and Visitors Bureau estimates that there are 300 hotels, motels and inns on the Monterey Peninsula, demand still exceeds supply... so it pays to shop around.
For a moment, let's pretend that money is no object and you're planning a weekend getaway to Monterey. What will you do there?
Are you a golfer? Then my mention of Pebble Beach above must have caught your eye, as it is Golf Digest's number one ranked golf resort in the United States. The Pebble Beach Resort boasts four golf courses, including two listed in Golf Digest's Top Ten.
The resort's hotels (The Lodge, The Inn at Spanish Bay and Casa Palermo) also offer world-class spas, tennis (their tennis club is ALSO top-ranked!), horseback riding, kayaking and swimming - both at the beach and heated pools. Fine dining and shopping are also on-site, which makes the resort a one-stop visit of its own.
What will a weekend stay at this paradise cost you? The least expensive room at The Inn at Spanish Bay (which is the least expensive of the three hotels) goes for $535 a night (and this does not include golf course fees). Ocean views at any of the three go for upwards of $730 a night.
There are less expensive options for golfers who are willing to forego the luxury of the Pebble Beach resorts. Monterey a beautiful, woodsy Hyatt Regency just three miles from downtown. A weekend room there will run you $249 a night (a relative bargain compared with the Inn at Spanish Bay), and guests get a special rate at Pebble Beach's Del Monte golf course. The Hyatt also boasts its own tennis facility, swimming pool and T-Mobile wi-fi throughout the property.
As I'm not a golfer, I'm kind of partial to Monterey's downtown hotels. I can also personally vouch for their quality, having managed several meetings and conventions at the Monterey Conference Center in the early '90's. The great thing about a downtown location is that once you park your car, you never have to use it again (until it's time to leave).
Adjacent to the Monterey State Historic Park and Portola Plaza is the Portola Plaza Hotel. Across the street is the Monterey Marriott. These are both pretty standard chain-type hotels (the Portola Plaza was originally a Doubletree, now under new management). While you do get a high level of service and amenities, there isn't anything particularly special about the facility or the rooms. These properties do, however, offer you an enviable location where you can walk to all the sites I mentioned in my first Monterey post). These hotels offer comparable rates: $229 and $249 for the Portola Plaza.
If it's a romantic getaway you're after, you'll find plenty of ambiance one block away, at the Hotel Pacific. This all-suite Spanish-influenced garden style inn offers rooms with feather beds, fireplaces, french doors that lead to private patios, and little luxuries like a second TV in the bathroom. If you book online through their website, it will cost you $269 a night -- but when I checked this out at AAA, I found a rate of $209.
This brings me to the subject of hotel room rates in general, which are fluid and dependent upon factors like supply, demand and season. The rate today may be wildly different from the rate tomorrow. To research this post, I selected a weekend in October to check rates and availability. Sites like Hotels.com, Travelocity and Orbitz are good for helping you locate properties to stay in -- however, in most cases you will get a better deal when you book your room through the hotel's own website, especially if you belong to their frequent traveler program and have points to trade for a discounted room. Membership in the Automobile Club can help too (as in the example above), although the discount is not usually as substantial as the one I found at Hotel Pacific.
AAA is also good for giving you accurate ratings of the hotels you're booking -- I've found that the big travel websites don't always concur on the number of stars awarded a particular property.
If the purpose of your visit is to see the Monterey Bay Aquarium, you should check out the many hotels and motels that have sprung up around Cannery Row. The one I've always wanted to try is the elegant Monterey Plaza, with its beautiful dolphin fountain and dramatic views of the bay. Alas, this property's rates are in Pebble Beach territory, with ocean view rooms for the weekend in question starting at $410.
More affordable options are the three-star Best Western Victorian Inn ($210), and the two-star Cannery Row Inn ($169) and Otter Inn ($139).
Notice how the rate gets lower the fewer stars the property is awarded and the farther you are from the attraction you are visiting? I wanted to save more money on my recent Monterey visit, so opted to try one of the many motels located in the Carmel Hill area of Monterey. This is a hillside strip on Munras avenue, roughly two miles from the Aquarium that is home to over a dozen little motels of the Days Inn, Clarion and TraveLodge variety. Our choice was the Comfort Inn Carmel Hill, with a AAA rate of $129. Even though it was a no-frills kind of place (vending machines instead of a coffee shop, plastic cups in the bathroom instead of real glass), it was clean, it felt safe, it had a decent little pool, and offered free high-speed Internet and continental breakfast in the morning.
It was also located right next door to La Giostra, a pretty good little Italian restaurant and was just a block away from the Del Monte Shopping Center, which had more places to eat and a Whole Foods Market to boot.
If I was worried that my daughter would miss the amenities she's used to in more luxurious places, those fears were quickly rested. "I like the Comfort Inn," she said, as she grabbed the remote and sank into her very own comfortable queen bed. I did, too.
Next: Final Monterey post.
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