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Close to home, but well worth a weekend

Nick's Cove & Cottages adds creature comforts to Tomales Bay's oyster-rich waters.

Pamela Feinsilber, Photography by Ed Anderson

I live in Marin County, in lovely Larkspur, so we go to Tomales Bay all the time—it’s my favorite day trip. But recently, after staying overnight at the newly opened Nick’s Cove & Cottages, I had to rethink many hesi­tations I had about paying to sleep so close to home.

For one thing, you forget that you’re close to home, thanks to restaurant-design king Pat Kuleto, who has magically cozied up this enclave of fishermen’s shacks—especially the five rebuilt cabins jutting over the bay. With their worn wood floors and tongue-and-groove paneling painted creamy white, they feel more restored than rebuilt, as if someone has been living in them happily for years, but bought some really nice stuff—soft leather couch, kilim-type rugs, king-size bed with a fluffy duvet, claw-foot soaking tub—without getting all chichi about it. With the waves lapping under your private deck at high tide and a fire in the wood-burning stove, it’s hard to tear yourself away.

Then again, Blue Waters Kayaking launches its Tule Elk Tour from the boat ramp right next to Nick’s. I’ve kayaked with this friendly, knowledgeable company for years, and its wildlife-rich trip from Nick’s moves across Tomales Bay through oyster beds at Hog Island and within shouting distance of the Tule Elk Reserve at Point Reyes National Seashore—or, during its three-hour moonlit paddle, next to night herons caught against a big old moon and gleaming silver water. Wait—where do I live again?

Blue Waters Kayaking: 19225 Hwy. 1, Marshall, 415-669-2600, bwkayak.com; Nick’s Cove & Cottages: 23240 Hwy. 1, Marshall, 415-663-1033, nickscove.com, from $165

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