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Seacliff State Beach is a state beach park on Monterey Bay, in the town of Aptos, Santa Cruz County, California. It is located off Highway 1 on State Park Drive, about 5 miles (8 km) south of Santa Cruz. The beach is most known for the concrete ship SS Palo Alto lying in the water. North of Seacliff State Beach is New Brighton State Beach.
The wet slips can accommodate boats up to 55 feet in length, and dry slips and a three-ton crane for smaller boats up to 25 feet in length as well as a dinghy launch and storage. The club is open five days a week, plus a full-time dock staff and shore boat.
California Coastal Access Guide, Seventh Edition, published by the University of California Press in 2014. ISBN 978-0520278172. Compiled by the California Coastal Commission, this guide provides comprehensive details on over 1150 public coastal access points along California's 1271-mile shoreline.
San Buenaventura State Beach; San Clemente State Beach; San Diego-La Jolla Underwater Park; San Diego-Scripps Coastal Marine Conservation Area; San Elijo State Beach; San Onofre State Beach; Santa Monica State Beach; Seaside Park (Ventura) Shell Beach, La Jolla; Silver Strand Beach; Solimar Beach; South Carlsbad State Beach; Surf, California ...
New Brighton State Beach is a 95 acres (38 ha) beach park on Monterey Bay in Santa Cruz County, California, consisting of a beach and campgrounds. The park is located east of Santa Cruz in Capitola , on Park Avenue off of Highway 1.
The Crystal Cove Historic District, a National Register of Historic Places site, inside the park contains 46 beach cottages from the 1920s and 1930s, of which 29 have been restored. 21 of these cottages are available for rent. [4] [12] [13] The house from the Bette Midler movie Beaches is located in Crystal Cove. [12]
La Jolla Shores Beach. This is a list of beaches in San Diego County, California.The beaches are listed in order from north to south, and they are grouped (where applicable) by the community in which the beach is situated.
Bathing Pavilion, Neptune Beach, Alameda, California in 1917. From the 1880s until the U.S. entry into World War II in December, 1941, the area around the visitor center was part of Neptune Beach, an amusement park and resort community that featured bathing spas and waterfront houses. It was formally called Alameda Beach and nicknamed "Coney ...