After a few days camped out in the North Bay of San Francisco, we relocated to the city and four nights gave us ample time to to revisitĀ our old haunts. But thereās one thing we made a priority, and that was taking a Half Moon Bay day trip to Martinās Beach.
This post was last updated in March 2025.
Getting Around the Bay Area
Having a car in San Francisco can be one big headache: Itās either an arm and a leg to park overnight or you have to comply with very strict street parking rules (including paying attention to street cleaning times, which are always very random), something we learned the hard way living there and racking up too many parking tickets to count.
On our second day in San Francisco, we picked up our rental, which we got for a stealāunder $300 for a full week from Enterpriseāso we had a car for the duration of our trip.
But we knew weād be turning it in early to avoid the hassle of driving around in circles waiting for a spot to open up only then having to move it every two hours we were stationary, so we planned our day trip to Half Moon Bay for the first weekday then turned in the car early.
Sadly, thereās no real public transportation method to get you up and down the coast, so if you want to see a bit of Highway 1 (aka the Pacific Coast Highway), youāre going to need a car. If youāre traveling on your own dime and not your companyās, I always recommend renting from a location within a city and not at the airport to save money on those airport taxes.
And let me just say if you are only going to rent a car for one day, make it a weekday. Despite the sunny, relatively warm weather, our beach day in North California was blissfully empty. There was literallyĀ nobodyĀ there.
Cruising Down Highway 1
Our first house together in the Bay Area was in South San Francisco, meaning Pacifica was just over the hill. SVV surfed there often, and my Bikram studio was located there, as well, so we popped down to the crescent-shapedĀ Pacifica State Beach en route to Half Moon Bay to snap some photos.
Despite the sunny day, it was coldĀ out. I was bundled up in a long-sleeved shirt, a vest and a sweater on top, and yet these surfers were out there in the 60-degree water in just a seven-millimeter wetsuit. Further proof I could never be a surfer.
We didnāt stay long (see: freezing outside!) and, from there, headed further south to the famed Mavericks and the town of Half Moon Bay. This was alwaysāand still isāour favorite part of the Bay Area, and you can see why from this little video of our drone footage I put together.
We spent a glorious four hours on the lesser-known Martinās Beach, which was quite literally vacant until we arrived. How that can still happen in a state with nearly 40 million residents and even more tourists is beyond me.
This is the exact spot we were the moment my brother-in-law texted that my niece Charlotte was born at 3:07pm, and Iāll forever cherish that despite the fact that no act of God could get us to convince the airlines to put us on an earlier flight home to meet her as she made her entry into the world.
Itās an interesting thing, the Pacific Ocean. If you gave me the choice, nine times out of 10, I would pick the balmy waters of the Gulf, warm enough to swim in 75 percent of the time and devoid of great white sharks that just feel as if theyāre lurking behind every seal-laden rock.
But I see the appeal of the Pacific, I do. SVV always says: āThe Gulf is tame and predictableāunless you count hurricanes. The Pacific Ocean is alive, breathing and will smack you in the face if you turn your back on it. Thereās something exciting about that.ā
āThereās a reason I would go surfing six days a week after working on my feet all day. Itās cleansing and invigorating. Itās constantly being churned. Itās full of life on a level thatās just not seen anywhere with warm water. That cold water breathes energy into the environment, and you canāt ignore it when youāre in the ocean.ā
He swam laps in his beloved Pacific despite it never getting above 65 out that day while I stayed bundled up on the shore of Martinās Beach.
After weād soaked up all the sun our pallid winter skin could take, we headed back to the town of Half Moon Bay, but not before making an impromptu stop in the mustard fields that flanked the sea cliffs. You think itās the ocean that gives all of Northern California its color? You havenāt seen the half of it.
We concluded our day trip with a stop at the local brewery and both agreed that while we miss the easy access to places like Half Moon Bay, we donāt miss the harsh realities of day-to-day life in San Francisco.
For those of you also making the journey, if youāre looking for the most perfect day trip from San Francisco, you can never go wrong with Half Moon Bay and the secret Martinās Beach. Though it appears to be private, it is open to the publicāat least for the time being.
Planning a California vacation? I have plenty of added ideas here:
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