San Ardo, CA Walking Trails and Maps

4 Reviews

Looking for the best Walking trails around San Ardo?

Find the top rated walking trails in San Ardo, whether you're looking for an easy short walking trail or a long walking trail, you'll find what you're looking for. Click on a walking trail below to find trail descriptions, trail maps, photos, and reviews.

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Length
Surfaces
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Morro Bay Harborwalk

0.5 mi
State: CA
Asphalt

Cloister Walk

2.3 mi
State: CA
Asphalt, Concrete
Trail Image Trail Name States Length Surface Rating
The Morro Bay Harborwalk has all the beauty you'd expect from a southern California trail: sparkling surf, sandy beaches and rugged cliffs in the distance. But the best sight is unique to the city:...
CA 0.5 mi Asphalt
The Cloister Walk offers just over 2 miles of paved pathway along the northwestern coast of Morro Bay. You'll enjoy views of the ocean and sandy dunes, which you can access at many points along the...
CA 2.3 mi Asphalt, Concrete

Recent Trail Reviews

Morro Bay Harborwalk

Great Views

March, 2020 by acewickwire

Location: Morro Bay, CA
Parking: Azure St. Ocean Access parking area north end of Cloister Walk trail.
Trail Condition: This is a “double” trail. Ocean side is walking path and then a separate asphalt surface for bikes. Both are plenty wide enough for lots of traffic and in great condition.
Signage: Informational signs but no directional signs, which aren’t needed.
Comments: Began from town out towards the rock. Short but nice. Stopped to watch sea otters near the shore line. Coming back from the rock took left hand turn on to bike path along Embarcadero to loop back to the Cloister Walk, our starting point. This trail and Cloister Walk trail gave us a short 6 mile ride. Great scenery and fun seeing sea otters.

Cloister Walk

Enjoyed the Scenery

March, 2020 by acewickwire

Parking: Azure St. Ocean Access parking area north end of trail.
Trail Condition: Good asphalt surface, not real wide but wide enough for passing oncoming traffic. Signage: As noted in trail description there is not any directional signage. At first we followed the spur that took us out to the beach, followed another spur into a housing development, and then figured out where the trail would take us into town (through the nice little park).
Comments: Began trail from the north, first sign along trail asks for an unrealistic speed limit of 5 mph for bikes. We got the point, not to race through the trail, which isn’t really our style. This park of the trail winds along the dunes restoration area and some beach homes. Is scenic and quiet. The main portion from the park towards town parallels highway 1 but below highway grade. Lots of trees. South end of trail stops at a major street into Morro Bay. We made a right into the bike lane along the street and followed down to the harbor. Then north again to connect to Morro Bay Harborwalk. Then followed Embarcadero to loop back to the Cloister Walk. Short ride 6 miles overall but did enjoy the scenery.

Morro Bay Harborwalk

Morro Bay Harborwalk

March, 2019 by thejake91739

For beautiful panoramas and photo ops, the Morro Bay Harborwalk is tough to beat. The path is usually full of tourists, but that's OK. It makes you slow down to enjoy the majesty of Morro Rock, the shimmering waters of the bay, and the antics of frolicking sea otters.
To make this into a lengthier and more substantial bike ride, we parked and unloaded our bikes up the coast a bit at the Morro Bay Sunset parking lot on Azure Street. We then enjoyed a leisurely ride down a Class I bike path for maybe a couple of miles. You'll pass through a park and go by Morro Bay High School.
Eventually you'll come to quiet Atascadero Road where you'll turn right. The road will dogleg into Embarcadero which leads straight to the Harborwalk. Yes, you have to ride on the road for a mile or two, but the roads had little to no traffic.
All in all, a fun time was had by all on these mini bike paths, perfect for a couple of sixty year olds.
BTW: If you're looking for something a bit more substantial near Morro Bay that's not on R-T-T, then go down the coast to Montana de Oro State Park and hike or ride your bike along the bluffs on a wide, hard packed dirt path overlooking the ocean. Talk about spectacular photo ops!

Accordion

Cloister Walk

TRAILBEAR IN THE DUNES - The Cloisters Trail

November, 2011 by trailbear

There are two bike trails in Morro Bay and this is one of them. It comes in two parts, anchored by the Cloisters Park. The Cloisters Trail is a little community trail. The name commemorates the Cloisters Inn that was on this site from 1925 to 1945.

You won't get much mileage here. In fact, there are very few miles of bike trail in the central coast. You have to take to the roads for distance.

The trail comes in two sections: behind the dunes and behind the power plant.


BEHIND THE DUNES...

The dunes section runs behind the dunes with two sand access trails out to beach itself at either end. The northern end is anchored by the full service trailhead (restrooms, water, parking) at the end of Azure St. (GE: 35.392620° -120.863434°).

From here you can take the sand trail out to the beach or the blacktop bike trail south to the Cloisters Community Park. The trail crosses the back Cloisters Park and then along the 54th St. Channel (bio-engineered - read the sign) to end at the back of the sands - behind the high school.


BEHIND THE HIGH SCHOOL, MOTEL, PARK, POWER PLANT, HILL...

Retrace your track to the Cloisters Park - another full service trailhead and more. Take the trail along side the tot lot, cross the parking lot, cross the access road and there is the opening to another section of the trail. This goes behind everything the first did not.

Cross behind the homes and over the 54th St. Channel and now you are behind the high school. Work your way out to Atascadero Rd., cross as the crossing and head for the Coast Highway. Turn at the side of the Morro Shores Inn and there is the trail again.

Now, in order, you ride behind the motel, behind Lila Keisler Park, behind the switching yard of the power plant, and behind the hill to end at the junction of Quintana and Main St. Notice the unfinished building project on your right side.

Head up Main St. and over the hill (bike lane). Turn right on Beach and head down to the harbor. Ride the Embarcadero towards the power plant. Across the street from the plant is the lower trail head of the Embarcadero Trail. It's about a half mile, but very scenic as it follows one side of the entrance channel out to Morro Rock and Morro Strand State Beach.

Come back and work your way across the waterfront down to Tidelands Park (GE: 35.359486 -120.851508) at the far end of the waterfront for more views. This marks the end of the channel and the mouth of the estuary. Quite a nice trip on a sunny day. You can tell the state of the tides by looking at the anchored boats. They clock around as the tides turn. The currents run strong in the channel.

FOR CAMPING...

Montana del Oro State Park - which also has good mountain biking.

http://www.slostateparks.com/montana_de_oro/default.asp


Ride on!

TrailBear
Triking down the channel trail.

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Accordion

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