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Technology Information:
Frommer's Napa and Sonoma Day by Day (Frommer's Day by Day - Pocket)

Product Type: Book
Product Price: $13.99
Manufacturer: Frommers
Purchase
Description
- Sonoma Day by Day features 30 smart itinerary ideas for your trip, all with gorgeous color photos and maps.
- We've included an itinerary to meet almost every need, from "Wine Country for Romance" to "Wine Country on a Budget" to even "Wine Country for Nondrinkers," plus Napa & Sonoma itineraries in 1, 2, or 3 days. You'll find lists of the best dining, accommodations, and wineries, details on the area's "most charming towns," outdoor hiking itineraries -- plus a chapter devoted to San Francisco itineraries.
- Our author is a California native to the core; she was educated at Stanford and UCLA, and was associate editor at the Los Angeles Times. She's done all the nitty-gritty updates needed for this second edition, as well as the not-as-difficult frequent tastings of these wines on site.
- Frommer's Napa & Sonoma Day by Day also includes a color fold-out map.
Reviews
Rating: 3 / 5
Date: 2010-08-14
Summary: "Check prices before you go"
Check the prices before you go to Wineries for the tastings, tours and freebies. I just went to Napa Valley and found out that free isn't free anymore. $5 is now $10, $20 is now $25, etc..... However, I did find this book very informative in details and descriptions of the wineries and other activities available in the Napa Valley Area.
Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2010-08-12
Summary: "Love the maps and organization"
Not only are the descriptions of wineries, towns, and things to do useful (including hours & prices), but there are maps of every sort of detail, perspective, and resolution: a front cover fold-out map of the general region, a heavy-duty removable map in a snapped plastic cover that details the different areas of Napa & Sonoma with locations of each winery, and high resolution small maps of many of the more interesting towns along the way indicating where restaurants, wineries, shopping, and sites of interest lie. We've never been to this area and appreciated the suggestions for seeing the various areas in 1, 3, 5, or 7 days. Also helpful info for kids, bikers, and non-drinkers. I'd definitely bring this small treasure along again.
Rating: 1 / 5
Date: 2009-10-08
Summary: "I am upset: A chapter on San Francisco?? Its no Napa Valley, you know..."
Why here, in a book with the title "Napa and Sonoma" someone would put in an entire chapter about San Francisco? These pages should better be vested to tell and show more about the vicinity of Napa and Sonoma. 30 pages about San Francisco is surely not providing any information above "any of the many" books about San Francisco, nor it is of any value. And considering that this leaves mere 160 pages about Napa and Sonoma itself, a sizable percentage of a possible content is lost. They have even spent an entire trifold page of the cover for yet another map of San Francisco. Unbelievable!
I really dislike mislabeling of books, and I consider writing about San Francisco, arguably a city NOT in the Napa valley, a clear case of a mislabel. There can be only one way I can react to this as a consumer: One star. Shame on you Frommers!
Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2009-04-16
Summary: "Helpful for planning a vacation"
I bought this book to use it as a planning guide for an upcoming trip to San Francisco, Napa and Sonoma. I was pleased to find out it had a section on San Francisco as well as the Wine Country. It is concise, with helpful descriptions of lodging, restaurants, and vineyards. The map does not look great for driving directions, but it does give you an idea where the different vineyards are located. Overall, I would recommend this book.
Rating: 3 / 5
Date: 2009-02-08
Summary: "Great resource. Bad map."
On our recent trip to San Francisco, my cousin and I decided to take one day visiting the Napa Valley area. We are not very knowledgeable about wine, so we were visiting more for the scenery and maybe learn a little about wine tasting. I figured this book should point us in the right direction.
The book was indeed very helpful in that regard. It had many lists with specific focus -- like places to visit if you are on a budget, places to visit if you got money to burn, places to visit if you are new to wine (like us!), places to visit if you want to see the best of Napa/Sonoma Valley in one day, and so on and so forth. These lists really helped us find the most attractive places to visit. And with the included fold-out map, we figured my one-day trip to Napa Valley would be a breeze.
Or so we thought.
The first sign of trouble was that it took a bit of guesswork to figure out how to drive to Napa Valley in the first place. As anybody who's driven in SF Bay Area can tell you, SF's freeway network can be quite confusing for newcomers. We did arrive at Napa Valley without much incident, but we were nervous and unsure whether we were going the right way throughout the drive. It would have been very nice if the book had a clear driving direction to Napa Valley from SF Bay Area, or if the book had a map that connects the Napa Valley roads with SF freeways.
Now it was time to find the first winery we were planning to visit. The fold-out map had decent amount of road detail with various wineries marked, so we drove to the location indicated on the map..., only to go, "this can't be right." Finally, we decided to just look up the winery's street address in the book, and we realized that the location of the winery's mark on the map was off by about 1/2 inch, making it look like the winery was located on a completely different street. A pretty glaring error.
When we were trying to get to the second winery on our list, we again noticed that the map had its location marked on the wrong side of the street. Comparatively speaking, this was a very minor error, but it really made us question the map's accuracy.
It unfortunately rained quite a bit on the day of our visit, so we really couldn't enjoy the scenery as we had originally intended. And since we felt we had our fill of wine education for the day, we decided to visit Charles M. Schulz museum (of Peanuts fame) in nearby Santa Rosa, as suggested by the book's list of "places to visit with kids." Again, the book's map failed us as it only pointed at the city, not any specific streets. We had to ask the city locals for directions to find the museum.
Now, the museum and the two wineries we visited were excellent. They were exactly the kind of place we were looking for, and we got a very informative tour and low-cost wine tastings, just as the book promised. All in all, it was a very rewarding trip, and there is no question that we would not have fared as well without the book. And if I visit Napa Valley area again (and I hope to do so in the near future), I will certainly turn to this book for more suggestions.
But I will get a separate map with more accuracy and detail. Maybe I'll get a GPS navigator, or maybe print out the necessary maps from Google or Yahoo before leaving home. (We didn't have internet access in our lodging at SF.) I strongly suggest other travelers to do the same.
