
Respect for the natural world is important for enjoying and sustaining the riches of California’s Central Coast. The best part about all this wildlife activity is its accessibility for viewing by the public here, anyone can witness sea life, any time of year. California sea otters often play wherever kelp beds sway, weaving in and out of these seaweed forests for food. Dolphins, harbor seals, sea lions, and porpoises navigate these waters, too, and can easily be seen in and around harbors and coves.

Further out, migrating whales pass through, feeding, birthing, and mating in waters alongside Highway 1. The Piedras Blancas Elephant Seal Rookery is one of just a handful in North America, seeing up to 25,000 elephant seals annually. Many have a permanent home here, but others are among the billion birds that migrate along the Pacific Flyway.īut birds aren’t the only tourists to visit our friendly, scenic haven several marine mammals pass through, too. On plush, sandy beaches, look for hundreds of species of seabirds, from plovers and egrets to tattlers and turnstones. Here, anemones, urchins, crabs, and sea stars make their homes among mussels moss and barnacles. Among the rocks of our rugged shoreline, tidepools stand as tiny underwater worlds, begging to be explored. White bluffs and cliffs reach like fingers into the ocean along the north coast, while dunes tower over the beaches to the south. Half of these miles benefit from state and federal protection - more than any other stretch of coast in California. In the 57 miles of coastline between Ragged Point and Nipomo, the Pacific Ocean defines the landscape.


Wherever you roam along Highway 1, the ocean never lies far away.
