Cave Culture

Hike to Cave Landing and Pirates Cove from Avila Beach

Cave Landing Avila and Pismo Beach Central Coast

Cave Landing, a craggy headland between Avila Beach and Pismo Beach, is a storied stretch of the Central Coast that stirs potent reveries in the beholder. While most such dreamy shores are remote or off-limits, Cave Landing is just a short drive off the 101 Freeway. The promontory’s singular feature—a tunnel that pierces its upper heights—is only one of its gifts. It’s also a launching-off point for exploring caves and tidal rocks or basking on secluded sand in adjacent Pirate’s Cove.

You can park right at the landing, but why not make it an adventure? Hiking in from Sycamore Mineral Springs, a spa resort nestled in a wooded canyon just up the coast behind Ontario Ridge, is an invigorating option. This 3-mile round-trip starts just behind the resort on Sycamore Springs Trail, a fire road that winds through dense oak woodland, climbing roughly 500 feet to the ridge in just over three-quarters of a mile. Flanking oaks bend over the trail to create natural arbors.

At the summit, you hit Ontario Ridge Trail and emerge into open sun and eye-popping vistas of San Luis Obispo Bay. Chaparral and grass hug a treeless slope descending south to ocean bluffs. You have two options for the descent. The first, straight down an extra-wide fire road, is comically steep, but nonetheless well-trodden. The other way follows Ontario Ridge Trail eastward and tags on about 2 miles one-way before it dumps you onto Bluff Drive. Continue west onto Shell Beach Bluff Trail to trace the coast to Cave Landing.

Cave Landing Hike Avila Beach

At the lot’s east end, head down a singletrack through tall coastal scrub to a T-junction at bluff’s edge overlooking Pirate’s Cove. Take the rightward path to reach Smuggler’s Cave near the end of the headland. This popular local hangout is a tunnel burrowed through the rock promontory. It opens onto a sheer cliff some 40 feet above the surf with spectacular views of open ocean and wave-battered rocks just off the coast.

At the promontory’s eastern point, you can scramble down to a tidal zone where swells pummel rocks and penetrate the unseen depths of a sea cave, producing a foam-spewing blowhole if the tide’s just right. Doubling back to the junction, you’ll find steps crudely carved in a rocky bluff that take you down to Pirate’s Cove Beach, a secluded, clothing-optional haunt since the late ’60s.

Cave Landing Hike Avila Beach

During sunsets, Smuggler’s Cave becomes a near psychedelic window on the Pacific. Human silhouettes are bathed in fiery hues, the sea surface transmuted to luminous silver, textured like blown glass, reflecting the hot neons at the horizon and deepening blues above, while pelicans congregate on surf-pounded rocks below. Truly a knockout sight. For those staying till dusk, consider taking a cab back to Sycamore Springs rather than braving the chill and darkness.

EAT & DRINK: For a delicious, affordable meal, try Avila Market, a restaurant and mercantile on Front Street that caters to the beach crowd. This fast-casual eatery serves up burgers, fish and chips, clam chowder, burritos, acai bowls, and more. The dining space opens to a breezy side patio and is steeped in retro-chic beach decor. Just thirsty? Choose from a menu of smoothies, or hit the center bar, which taps over 25 local microbrews and pours nearly as many Central Coast wines. Open 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily. It’s even dog-friendly!

From the 101 Freeway, exit Avila Beach Dr. and head west. After about a mile, the entrance to Sycamore Springs will be on your left. Park in the lot and walk west. You’ll see signs pointing you in the right direction for the trailhead. Dog-friendly!

Trending Stories NorCal

View all Stories
  1. Can't Top This

    San Francisco’s Presidio was already a fantastic place to hang out for the afternoon, a beautiful site within the largest urban national park in the United States (the Golden Gate National Recreation Area). And Presidio Tunnel Tops is like a cherry on top. Make that two cherries on top, with the newly opened (July 2025) Outpost Meadow, a 1.5-acre green space located at Old Mason Street across from the Crissy Field Marsh in the Presidio.

    View
  2. This Is Paradise

    Granite mountain-scape, superb sunset views, crystal lakes, and shoreline campsites … the trip to Paradise Lake in Tahoe National Forest lives up to its idyllic name.

    View
  3. Aloha from California

    Say Aloha without leaving California with a 7-mile out-and-back hiking adventure to Lake Aloha in El Dorado National Forest. You can also camp here, a premier place for stargazing.

    View
  4. Sequoia Re-opens Crystal Cave

    Step inside Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Park's hidden world by visiting the newly re-opened Crystal Cave—the only cave in the parks open to the public. Closed for four years, this rare marble karst cavern is welcoming visitors once again, but only through the summer season!

    View

Trending Stories SoCal

View all Stories
  1. Hot As (Bumpass) Hell

    So you like going to all the hot spots when you visit places? Well, in Lassen Volcanic National Park there’s a place so hot it gets downright steamy. Bumpass Hell is the largest hydrothermal area in the park, with sputtering mud pots, sulfur vents, and boiling pools. It’s California’s Yellowstone. But it only opens in summer through fall.

    View
  2. Underground Garden

    Looking to escape the summer heat? Head to Fresno and discover its cool secret: the Forestiere Underground Gardens–an enchanting garden and architecture oasis like no other.

    View
  3. Oh Ryan

    Sure, it’s those whimsical trees that give Joshua Tree National Park its marquee billing; but this beautiful landscape also has surrounding mountains and its night sky—one of the darkest in Southern California and designated an International Dark Sky Park. Joshua Tree has four allowable stargazing parking lots, and a newly opened haven for spending the night nearby...

    View
  4. Easiest Best Hike in the World

    Choose the easiest and most view-rewarding hike in Yosemite. Okay, we’ll go first: the combination of hiking to Sentinel Dome and Taft Point. Both of these lookouts are within a couple miles of each other on Glacier Point Road

    View