RAISE A GLASS TO ITS RUSTIC-CHIC CHARMS
BY SHARON BOORSTIN >>> Since the 1950s the Skyview Motel in Los Alamos has been an overnight stop for travelers on the L.A.-San Francisco run on U.S. 101. The motel fell into disrepair in the early 2000s, but new owners renovated and reopened it in April. Its big yellow sign still looms over the 101, visible for miles, but the rebranded Skyview Los Alamos, I learned on a recent visit, is more than a roadside motel. The 33-room boutique resort, which has a pool, restaurant and bar, bicycles, spa services and a vineyard, is a rustic-chic home base for a weekend of wine tasting, dining and chilling in Santa Barbara wine country. The tab: $279 a night for the room; $75 for dinner at Norman, excluding wine. THE BED It was a tough choice between a “Cozy” and a “Classic” guestroom at the Skyview. Both rooms were smallish but pleasingly decorated and had king-size beds, but the “Cozy” had a larger bathroom with a double-sized farm sink and a separate toilet. As much as I appreciate spacious bathrooms, I chose the “Classic” because it had a patio with a view of the Santa Ynez Valley. No regrets. At dusk, my husband, Paul, and I snuggled into patio chairs, gazing at horses grazing and birds soaring over the vineyards. THE MEAL Norman, the Skyview’s restaurant, was named after the ghoulish Bates Motel owner in “Psycho,” but the macabre ends there. Norman has swank midcentury decor with a bar that opens onto the pool deck. Chef Will Hanko offers a small but sophisticated locavore menu. We enjoyed a salad of peppery greens, watermelon and fresh herbs; succulent Jidori chicken with garlic mashed potatoes; and a tasty filet of freshly caught Vermilion rockfish. THE FIND it, now is available only for weddings and private events. Its saloon, however, is open to the public, we learned. We stopped in at 5 p.m. and found locals playing table shuffleboard. They regaled us with winecountry THE LESSON LEARNED wine in Santa Barbara wine country. After a day of driving from winery to winery, sampling wines until they blur together, many guests return to the Skyview eager to hang out at the pool and/or relax with a cocktail. Norman and the 1880 Union Saloon are the only places in Los Alamos with a license to sell those drinks. I’m not much for cocktails, but for those who are …