The Mercury News

INN-ESCAPABLE: A cozy Healdsburg inn

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The Camellia Inn comes by its name honestly. More than 80 camellia plants flower in the gardens of this peach-hued Victorian inn, just a couple of blocks from Healdsburg’s town square. The house was built in 1869 for a former gold miner, who found prospectin­g in real estate far more lucrative than scrabbling around creeks with a pan. These days, the Camellia Inn is a charming bed-and-breakfast run by Lucy Lewand and her family, who say the building’s “happy history” accounts for its lack of ghosts. “Since the removal of the water-tower,” the inn’s historical accounts note, the property has been “poltergeis­t-free.”

Zzzz’s: The inn’s nine rooms are filled with antique furniture, including queen- and king-size four-poster or brass beds, done up in soft linens and new comfy, eco-luxury mattresses from Berkeley’s European Sleep Works. Rooms also have an iPad and free Wi-Fi, in case you need to browse winery possibilit­ies or map out the next day’s itinerary. Families or groups may want to check out the family suite, as well as the inn’s off-site cottages and apartments.

Splashes: All the rooms have private bathrooms, some with showers and some with huge whirlpool tubs, big enough for two lovebirds. There’s a swimming pool as well.

Extras: Enjoy wine and cheese in the antique-filled parlor in the afternoon, and a hot breakfast buffet in the morning that includes organic fare, such as a veggie-filled frittata made with local eggs, and bread from Healdsburg’s Costeaux French Bakery.

Details: Rooms run $139 to $365, with a two-night minimum most weekends. 211 North St., Healdsburg; www. camelliain­n.com

 ?? JACKIE BURRELL — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Built in 1871, the charming Camellia Inn is just steps from Healdsburg’s bustling town square.
JACKIE BURRELL — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Built in 1871, the charming Camellia Inn is just steps from Healdsburg’s bustling town square.

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