Located in a tucked-away ravine with vibes best described as post-apocalyptic charm, Point San Pablo Harbor can sometimes feel like visiting the end of the world.
But for a one-of-a-kind day trip it’s hard to beat. There’s rugged beauty and warm-water swimming, friendly locals and equally friendly goats. A restaurant provides lovely open-air dining and right next door is perhaps the coolest new waterside bar in the Bay Area.
To reach the Harbor, as it’s known, take the last exit before the southern end of the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge and cruise carefully down a road of sharp turns and blind corners. After a few minutes the roadway disgorges into a pincer-shaped cove in Richmond where roughly three dozen people reside on floating homes and live-aboard boats. It’s like a snow-globe version of “Waterworld.”
The sun begins to set behind the artwork called “Purr Pods” created by artist Paige Tashner on display at Point San Pablo Harbor in Richmond, Calif., on Friday, Aug. 1, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)Over the decades the Harbor has seen a succession of private owners. The current ones are Yaella Frankel, Rob Fyfe and Daryl Henline, who bought the property in 2016 and have made many renovations and improvements.
Gone are the abandoned vehicles, derelict vessels and oil drums; in their place are ADA-compliant pathways and a hulking, iron garden of Burning Man sculptures. Frankel has personally attended the desert festival more than 20 times, and recently told news site Richmond Confidential: “We’re doing our best to have a public Burning Man camp.”
Musician Nathan X Moody, of Oakland, plays the guitar for patrons at the Sailing Goat Restaurant at Point San Pablo Harbor in Richmond, Calif., on Friday, Aug. 1, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)The population is small but close-knit, with some residents having lived here for 30 years. People sit down with each other for potlucks every three months to celebrate birthdays and new arrivals. During the holidays, a fisherman might go out to catch crab and prepare a grand feast for everyone – Dungeness being one Bay Area answer to roasted turkey.
“Rob Fife refers to this as a ‘nonintentional community’ because we’re not all from some specific creed or background. We just all really love this place and found some way to buy a house and become employed here,” says Daryl Henline, who serves as the community’s harbor master. (What’s a “harbor master” do? “Make sure boats aren’t sinking,” he quips.)
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