Bailey’s Palomar Resort
P.O. Box 87, Palomar Mountain, CA 92060
Phone: 760-742-1859
Email: Click for secure form.
* Reservations are required. Prices subject to change without notice. Weekend and
weekday rates vary by season, accommodation and occupancy. Please refer to
individual accommodation page for more information - and feel free to contact us by
phone or though our secure email link on our Contact Us page.
Thank You For Your Interest in our Place!
Welcome to the Shire
Palomar Mountain California,
by Brad Bailey,
A Tourist’s Introduction
On the face of it, Palomar
Mountain is one of the most
striking natural environments in
Southern California. Rising over a
mile into the bright western sky; its
steeply forested south face offers
unparalleled vistas of the blue
Pacific Ocean far below. It is a
place of rich forests, dripping
springs and the finest artesian
waters on the planet.
The mountain is largely wilderness, and mostly under control of state
and federal government agencies. Palomar is located about 30 miles
inland from the Pacific Ocean and 60 miles north of San Diego,
California. The small population is dispersed along the southern
summit and supports two private communities.
To the east the small enclave of Birch Hill is also known as Crestline for
its single paved roadway. To the west is the tiny subdivision of Baileys.
Northward is the Palomar Observatory compound which is a self
sustaining community in its own right.
Just two paved roads service the
area, running orthogonally north-
south and east-west, and both
terminate in dead-end.
The mountain supports a little
store, post office and restaurant,
plus a state park, various federal
and county campgrounds, and a
few private camp and resort
facilities. Several ranchers work
tracks of lush, sheltered valleys behind locked gates accessible only by
rutted dirt roads.
One Youngster’s Introduction
Yet to live on this remote mountaintop in southern California, along with
a couple of hundred others in full time residence, is a singular
experience within an equally rare environment.
Over a half century ago, my widowed grandmother lived here as the
sole occupant of our family's former resort hotel. She always referred
to it as “the home place.” To an
impressionable youth (me), the
view of Palomar Mountain
through that nimbus seemed
indeed a rarefied vision,
simultaneously the stuff of
belonging and beguilement.
For decades Grandma Adalind
lived within what seemed to me
like an old ghost town - all but
abandoned to the fates long ago.
With her blessing we visiting kids
would play “store” in the
abandoned century mercantile, its shelves still stocked with canned
goods and rolls of brown wrapping paper gone crisp with age.
In the drawer of the ornate brass cash register were little notes written
on scrap paper; perhaps a promise quickly dashed off by a neighbor
short on change long ago. From above the official Norman Rockwell
Presidential portrait of “Ike” smiled down like a kindly grandfather
figure. The picture still dutifully hung in the tiny cubby-hole post office
once known as Nellie, California.
In the evening we would sit before a massive stone fireplace in
Grandma’s overstuffed and faded chair, while our folks chatted in the
tiny kitchen nearby. In the former lobby of this turn-of-the-century back
country resort were the leather-bound, heavy black paper pages of our
family albums. She had always kept them just there next to the ancient
stone hearth, under back issues of The Saturday Evening Post and
Collier’s magazines.
Inside those pages, peering out from within tidy triangle boarders, were
the old folks from days long past; one on horseback clothed in overalls,
another behind the wheel of an open top touring car sporting a fedora,
bow tie, and broad smile. At one time they had been a part of our
mountain and had created the amazing world that remained decades
later.
As documented in these black on white pictures, our mountain place
dated back to the late 1800s, and now seemed to be quietly sleeping
off oblivion within our forested mountaintop backwater; the terminus of
three dead-end roads. From these albums a family of our hardy
ancestors stands proudly before their newly completed adobe
homestead, actually just a hovel of mud and hand split cedar shakes.
The hundred foot cedar trees towering out front today were mire
saplings back then.
Here was a snap shot of six children who help paddy-cake these walls
of plaster-coated soil, thus literally making Palomar Mountain their new
home. Turn the page again, and the kids have grown to adulthood.
One of the brood has created a delightful destination resort from those
humble beginnings, eventually marring a beautiful and demure hotel
guest. Turn the pages again and the glowing Victorian bride-come-
hostess is now pictured gray-haired with age next to the same family
hearth we now enjoyed.
Education of this sort was not taught to us formally on the mountain.
Local, stories, traditions and legends were picked up piecemeal,
usually through short, often funny anecdotes and snippets of
information told over Grandma’s kitchen counter or from a her front
porch rocking chair. What few collections survied were just a
hodgepodge of stories, photos, maps, postcards and all manner of
bric-a-brac; packed away in sagging cardboard boxes for a time and
purpose still undefined. Some material was copied from our widow
neighbor up the road, others we discovered in boxes of pictures half
buried in the old community dump; perhaps the last vestiges of an old-
timer’s life on the mountain, no longer of value as the realtor prepared
the a little cabin for sale.
Yet the true color of Palomar Mountain is more subtle and intriguing
then mere collectables. It can best be found in the fabric of the lives
and stories woven by those who have peopled this unique community
in the past, and by those who carry on much the same traditions today.
In the series of articles to follow, I present a small collection of images
and memorabilia mostly from our families modest archive. The content
has been arranged to help convey a larger story which, due to the
nature of the format, revolves around the images I have at hand.
Nonetheless, the effort is intended to be a tribute to the mountain and
its people, past and present, in appreciation of this truly unique,
compelling and timeless oasis in the sky.
Brad Bailey
February 27, 2012