A couple keep warm during their deck-top ride aboard one of the Catalina Express catamarans. The company offers daily ferry service to Avalon from ports in Long Beach,
A helicopter heads off into the sunset after dropping off passengers in
A catamaran closes in on the island. Winter perks on Catalina include earlier check-ins, lower rates and no crowds. (Chris Erskine / Los Angeles Times)
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A kayak heads for shore near the Casino Ballroom, one of the legacies of chewing-gum baron William Wrigley Jr., who bought the island sight unseen in 1919 and shaped it into his vision of an offshore hinterland and equestrian-class resort. (Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times)
A visitor explores a breakwater near the Casino. Dont feel like taking a tour of the Avalon landmark? Other wilder options include hiking and an off-road tour across the islands wild interior in a Mercedes Unimog. (Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times)
Framed by the Via Casino Arch, the Art Deco ballroom is like an island of light surrounded by a deep blue sea of sky. Film fans can take in a movie at the Casinos ornately muraled cinema (the first one designed for talkies in North America, according to a guide, and an early acoustical model for
Debbie Davis, left, and Yvonne Ojeda go for a paddle off Catalina. When the weathers nice and the sea isnt choppy its a refreshing way to explore the wildlife around the island. (Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times)
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If youve got the time and the skill, consider kayaking to Catalina. And after that paddle, the Casino Boat Dock Cafe at Avalon will be a welcome sight indeed. (Bob Chamberlin / LAT)
Lights along Crescent Avenue define the shape of the harbor as dawn breaks on Avalon. (Bob Chamberlin / LAT)
We all scream for ice cream at Dessert Island on Crescent Avenue in Avalon. (Bob Chamberlin / LAT)
Their (model) ship has come into the House of Wood, a curio shop on Crescent Avenue in Avalon. (Bob Chamberlin / LAT)
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The Inn on Mt. Ada hass an eagle’s eye view of the harbor at Avalon on Catalina Island. The Georgian colonial mansion that once belonged to the Wrigleys is a six-room luxury hotel. (Bob Chamberlin / LAT)
An epidemic of island fever sweeps Luau Larry’s on Crescent Avenue in Avalon. (Bob Chamberlin / LAT)
Catalina’s own stairway to heaven at the Inn at Mount Ada. (Bob Chamberlin / LAT)
Pedestrian friendly Crescent Avenue is Avalon’s main thoroughfare. (Bob Chamberlin / LAT)
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The tall ship Exy Johnson sets sail from Avalon Harbor, Catalina Island. (Bob Chamberlin / LAT)
Flip’s Saltwater Bar and Grill, on Catalina Avenue in Avalon, promises to have “the only sushi bar between Los Angeles and Hawaii.” (Bob Chamberlin / LAT)
Did somebody say lunch? A harbor seal pokes its head out of a kelp forest near Frog Rock on the front side of Catalina Island. (Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times)