Lodging, Hotel, Cottages & Accommodations at the
Old Point Reyes Schoolhouse Compound
Point Reyes Station, California

For Reservations, Call 415-663-1166 or Email: PRSchool@sonic.net

Rates range from $185-$385 for two each night. $75 fee to bring a perfectly behaved dog.
Inquire regarding rates for full use of compound for Weddings, Family Reunions, Board Retreats and Staff Meetings.
Kitchens, Private Baths, Fireplaces, Laundry, Pets, BBQ, Private Gardens, TV/Video.


West Marin Dairy Ranch on the Road to Point Reyes

West Marin Dairy Ranch on the Road to Point Reyes
© Doug Elliott

Check Availability


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History
Site Plan   
Homework Report
Location
Area Tour

1Q & 2T &
Crib, high chair
jogger stroll
Full Kitchen
Private Gardens
Wireless Internet
Fireplace in & out
Garden views
Naturalist Library
BBQ & hammock
Fresh Flowers
Laundry
Basketball Hoop
1Q & 2Dble &
Crib, high chair
jogger stroller
Full bath
Full Kitchen & dw
2 Private Patios
Beautiful Views
BBQ & chaises
Fresh flowers
Fireplace in & out
Naturalist Library
Wireless Internet
Private Phone
TV with cable
Laundry
Bocce Ball Court
1 Dble & 2 bags
Full Kitchen
Private Patio:
BBQ & hammock
Wireless Internet
Fireplace
Beautiful Views
Naturalist Library
Fresh flowers
Laundry
Window Seat

Retreat Annex
1Dble 1bag
Electric Light
& Heat
Ridge View
Half Bath

Game Table

3 Bedrooms:
1Q 1 Dble 1T
3 Cots
3 Baths
Gourmet Kitchen
Private Gardens:
Patio, pond & lawn
Gas grill & chaises
Beautiful views
Fireplaces:
lvng room & bedroom
Large library
Baby grand piano
Wireless Internet
Private phone
TV with cable
Laundry
Day Use for
Family Reunions, Weddings,
Conferences,
Seminars,
and Retreats
The entire compound may be rented for many kinds of gatherings.

An Invitation to Point Reyes, California

Aerial View of Point Reyes Station up Tomales Bay to the Pacific Ocean

Aerial View of Point Reyes Station up Tomales Bay
to the Pacific Ocean

© Robert Campbell, www.chamoismoon.com

    You are invited to share in the rich cultural history and spectacular surroundings of Point Reyes from your own historic country retreat: The Old Point Reyes Schoolhouse Compound in Pt. Reyes Station, California. Situated in the heart of Marin County ranchlands, a national center for organic farming on the Northern California coast, Schoolhouse guests can be a part of the local scene with just a five minute walk to town for the farmer’s market and local art galleries, or a five minute drive to the headquarters for the Point Reyes National Seashore. Come home to cook for each other in the kitchen or patio, then retreat to the seclusion of your library and gardens.

     It’s all here for your enjoyment and I hope to share my family compound with you. Our family history spanning over three decades is written here, and so are the histories of my many guests who have made Jasmine Cottage, Gray’s Retreat, the Barn Loft and the Schoolhouse their home away from home on the California coast.

Looking forward,
Karen Gray
Proprietor
Author and illustrator of  "The Family Guide to Point Reyes"

View of Pt Reyes

View of the Point Reyes Peninsula from the Old Point Reyes Schoolhouse Compound above the fog 


125 Years of Point Reyes History

     Our Point Reyes Schoolhouse was built in 1879 to serve the children of the little cow town of Pt. Reyes, which grew up around the steam train station - Point Reyes Station - that brought supplies and vacationers out to Tomales Bay and the Northern California coast, then took dairy products from the local ranches back. The old train station is now our local post office where I go to collect my mail. Our open pasture that once supported the Point Reyes Water Company tower and tank is now a meadow filled with wildflowers in the spring.  

View from the Schoolhouse of a Couple Motoring Down Scenic California Coast Route One, circa 1918

View from the Schoolhouse of a Couple Motoring Down Scenic California Coast Route One, circa 1918


Pt. Reyes

     The Schoolhouse was one of very few buildings in Point Reyes, California in the 1880’s. The school stood alone at the top of the hill just north of town. The train station, the Foresters’ Hall, a mercantile, a small hotel, a train car barn, and a few other buildings clustered around the train tracks.

      Over the years as the town grew a few cottages sprang up, a bigger school was built in the center of town, and the Old Point Reyes Schoolhouse became home to generations of local families. A back porch kitchen was added as well as indoor plumbing. Roses, naked ladies and fruit trees were planted under the towering cypress trees. The 1906 earthquake – Epicenter Olema – knocked the house off its foundation (a boulder under each corner). A team of horses and a come-along pulled it back up to plumb, (well…closer to plumb.)

 
Point Reyes Lodging

Karen Gray and Partner Inside the Old Schoolhouse 1977 - 'Before'

Karen Gray and Partner Inside the
Old Schoolhouse 1977 – "Before"


     When we bought the Old Point Reyes Schoolhouse in 1977, it was a ramshackle mess: five layers of sagging roofs, frightening electrical wiring, bowed floors, rotten windows, no heat, no foundation, (the four boulders were still there, one under each corner). But, it was an historic building and we fell for it, as well as its prospect at the top of the hill looking down on the little town and over to the beautiful Inverness Ridge of the Point Reyes Seashore. We loved being up in the sunshine just a short walk from town.

Same Schoolhouse Interior View Today – "After"

Same Schoolhouse Interior View Today – "After"




     After ten years of hard work at night and on weekends, with not much more than our carpentry skills and determination, we had a home.  We raised children, chickens, vegetables, fruit trees and honey bees here, making blackberry jam every summer. We built the wood-fired oven in the garden, a pond, Jasmine Cottage, Gray’s Retreat and the Barn Loft. I was a professional artist for many years, then commuted from the Schoolhouse to U.C. Berkeley to become a landscape architect.
 

Old Point Reyes Schoolhouse and Gardens Today

Old Point Reyes Schoolhouse and Gardens Today

Jasmine Cottage, Gray’s Retreat & the Barn Loft

Chicken

Chickens on the Old Point Reyes Schoolhouse Compound

     Twenty-five years ago I converted the carriage house to Jasmine Cottage. It was the very first cottage open to visitors as a Point Reyes vacation rental. Point Reyes area lodging at the time was just a few traditional bed and breakfasts in Inverness with a couple small motels on that side of Tomales Bay. Inverness was the place for holidays then; Point Reyes was a working cow town.

      Nobody thought visitors would want to stay in the little town of Pt. Reyes. Because I offered a secluded garden cottage with an invitation to bring the children and the family dog, Jasmine Cottage was instantly popular as a romantic get-away and a family retreat. Sixteen years ago I designed and built the barn that houses Gray’s Retreat and the Barn Loft, intended as places for our extended family to visit and as part-time vacation rentals.

Point Reyes Seashore

     The Point Reyes National Seashore was still young when we moved to Pt. Reyes in 1977. Today, over 3 million visitors each year come to experience the wild and beautiful lands that surround our home: Point Reyes National Seashore, Tomales Bay State Park, the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, and Samuel P. Taylor State Park.

      Most of these visitors are Americans, the same citizens who supported the legislation and pay the taxes that established and maintain our spectacular area. It is a great pleasure for me to share this piece of authentic California with all of my guests – most especially those without whose support this area would not be protected.

Family Guide to Pt Reyes

Loren Hiking Muddy Hollow Trail with California Newts



"The Family Guide to Point Reyes"
by Karen Gray

I wrote and illustrated, "The Family Guide to Point Reyes" to answer the questions of the many guests who stayed with me on the Schoolhouse Compound over the years. Sales from the first edition wholly benefited the local preschool and it sold out in just a few years.

A second edition is now in the works: "The Family Guide to Point Reyes: the Best Adventures From 30 years of Life in West Marin." 


Old Point Reyes Schoolhouse Homework Report

January 2008 - A young persimmon sapling stands in my back garden against a dark wall of English ivy. This past November and December, its branches were bent under the weight of its heavy ripe fruit. Just before Thanksgiving the orange globes blended with the bright fall colors of the leathery foliage and I cut branches for the table. Later, I picked dozens of the fruits for persimmon pudding at Christmas. We brought them in to eat plain off the plate with walnuts. The beautiful leaves fell and left the bright fruit suspended for all to see – lots of them still. I had forgotten how much fruit a single persimmon could produce.

This one is visible from my bed as I look out the French doors that lead to the garden. It catches the first rays of light in the early morning while I am having my tea and watching the day begin. Around the New Year I had casually decided to leave the rest of the fruit on the tree for the birds. There was just too much for us to use. I never gave it another thought.

Later, on a frosty morning, I saw two red breasted woodpeckers alight on the branches and drill the fruit. Their scarlet heads and stark black-and-white coloration flashed through the garden as they swooped down out of the branches of the towering oak tree that overhangs the house. Next day, the woodpeckers were joined by a flock of robins who mostly bounced on the ivy branches gulping berries while a few of their number ventured over to the stronger branches of the sapling to feed on the persimmon pulp. These birds arrived in the early morning with the sunshine as it warmed the fruit after the night’s freeze.

A few weeks later, this group was joined by a flock of orioles whose bright yellow feathers stood out sharply against the dark ivy backdrop. These smaller birds were able to alight wherever they chose on the branch tips and feed off the flesh that was now exposed through the tough skin by the woodpeckers and robins.

Then, one morning, the full floor show arrived: all of the above – plus, this time, the robins flew in with a number of cedar wax wings, also flitting between the ivy berries and the persimmons. Later in the day, as the softening flesh grew gelatinous in the sun, an Anna’s hummingbird hovered beside the fruit, drinking in the sweet juice. The persimmon’s wildly bobbing branches flagged with colors set off a jealous blue jay and a resident gray squirrel, both screaming from the apple tree in frustration, unable to join the fray because their weight was too much for the delicate sapling’s branches. This went on for some time.

The orioles were the first to go. They only stayed three or four days before moving on. Then the cedar wax wings didn’t come back. The robins kept returning until the very last berry was picked off the ivy and the persimmons were pretty well eaten. The woodpeckers live in the oak tree and they kept swooping in until the persimmon stems were picked clean.

Now, as I have my morning tea, the sun lights up the young tree branches with a soft golden light that makes them shine, stark and perfectly still, against the ivy wall. All the commotion is over. The tree could be dead. It isn’t of course. In a month’s time the leaf buds will swell and then the glossy leathery leaves will unfurl in a bright green display of springtime elegance and promise.

to read previous Homework Reports, click here

KAREN GRAY

It is thirty years since Karen Gray put down roots in Point Reyes Station on land that would become the Old Point Reyes Schoolhouse Compound. She comes from three generations of Californians settled in California's great San Joaquin Valley where most of her extended family still lives and some still farm. Growing up at the foot 0f the Sierra Nevada with the orchards of almonds, walnuts, peaches and vineyards of her grandfather's ranch, she had the freedom to ride her bike for miles on the dusty ranch roads and river banks alongside the wildlife and plants that became her daily companions. Her family on both sides were gardeners and her maternal grandfather a nurseryman. That familiar overlay of agriculture and native landscape is what drew her to Marin County forty years ago.

Karen began her formal education in a brick schoolhouse where her grandmother went to school. Her second grade teacher taught her mother. The family lived in a home built by her great grandparents with a garden that included an apricot, almond and peach tree, quince, rhubarb, pomegranate, a grape arbor, and a walnut tree so majestic that it could be seen from miles away. There was a canning shed in the side yard. Her bedroom windows opened onto the creamery next door that took deliveries of large steel milk cans rattling over a metal conveyor belt at four in the morning. It's no wonder that she felt right at home in the diary ranching landscape of west Marin.

Moving to San Francisco to study Philosophy and Religion at college Karen worked full time with the Quaker Society of Friends during the Vietnam War era. After years of urban work for international peace she left the city for the peace and quiet of Mill Valley at the foot of Mount Tamalpais in Marin County. Karen learned fabric design, joined the Bolinas Craftsman's Guild, and lived the life of a villager dedicated to fine craft. It was a perfect place to be in the 1970's.

Fine craft, however, did not pay the bills. Figuring that the cooking skills she had from her upbringing would support her, she answered a modest add in the local paper for a part time cook for a group of fourteen. The Sister Superior hired her to cook for the Convent of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary on the campus of Marin Catholic High School where she stayed for seven years, managing the kitchen and making breakfast and dinner for the order of teaching nuns six days a week. During the mid-day she worked at her fabric hangings which were shown in galleries all over the country. In 1977 Karen and her partner bought the old ramshackle Point Reyes Schoolhouse (built in 1879) having scraped together a tiny down payment borrowed from her parents. They gutted the house and moved into the place. There was virtually no work available in Point Reyes then - pretty ramshackle itself - so her partner commuted long hours for carpentry work and Karen did her fine craft in any clear corner of the place. They worked full time during the week using evenings and weekends to restore the schoolhouse. The windows, doors, and cabinets were built in the workshops of Bolinas Craftsman's Guild members in their off hours. It took them twelve years to finish the place.

In that time Karen grew restless with the isolation of studio work and began to do landscape design and installation, drawing on her family background in horticulture. She enrolled in the U.C. Berkeley Landscape Architecture program for working professionals commuting from Point Reyes to the U.C. campus three week nights and all day Saturdays for four years to graduate. She put the lessons she learned in land use planning and ecology to work at home, growing first Jasmine Cottage, then designing the site plan and building for Gray's Retreat and the Barn Loft, then finally the gardens. Karen's professional experience in the field and decades of living in Marin gave her a solid background for her years of community service in west Marin: teaching "West Marin Day" for the Marin Environmental Forum; acting as a guide for the Marin Agricultural Land Trust; serving as president of the board of the Environmental Action Committee; and acting as President of the Point Reyes Village Association. She wrote and illustrated "The Family Guide to Point Reyes."

Karen raised a family in the Old Schoolhouse. They, in turn, raised quail and award-winning chickens with the Point Reyes 4-H. Today, the Old Point Reyes Schoolhouse Compound has become a fulfilling venture for Karen. It serves as a gracious home base for guests who share her love of the rolling hills and farmlands, ocean beaches, forests and wildlife of Marin County. "If we are to hope that the present and future citizens of America will dedicate the necessary money and governmental oversight to protect these precious lands," she says, "then we who are blessed to live here must be willing to share with others what it is that they are asked to preserve. I see my work on the Old Point Reyes Schoolhouse Compound as a daily opportunity to do just that." For her, it is the perfect blend of farmland roots, shared love of wilderness, and professional satisfaction.

MARIA ROMO

Maria Romo was born in Jalos, Mexico in the state of Guadalahara. Her family farmed the land growing corn and beans. She came to California eighteen years ago with her husband. She has worked on the On the Old Point Reyes Schoolhouse Compound as the head of housekeeping for five years. Maria is a skilled housekeeper whose natural good humor and graceful hospitality help to make our guests feel right at home. She has two children who attend school across the street from the Old Point Reyes Schoolhouse at the West Marin Elementary School.

Maria lives with her family on the historic Stuart Horse Ranch in the beautiful Olema Valley, five miles south of Point Reyes Station. Her husband trains and tends the quarter horses bred and raised at the ranch as mounts for the rangers at the Point Reyes National Seashore. During part of the year he also works as a cowboy herding and tending the black angus beef cattle raised on the ranch. The Romo family is part of a large latino community that enriches life in west Marin with its religious traditions, culture, and spanish language.

As head of housekeeping on the Schoolhouse Compound Maria is on site almost daily. She sets the tone of unruffled competence and hospitality for our guests.


To view a site plan of the Old Schoolhouse Compound, click here
to read previous Homework Reports, click here


For Reservations, Call 415-663-1166 or Email: PRSchool@sonic.net
Rates range from $185-$245 for two each night. $75 fee to bring a perfectly behaved dog.
Inquire regarding rates for full use of Compound for
Board Retreats and Staff Meetings.
Kitchens, Private Baths, Fireplaces, Laundry, Pets, BBQ, Private Gardens, TV/Video.

[Jasmine Cottage] [Gray's Retreat] [Barn Loft] [Schoolhouse Rental]
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[Homework Report Archives]

All photos ©Karen Gray unless otherwise noted