ADVERTISEMENT

Lake Tahoe Winter Activities That Aren't Skiing

Winter in Tahoe doesn't require skis or snowboards.

emerald bay state park in winter
From snowy hikes to sleigh rides, it's easy to find winter activities in Tahoe that don't require skis. 
Ajinkya9 / Shutterstock

Lake Tahoe is a winter wonderland in a thousand ways, its panoramas of lake, mountain, and endless open space rivaling the great landscapes of our fantasies. But you don’t need skis to marvel at the way winter’s silvery light glints off mirrored waters, blankets of steam settle on morning creeks, and snow cover shows only the tracks of critters.

Winter Sports Near Lake Tahoe

A few sporting opportunities in Tahoe City will keep you fit without hitting the mountain. Meander a half mile along the Lakeside Trail past the town’s boat harbor and along Commons Beach to the Yoga Room where, on the second floor of Cobblestone Center mall, you’ll find spiritual release in classes varying from Iyengar to Vinyasa Flow. Behind Cobblestone, at Tahoe City Winter Sports Park, glide around the ice-skating rink or find your inner child on the sledding hill. At the end of the day, warm your tired muscles with a happy hour margarita by the outdoor fire pit at River Grill.

Take a Sleigh Ride

Snuggle into a handmade sleigh pulled by Belgian draft horses through South Shore’s snowy Pony Express territory. The reigns are held by a lively narrator from the family-run Borges Sleigh Rides company. Afterward, spring for a bowl of crème of asparagus and morel soup and a 24-ounce ribeye steak at MontBleu Resort’s Ciera Steak and Chophouse.

Do a Spa Day

At the Stillwater Spa & Salon in the Hyatt Regency Lake Tahoe Resort in Incline Village, enjoy a massage next to your partner on tables set by a crackling fireplace. Recover at Lone Eagle Grille next to one of the lake’s most magnificent multi-story views, sipping a warm Almond Joy steaming with hot chocolate, Amaretto, coconut rum, and whipped cream.

ADVERTISEMENT

Enjoy the Views

Drive State Route 89 South through the West Shore hamlets of Homewood and Tahoma to Emerald Bay State Park, where pillows of snow soften glacier-carved slopes down to sparkling waters. A parking area on the lake side of the bay’s north end affords views of Fannette Island and snow-crested peaks. From the parking lot on the mountain side of the highway, find a trail that is sometimes stomped by snow hikers for a quarter mile uphill to a bridge over the cascades of Eagle Creek.

Snow on the dock at Ed Z’berg Sugar Pine Point State Park.
Snowshoe at Ed Z’berg Sugar Pine Point State Park.
Alexander Kozik

Try Snowshoes

At Ed Z’berg Sugar Pine Point State Park, click into a pair of cross-country skis or snowshoes and explore the original 1960 Winter Olympics cross-country and biathlon ski trails. The groomed trails wind for more than 12 miles through the forests sheltering the West Shore’s fabled deep snowpack and end at the peaceful shoreline estate of the 1930s Hellman-Ehrman Mansion. (Rent skis at Homewood’s West Shore Sports or Tahoe Cross-Country ski center in Tahoe City. The latter also boasts its own miles of groomed trails, along with trailside warming huts and pull sleds for toddlers.)

Stroll the Beach

Park at the large North Tahoe Event Center lot to stroll the half-mile of soft, caramel-colored sands at Kings Beach and soak in the gloriously serene views embracing the Crystal Range of the Desolation Wilderness. Grab a coffee at the Java Hut, then skip some rocks into the water before retiring lakeside to Whitecaps Pizza for a tasty pie topped with arugula, applewood-smoked bacon, and pear.

This article was published in January 2018 and last updated in January 2019.