Archive for the ‘Lynn Richardson Lake Tahoe Truckee Real Estate’ Tag
By Tim Hauserman

Jenna Minnes the new owner of the Yoga Room in Tahoe City. Photo by Lisa Masser
Springtime is a good time to get back to yoga class. Many active Tahoe and Truckee folks attend yoga classes regularly, because it keeps them flexible and strong, while providing an awesome way to relax. But some of us who really could use the benefits of yoga tend to go through periods where skiing, biking, hiking or paddling is enough to keep us happy, and yoga falls by the wayside. This is probably not a good idea. In fact, the more we do all those other strenuous outdoor sports, the more we need yoga to counterbalance it’s effects. We need to get back to class and remind our bodies of it’s benefits.

Jenna Minnes the new owner of the Yoga Room in Tahoe City. Photo by Lisa Masser
Truckee Yoga:
Truckee is a hot bed of yoga. There are three great studios which provide a full spectrum of classes with top notch instructors. Special workshops and training programs are also available. Go to their websites then go to class.
Tahoe Yoga and Wellness Center.
tahoeyoga.com
Namaste Holistic Healing and Yoga Center
namastetruckee.com
Yoga Studio Tahoe
yogastudiotahoe.com
Tahoe City Yoga:
The Yoga Room in The Cobblestone in Tahoe City provides an eclectic mix of classes seven days a week. Long time Tahoe local yogi and massage therapist Jenna Minnes took over what was the Tahoe Yoga Institute a few months ago, and has been busy adding new classes and instructors. She has also been scheduling interesting workshops and events for the yoga community. It’s also the place to be during Tahoe City’s First Fridays.
yogaroomtahoe.com
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Kings Beach Yoga:
Check out The Lake Tahoe Wellness Center in Kings Beach which has a full schedule of classes seven days a week including aerial yoga and meditation.
laketahoewellnesscenter.com

Jenna Minnes the new owner of the Yoga Room in Tahoe City. Photo by Lisa Masser
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THINK OF ME, LYNN RICHARDSON, FOR ALL OF YOUR LAKE TAHOE AND TRUCKEE REAL ESTATE NEEDS!
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By Tim Hauserman

View of the east shore of Lake Tahoe from Mt. Rose Hwy. Photo by Tim Hauserman
This mild winter is allowing Tahoe athletes to take on challenges that are usually not in the cards for March. My latest was to ride my bike from Incline Village to the top of the Mt. Rose Highway. It’s only eight miles to the top, but with 2700 feet of climbing and a destination elevation of just under 9000 feet, it will certainly get your heart pumping.
Pick your spot to begin in Incline and make your way over to the roundabout at the intersection of Highway 28 and Highway 431 and start heading up Highway 431 towards Reno. While the route is a steady uphill the entire way, the grade is mostly manageable and the shoulder is wide and smooth. While many people drive this road regularly, taking it at bike speed gives you a new appreciation of what it has to offer. About a mile up you start seeing Incline Peak standing high above. I’m not sure why it’s not called Pyramid Peak, because it certainly looks like a pyramid from this angle. More climbing brings you to the lookout point where you will find one of the best spots to see Lake Tahoe. And after over 3 miles of uphill, you will be ready for a break to check out those views. Check out Diamond Peak Ski Area below you. It was strange riding in bike shorts and looking down on the skiers still making their way down the few remaining ribbons of white.

Meadow area along Mt. Rose Hwy.
Photo by Tim Hauserman
Now the ride starts to get steeper, but the views of Rose Knob Peak and Relay Peak are sublime. You know you are getting closer when at 7 miles you reach Tahoe Meadows, still covered in snow but going fast. Just past the 8 mile mark is the summit and your turn around point at the Tahoe Rim Trail Mt. Rose Trailhead. The truly ambitious can keep going towards Reno but the heavily traveled road is narrow, often with little or no shoulder, and unless you left a car at the bottom you will have to come all the way back up. The ride back to Incline is a steady, long downhill with a nice shoulder.
Tip: Bring layers. The temperature difference from huffing and puffing up the hill, and roaring back down is pretty substantial.
THINK OF ME, LYNN RICHARDSON, FOR ALL OF YOUR LAKE TAHOE AND TRUCKEE REAL ESTATE NEEDS!
www.lynnrichardson.net
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3By Tim Hauserman
While many of the higher elevation trails around Tahoe and Truckee are still covered in snow, this mild winter has made it possible to hike a few lower elevation trails that you rarely encounter snow free before May, let alone March:
Negro Canyon and the Donner Lake Rim Trail

Photo by Tim Hauserman
A few miles east of Truckee, just off I-80 at the Donner Lake Exit, you will find the Wendin Way Access Trail to the Donner Lake Rim Trail. The snow melts fast off this sun baked south facing bowl, and the well graded trail is a pleasure to hike. After a mile, you join the Donner Lake Rim Trail, where you find another mile of steeper climbing to the Tahoe Donner Cross-Country Ski Area’s Drifter hut at the top of the ridge. If you’ve skied to Drifter before, you will find this hike a piece of cake in comparison, and yet you still get awesome views of the snow covered Sierra crest.
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Vikingsholm

Photo by Tim Hauserman
Now, when crowds are absent, is the time to enjoy Lake Tahoe’s most popular hiking trail to the Vikingsholm mansion in Emerald Bay. Take the one mile descent to the waters edge, then follow the south facing shoreline on the Rubicon Trail to the entrance of the bay, and then along Tahoe’s west shore towards Bliss State Park. A sit at the end of the Boat Campground pier, with it’s views of Maggies Peaks and Eagle Falls, makes for a nice break.
Tahoe Rim Trail-North from Tahoe City.
From the trailhead along Fairway Drive in Tahoe City, the Tahoe Rim Trail climbs through cedar and fir while dishing out views of Lake Tahoe and Tahoe City. In about a mile, a wide panorama of the lake opens up, as well as views of the Truckee River Canyon. If you have more time and energy, keep walking, as you pass nearly constant views of the Truckee River and Lake Tahoe.
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East shore beaches

Photo by Michelle Portesi
While skinny dipping in March might not be on your list of things to do, perhaps enjoying the lovely beaches of the east shore with clothes on, but crowds gone, sounds attractive. Several short trails lead from Highway 28 down to the lovely, rocky shore of Lake Tahoe. Wander past all the tidy little coves and pick your perfect little secluded beach to ponder the beauty of Tahoe.
THINK OF ME, LYNN RICHARDSON, FOR ALL OF YOUR LAKE TAHOE AND TRUCKEE REAL ESTATE NEEDS!
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