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Treatments are available at:
Golden
Haven Spa - Nestled in the heart of the Napa Valley,
in the beautiful town of Calistoga, Golden Haven Hot Springs
makes the perfect wine country getaway. Come and experience
the magic of the healing mineral waters and rejuvenating spa
treatments. After a day of touring the wine country, you can
swim in our warm mineral pool, relax on the sun deck, and rejuvenate
with Golden Havens famous spa treatments. At Golden Haven
couples can enjoy mud baths in private treatment rooms. We also
feature soothing massages, luxurious herbal facials, and detoxifying
European Body Wraps. Come for the day or stay for the night
in one our newly remodeled rooms. Many have private kitchenettes,
saunas or hot mineral jauzzis. Families may prefer our two bedroom
units that accommodate up to four people. Come and see for yourself
why Conde Nest Traveler recently highlighted Golden Havens
Mud Bath treatments as a quintessential American travel
experience and why Travel and Leisure Magazine in April
2007 concluded that Golden Haven Hot Springs is one of the most
professional and up-to-date" spas in Calistoga. Special
Internet package discounts are available on our web siteessential
American travel experience. Special Internet package discounts
are available on our web site.
Calistoga Village Inn &
Spa
Dr. Wilkenson's Resort
Golden Haven
Spa
Oasis Spa
Indian
Springs Spa
Mud History
Calistoga and mud go way back - Mud baths -- said
to relax muscles, sooth aches, improve circulation and smooth
the skin -- have been a visitor staple in Calistoga ever since
Sam Brannan reined in the thermal springs at the foot of Mount
St. Helena and opened his Calistoga Hot Springs Resort in the
1860s. Spa after spa followed; today there are more than a dozen,
making Calistoga the most spa-ified town in the West. "In
the natural state, what we had around here was hot springs bubbling
up all around. When they put wells down for swimming pools,
it concentrated it, and the hot springs were lost," said
John Merchant, whose Indian Springs Spa and Resort stands on
the site of Brannan's fashionable 19th century watering hole.
Until rather recently, mud baths were promoted as an arthritis
treatment. They entail lying for 10 to 15 minutes in a sarcophagus
like tub filled with mud made from hot-spring water mixed with
volcanic ash, peat moss, clay or other materials, depending
on the spa.
"The mud bath is done in Japan, it's done in Europe --
it's a very old procedure," Merchant said. "In the
1930s and '40s, people with arthritis would come here, take
a mud bath every day and come away feeling healed."
Nowadays, mud baths are generally included in a larger course
of treatment aimed primarily at reducing stress and promoting
relaxation. Though it sounds, well, dirty, mud baths actually
are quite sanitary, spa operators say. Brochures from the establishments
that offer them explain that mud in the tubs is pumped through
with 212-degree water and thoroughly raked between customers.
Indian Springs -- which locals persist in calling Pachita's,
after a previous owner -- remains the classic place to go for
"the works," followed by a swim in a magnificent,
60-by-120-foot, geyser-heated swimming pool dating from 1913.
The Sacramento Bee, May 18, 1997
Whose idea was this? - It was the novelty of sitting
in hot mud that first put Calistoga on the map. Hot mud and
even hotter salesmanship. Although Native Americans and early
Spanish settlers used the area's natural hot springs, it took
a fast-talking, big-dreaming entrepreneur named Sam Brannan
to turn geyser water into gold.After making a fortune selling
shovels to prospectors during the Gold Rush, Brannan snapped
up the steaming geysers and hot marshlands at the northern end
of the Napa Valley with the idea of creating a resort modeled
on New York's famous Saratoga Hot Springs.
Although no records remain, local legend has it that Brannan
was the first to mix volcanic ash from nearby Mount St. Helena
with hot mineral water to concoct Calistoga's famous mud baths.
He opened his Hot Springs Hotel in 1860, promoting it as the
"Saratoga of California." One evening over supper,
apparently after amply enjoying the fruits of his own nearby
vineyards, he held forth on this theme a bit too intensely,
proclaiming, "I will make this place the Calistoga of Sarafornia."
Calistoga stuck, and for 10 years Brannan's resort attracted
the likes of Leland Stanford, Robert Louis Stevenson, and P.
T. Barnum. In 1870, a divorce settlement put Brannan out of
business, and fire later razed most of the Hot Springs Hotel.
By the 1920s, other resorts offering mud baths had been built,
but it wasn't until the early 1950s that Calistoga's reputation
as a thermal destination really began to grow. Today seven spas
offer traditional mud baths, and four others offer a variety
of New Age treatments.
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