Californai b&b association1/7/2023 Below is a list of the top five misconceptions we heard. ![]() SACRAMENTO, Calif., April 12 - The California Association of Bed & Breakfast Inns (CABBI) recently asked travelers if they’ve ever stayed at a bed and breakfast, and if not, why? The answers made us smile. (San Francisco County extends to places it really shouldn’t, don’t you know.)ĭebunking the Top Five Myths of Bed & Breakfasts: California’s B&B Association Sets the Record Straight Red Rock is on the left and Danielle Steel’s least favoritest Bed and Breakfast is on the right behind the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge, on noisy East Brother Island in neighboring CoCo County. OTOH, put a kayak-in B&B on Red Rock Island, San Francisco’s northernmost piece of real estate, and I’d be up for an overnight. (Also, I’d like to note that not having a shared bathroom, in and of itself, does not “ensure” your safety.) Think I’d rather sleep in my aging Land Cruiser (diagonally, as it’s shorter than some Camry Solara two-doors) after flopping the rear seats and popping the minivan-style rear side windows than deal with any of the B&Bs that got these myths going. So the net effect is that I’m less likely to ever set foot in a B&B. ![]() ![]() Now I know what the California Association of Bed & Breakfast Inns (CABBI) is trying to do here today, but, man, I don’t know, some of the myths listed below are news to me.
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