East Shore · Moderate

Skunk Harbor

A quiet cove, water like glass, and a 1920s stone party house — all a short walk downhill from the highway.

The Hidden Cove

Downhill to a Different Century

From an unassuming iron gate on NV-28, an old road descends through pine and manzanita to one of the East Shore's loveliest pocket coves. The water in Skunk Harbor is absurdly clear even by Tahoe standards, and on weekday mornings you might share it with no one but a few ducks and the odd sailboat swinging at anchor.

At the beach stands the Newhall House, a handsome stone picnic lodge built in 1923 by San Francisco's Newhall family as a lakeside retreat — a wedding-gift party house from another era. The building is preserved as a historic structure; peek through the doorways, imagine the jazz-age picnics, and leave it exactly as you found it.

Moderate Secluded cove 1923 Newhall House Crystal-clear swimming
Trail Facts

Know Before You Go

Distance~3 miles round trip (about 1.5 mi each way)
Elevation gain~600 ft — all of it on the climb back out
DifficultyModerate (easy down, steady uphill return in full sun)
TrailheadGreen iron gate on the lake side of NV-28, a bit over 2 miles north of the US-50 junction near Spooner Summit — park in the roadside turnouts, never in front of the gate
Fee / permitsNone
DogsLeashed dogs allowed
SeasonSpring through fall; a fine snowshoe route in quiet winters
No facilities, tiny parking: The turnouts hold only a handful of cars and NV-28 shoulder rules are enforced. There's no water, no restrooms and no trash service at the cove — carry out every crumb. Save some water and energy for the 600-foot climb back to the car; it's warmer than it looks.
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