![]() Our accounting department will be in contact concerning your refund. Paid in cash: To receive your refund, please visit /MeasureH and fill out the form. The form will be live on June 15, 2022.Please contact the company you made payment to concerning your refund. Purchased a package, consignment ticket or voucher: Partners who sell Catalina Express tickets will be provide with passengers' refund by the beginning of July. ![]() If you no longer have this card, please visit /MeasureH and fill out the form. Please check your statement for the refund. Paid via credit card: You will receive a refund to the credit card used to purchase the tickets.One-way tickets will be charged the applicable Island wharfage fee and tax.ĭue to the overcollection, Catalina Express is going through the process of refunding passengers as quickly as possible to right this situation. Round-trip tickets should include a $6.50 Island wharfage fee and tax which entails $3.50 from Long Beach/San Pedro/Dana Point to Avalon and $3.00 from Avalon to Long Beach/San Pedro/Dana Point. For a classic view, wander along the Bluff Top Trail and, while looking out over the water for whales, see the statue honouring 19th-century hide droghers-tradesmen who literally tossed hides over the cliffs to the merchant ships anchored below. And if you’re looking for an ultra-deluxe experience, check in at the Ritz-Carlton Laguna Niguel, a longtime Dana Point oceanfront institution.After further communication with the City of Avalon, Catalina Express has discovered a misinterpretation of the Avalon Measure H Tax resulting in an overcollection of $0.50 per ticket for passengers traveling from Avalon to the mainland. Many of Dana Point’s hotels and restaurants sit on the cliffs above the harbour (like the Monarch Beach Resort and the Blue Lantern Inn) or on the water itself, such as Waterman’s Harbor where sustainable and locally sourced seafood is on offer, or The Harbor Grill, which serves mesquite-grilled fresh catches. Come during the Christmas season to double the viewings out on the water: one of the town’s biggest events of the year is December’s Dana Point Harbor Boat Parade of Lights. Take a paddleboard ride-the harbour’s waveless anchorage is especially kind to first-timers-and you might also spot pods of dolphins, sea lions and seals. Migrating grey whales can be seen from November to April, then blue whales from April to October, along with sightings of humpbacks, orcas, fin whales and minke whales. Indeed, you can spot these giant mammals breaching and frolicking in the waves nearly year-round. The quieter waters, though, created abundant options for kayaking, stand-up paddle boarding, angling and a lot of whale-watching. Otherwise, the town very much revolves around the harbour, which, when it opened in 1971, tamed Killer Dana. Today, you’ll still find a Hobie Surf Shop, boutiques and restaurants along this stretch of Highway 1, as well as at nearby Salt Creek Beach, Baby Beach and Doheny State Beach. A few streets away, California’s first surf shop was opened in 1954 by Orange County local Hobie Alter. In the 1950s and '60s, the right-breaking waves that tended to form here could produce 4-metre surf breaks known as Killer Dana and Doheny. The town has been wooing whale- and dolphin-watchers and water lovers ever since, earning the designation of Dolphin & Whale Watching Capital of the World ®. The southern end of California’s Highway 1 offers some gorgeous drama, like beach town and whale-watching mecca Dana Point. The town was named after Richard Henry Dana, who first arrived there on a trading ship circa 1835 and was entranced by the romantic cliff-lined area.
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