Discover the Best Rocky Point Beaches for 2025 Adventures

by | Travel & Destinations

arch doorway leading to beach.

Discover the Best Rocky Point Beaches for 2025 Adventures

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Updated 4/15/25

 The Rocky Point Beaches are no secret to the people of the Southwest. With 55 miles of diverse coastline, it is easy to understand why they are so popular. This guide will help you navigate the coast and find the perfect Rocky Point Beach for you.

While Rocky Point or Puerto Penasco lies in the Sonoran Desert, the western border is The Sea of Cortez.  The calm clear waters and soft sand are inviting to visitors and locals throughout the year.

For us, enjoying the beaches tops our Things To Do in Rocky Point list.   Grab a towel and a good book.   It is time to relax and enjoy the warm sun, soft sand, and soothing waves at any one of these stunning Rocky Point beaches.

 

Ready to Hit the Sand? Explore These Rocky Point Beaches

 

Pelican Beach

Pelican Beach sits at the far northern end of Puerto Penasco in the Cholla Bay community.  During low tide, the shore becomes a resting place for flocks of brown pelicans.  A hearty buffet of crabs, clams, and shrimp keeps the pelicans happy.   Locals also enjoy tide pools, swimming, and water sports in Pelican Beach.

Parking can be difficult for visitors, which makes Pelican Beach a favorite with locals.

Arch doorway leading to beach.

 

Sandy Beach:

Just south of Pelican Beach sits Sandy Beach, home to watersports and off-road racing fun.

From horseback riding on the beach to kite surfing, you can find something fun to do. The Sandy Beach area offers jet ski rentals or banana boat adventures. Of course, the calm water and soft sand are inviting places to relax.

High-rise resorts such as the Sonoran Sea Resort and Bella Sirena are perfect for a weekend getaway or a family vacation. Nearby, Wrecked on the Reef offers food, music, and a seriously good time. There is also an adjoining RV Park for campers.

The sand dunes are across the road from the resorts. Would you like to rent an ATV and play in the sandbox?

Robb and I scheduled an ATV guided tour that took us up to the rocky bluffs overlooking the ocean. The view from above the beach is outstanding, and it can only be reached by ORV. Be aware, though, that the rocks and cliffs are quite dangerous.

Off-road racing is popular here in Sandy Beach.  Hill climbs are especially exciting to watch and participate in if you have the right equipment.  In any event, wear goggles and a neckerchief to protect yourself from the blowing sand.

 Sand dunes at rocky point beaches.

 

Playa Hermosa / Playa Bonita:

Playa Hermosa and Playa Bonita stretch from Sandy Beach to the edge of town. Their soft sand and gentle waves make them perfect for a morning walk or a sunset celebration.

Seasonal RVers enjoy beachfront camping at its best on Playa Bonita.  Between the gorgeous views and affordable prices, it is understandable.

Along the beach, you can find tasty restaurants, tiki bars, and even a beach massage.  Calle 13 is within walking distance with beach access near the Penasco del Sol Hotel and Conference Center.

Sunset is our favorite time of the day on Playa Bonita.  Watching the sky turn from sunshine yellow to cotton candy pink and blue is beautiful.  However, when the sky turns blood red and black with layers of ripples, look out, it is mesmerizing.

Long stretch of white sandy beach.

Mirador Beach

Mirador Beach is along the southern side of Puerto Penasco. It is close to downtown and popular beach bars, like Manny’s Beach Bar.

Spring Breakers flock to Mirador Beach during February and March. The vibe here is party-central and a lot of fun.

Like the other quieter beaches, the water is calm and the sand is soft.  So grab your floaties and jump in!  The water is fine!

Dinosaur on rocky point beaches.

 

Las Conchas Beach:

Las Conchas is one of Puerto Penasco’s finest stretches of beach.  With 6 miles of pristine sand and shallow waters, you can feel relaxed and set apart from the hustle of daily life.

Las Conchas is a private community with full-time residents and beach house rentals. The quiet neighborhood and limited public beach access allow residents privacy and a feeling of seclusion.

Remember, all Puerto Penasco Beaches are public.  However, please don’t trespass on private property to access them.  Park in designated areas and not in private driveways or resort parking lots.

Quiet stretch of  sandy beach in rocky point.

 

La Playa Jolla and Playa Encanto:

La Playa Jolla and Playa Encanto are located 15 minutes outside town, just south of Estero Morua.

Here, you can feel as though you are on your private island.  Kayak, jet ski, or soak up the sun here on one of Puerto Penasco’s quiet beaches.

Estero Morua is known for its tidal fluctuations, so be sure to check on the tides before venturing into this area.  Low tide can stick you on a sandbar for hours.

If seashell hunting is your hobby, you will be rewarded with fascinating treasures. The night sky is perfect for stargazers, as there isn’t much ambient light in the area.

La Playa Jolla Beach and Playa Encanto are perfect places for a romantic beach day or night.

 

Rocky beachfront and blue ocean.

 

Playa Dorado and Playa Mirimar:

Continuing south is the less populated stretch of beaches, Playa Dorado and Playa Miramar. This area is about 30 minutes away from downtown Puerto Penasco.  Although there are plans to develop residential and commercial properties here, it seems like more of a ghost town.

Since the area is remote and quiet, beachfront rental properties are popular with visitors wanting to “get away from it all.” For the few residents and curious explorers, these beaches are perfect.

Housing construction near quiet puerto penasco beaches.

The Mayan Palace Beach:

Just 45 minutes south of downtown Puerto Penasco is the Mayan Palace Resort.  This super luxurious resort is home to a 2-mile stretch of pristine beachfront.  Although you don’t need to be a guest at Mayan Palace to access the beach, you will wish you were.

Relax on the soft sand, enjoy the calm waters, or nap in the warm sun.

There are no bad days here.

Beach view from pool in mayan palace resort.

 

 

Water Temperature in Puerto Penasco

 

Although the average winter water temperature in Puerto Penasco is only 61 F, it is not unusual to see people wading and even swimming in the water.

While the Summer sun heats the water to a tepid 83°F, the Fall water temperatures in Puerto Penasco range around a comfortable 77°F.

Grab a towel and jump in the water!

 

Tidepools and Sea Shells

 

As the name implies, Puerto Penasco or Rocky Point, you can also find a rocky coastline.  As the tides change, water is trapped in the rocks, creating natural pools.

For shell hunters, it is not unusual to find a small octopus, fascinating shells, and sand dollars in the tide pools.  As the tide comes back in, these mysterious creatures and rocky coastlines will be hidden once again.

Tide pools on puerto penasco beaches.

Tide Charts Are IMPORTANT

 

The tides in Puerto Penasco are quite dramatic.  The fluctuation can sometimes be up to 24 feet.  Because the beaches have such a gentle slope, the water line can recede pretty far.  It is not unusual to see swimmers way out in only knee-deep water.

Cholla Bay, aka Tucson Beach, provides a prime example of these crazy tides.   Low tide makes the beach a perfect place for families to play, as you can park right up to the water’s edge.

A few years ago, during the “spring” high tide, the area quickly flooded, leaving a few dozen cars submerged.

Several months later, Tropical Storm Rosa hit the area, destroying some of the surrounding streets.  Barricades were placed to prevent visitors from parking along the beach now.

 

Sunset

 

The sunset on the Rocky Point Beaches is spectacular. As you watch the sun drop into the sea, the sky can turn brilliant with shades of orange, yellow, red, and purple—sometimes, it appears to be on fire!

It’s no wonder that Rocky Point Beaches are a favorite snowbird location for RVers, retirees, and even spring breakers.

 

Colorful dramatic sunset on the rocky point beaches.

 

Rocky Point Beaches Conclusion

 

Although beach access is limited at some of these beaches, there are no private beaches in Puerto Penasco.  In other words, you can soak up the sun and play in the water, as long as you don’t trespass through someone’s yard.

Each of the Rocky Point Beaches offers a unique experience to both locals and visitors. There are plenty of lodging options, including beachfront home rentals, fabulous resorts, and RV Campgrounds.

After a day on the beach, Puerto Penasco offers plenty of things to do. From a stroll down the Malecon to a relaxing dinner, there are many possibilities.

Grab a towel or beach chair and apply sunscreen. The Rocky Point beaches are waiting for you!

Travel Safe and Adventure Often!

Happy couple standing on a rocky point beach.

 

Maureen Wright and Robb Strobridge

The Stromads

The stromads in puerto penasco.

Entrepreneurs, Wanderlusters, Constant travelers, and Full-time RV Nomads since 2016.  We are fueled by life, love, and the pursuit of all things good.  Thanks for joining our journey and we hope to see you down the road!

Cadillac Ranch
Art, Iron, and a Spray-Painted Revolution

Ten Cadillacs, tailfins and all, buried nose-first in a field just off I-40. From a distance, it looks like a surreal junkyard. Up close, it’s a rainbow of spray paint, rust, and road trip energy.

Back in 1974, an art group called Ant Farm proposed the idea as a critique of American consumerism. Stanley Marsh 3 loved it. He gave them the land and the funding, and Cadillac Ranch was born.

Visitors are encouraged to leave their mark. And Marsh? He loved the chaos.

Graffiti-covered Cadillacs half-buried in the ground at Cadillac Ranch, one of the most iconic things to see in Amarillo.

Floating Mesa
An Optical Illusion in the Middle of Nowhere

The top of the mesa looks like it’s levitating. Stanley Marsh 3 painted a strip of white metal sheeting around its rim to match the sky—an unfinished illusion meant to fool the eye and unsettle the mind.

On clear afternoons, it works. The mesa floats. And Marsh, in typical fashion, never explained it.

Ozymandias on the Plains – Giant Legs
and a Not-So-Subtle Jab at Lubbock

Two giant stone legs in the middle of a field. No torso, just socks. It’s a nod to Shelley’s famous poem, but also a rumored jab at rival city Lubbock—legend says the statue faces south, mooning them.

Stanley Marsh 3 funded this, too. Satire, prank, or both? Probably both.

Graffiti-covered giant pair of legs in a field—an unusual roadside attraction among things to see in Amarillo.

The Dynamite Museum
Street Signs That Ask the Wrong Questions

No dynamite. No museum. Just hundreds of bizarre street signs placed across town in the ’90s by Marsh 3 and a band of local artists.

Signs read things like “Road Does Not End” and “Hope is a Naked Dance.” Many are gone now, but some still pop up—tiny time bombs of confusion in Amarillo’s neighborhoods.

Slug Bug Ranch – A Beetle Graveyard Gets a Second Life at the Big Texan

Originally planted outside of town as a twist on Cadillac Ranch, five VW Beetles were buried nose-down and left to rot in colorful glory. The owners of the nearby convenience store had hoped this quirky installation would steer curious drivers off the highway and into their shop.

But over time, the Longhorn Trading Post saw fewer visitors and eventually shut down. The corner became a graffiti-covered ghost town and a garden of Volkswagen skeletons.

The Conway land was later sold, and Slug Bug Ranch found a new home in the parking lot of the Big Texan Steak Ranch. There aren’t any ghosts in this version (that we know of), but it’s still one of the weirder sights to stumble across in Amarillo.

 

Helium Monument
A Time Capsule with a $10 Bet on the Future

A monument to helium, featuring time capsules sealed to be opened in 1993, 2018, 2068, and one in 2968. That last one includes a bank passbook with a $10 deposit from 1968. Some say it could be worth a quadrillion dollars by the time it’s opened—assuming we still use money.

It’s nerdy, wild, and perfectly Amarillo.

Close-up of the Helium Monument's atomic model sculpture—an iconic and educational thing to see in Amarillo.

Jack Sisemore RV Museum
Chrome, Campers, and Cross-Country Dreams

A private collection of vintage RVs, including the motorhome from RV (yes, the Robin Williams movie) and the first-ever full-time RV family’s rig. Each one is set up with period furniture, maps, and decor.

More than a museum—it’s a walk through America’s road-tripping soul.

Amarillo Railroad Museum
Where Model Trains Meet Cold War Secrets

A great little museum with working model trains, but the star is outside: a Cold War-era “White Train” that once secretly transported nuclear weapons across the U.S. from the nearby Pantex Plant.

No velvet ropes. Just a piece of history standing quietly in the Panhandle sun.

Pantex Plant
The Most Dangerous Place You’ll Never Tour

Still in operation today, Pantex is the primary nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the U.S. It’s high-security, off-limits, and unnervingly close to cattle country.

It casts a long shadow over Amarillo, one most people don’t talk about—but it’s there.

Amarillo Botanical Gardens
Growing Beauty Where It Shouldn’t Exist

We probably would’ve laughed if you asked us to picture a botanical garden in Amarillo. Not because the Panhandle isn’t beautiful, but because it’s where the wind can knock over your coffee, dog, and will to live—all in the same afternoon.

And yet, just behind the medical center, the Amarillo Botanical Gardens bloom defiantly—like a full-color dream planted in the middle of the Dust Bowl.

The story starts in the 1920s, when a group of gardening enthusiasts—yes, in Amarillo—formed a club focused on landscaping and beautification. It wasn’t easy. The ground was dry, the climate harsh, and the odds were long. But after weathering the Great Depression, the Dust Bowl, and decades of development, that club grew into something permanent: a full-fledged public garden.

We haven’t made it inside yet, but what we’ve seen from the outside is enough to spark curiosity. Locals rave about the mix of native plants, seasonal beds, and the glowing tropical conservatory that lights up like a greenhouse spaceship at night.

But what makes it weird—in the best way—is that it shouldn’t exist here. This isn’t a garden built for Instagram. It’s a slow, determined response to a harsh climate by people who looked around at bare dirt and said, “Let’s grow something anyway.”

Even just standing near the gates, it feels like a quiet rebellion. And on our next trip through town, it’s at the top of our list.

Richard Daniel Baker Peace Park
A Monument to Peace on Route 66

Driving along Route 66, just east of Amarillo, you might spot something unexpected: a large peace sign rising from the prairie, surrounded by a circle of pedestals bearing dates and messages. This is the Richard Daniel Baker Peace Park, also known as the Stoner Patriot Peace Garden of All Faiths.

The park is a personal tribute to peace and unity created by Richard Daniel Baker, a local farmer and retired telephone repairman. Each pedestal marks a significant date in history, inviting visitors to reflect on the events that have shaped our world. The park blends symbols from various faiths and philosophies, emphasizing a message of universal harmony.

While not widely known, Peace Park offers a quiet space for contemplation amidst the vast Texas landscape. It reminds us that even in the most unassuming places, one person’s vision can create a lasting impact.

The Nat
Big Bands, Buried Pools
and a Haunted Attic That Won’t Quit

Step inside The Nat on Route 66; it feels like time forgot to move on. High ceilings. Vintage lighting. A retro stage just begging for a swing band. Today, it’s a sprawling antique mall—but behind the shelves of records and racks of rhinestone jackets is one of Amarillo’s best-kept (and strangest) secrets.

It used to be a pool.

Initially opened in 1922 as The Natatorium, it was a public indoor swimming pool—back when that was considered a glamorous, almost futuristic idea. Amarillo locals swam here in the roaring ’20s, splashing beneath stained glass windows and ornate fixtures. But by the 1930s, swimming was out, and swing was in.

Rather than tear it all down, the owners did something wonderfully weird: they drained the pool and built a dance floor right over it.

Suddenly, the Nat became one of the hottest dance halls in the Texas Panhandle. Everyone who was anyone came through—Duke Ellington, Tommy Dorsey, Louis Armstrong. On any given weekend, you could dance the jitterbug straight across a former swimming pool, the music echoing off walls that once smelled of chlorine.

But that’s not the whole story.

In the attic—closed to the public and rarely talked about—people say something lingers. Past employees whisper about footsteps when no one’s upstairs. Cold spots. Doors that open on their own. One person swears they heard a piano playing softly, even though the building was locked and empty.

No one’s quite sure who—or what—might be haunting the place. A lost dancer? A musician who never left? Or maybe just the building itself, too full of memories to sit still.

We wandered the maze of vintage booths downstairs but couldn’t help looking up. There’s something about The Nat that hums under the surface. A little glamour. A little grit. And just enough mystery to make you glance over your shoulder.

 

Amarillo Historical Museum
One Man’s Obsession, Amarillo’s Memory Box

We love a good museum. But what we love is weird; from everything we’ve heard, the Amarillo Historical Museum checks all the boxes. Tucked into a modest building just off I-40, it’s not flashy or state-run. It’s a passion project—curated by a local historian who’s spent years collecting Amarillo’s odd, overlooked, and offbeat stories.

By the time we got there, the doors were closed for the day, but just peeking through the windows and reading about it later was enough to convince us that this place is high on our list for the next time we pass through town.

From what we’ve gathered, the rooms are packed with memorabilia: signs from long-gone businesses, Civil War relics, rotary phones, cattle brand records, and—somehow—more mannequins than you’d expect in one zip code. It’s part thrift store, part time capsule, and completely Amarillo.

The museum is run by a local storyteller known for giving off-script tours filled with local lore you won’t find on plaques. If the basement’s open, it might hold anything from a bomb shelter display to outlaw memorabilia to a forgotten fire engine.

No promises—but if it’s open when you come through, it might be the weirdest attic in the Panhandle.

The Big Texan Steak Ranch
Gimmicks and Giant Steaks

You can spot it from the highway: bright yellow walls, oversized cowboy signs, and a banner that dares you to eat a 72-ounce steak—plus sides—in under an hour. Welcome to the Big Texan Steak Ranch, Amarillo’s most famous and ridiculous institution.

This place is more than a restaurant. It’s an experience.  And yes, the 72-ounce steak challenge is real. You sit on a raised stage in the middle of the dining room while everyone watches you attempt to conquer four and a half pounds of beef, a baked potato, shrimp cocktail, salad, and a roll. Fail, and you pay the bill. Win, and your meal is free—plus you get bragging rights and a photo on the wall of fame (or shame).

But the weird doesn’t stop at the steak.

There’s a shooting gallery in the lobby. A full ice cream parlor and brewery on-site. Taxidermy watches you eat. And if you’re staying at the Big Texan Motel, they’ll pick you up in one of their custom-painted limos with longhorns on the hood. 

And now, the restaurant is home to the relocated Slug Bug Ranch—because nothing says Texas like spray-painted Volkswagens next to a giant fiberglass steer.

We’ve been here more than once, not because we needed another steak, but because the place is like a fever dream that somehow works. It’s weird, loud, a little unhinged—and somehow, perfectly Amarillo.

 

So… Why Is Amarillo So Weird?

Some places hide their weird. Amarillo wears it like a badge.

You don’t just visit Amarillo—you try to figure it out. It’s a city that buries Cadillacs in a field, outlines mesas to float, and honors helium with a time capsule full of Spam. It’s where dance floors are built over drained pools, and old hospitals whisper secrets when the wind shifts. It’s art and science, kitsch and chaos, sometimes unsettling, often hilarious—and always layered with stories.

And if there’s one thread that runs through it all, it might be Stanley Marsh 3—the millionaire trickster who helped turn public art into public curiosity. But Amarillo’s weirdness goes far beyond him. It’s in the antique mall mannequins, the painted Beetles, the radioactive past, and the peaceful protest planted in a park.

We’ve wandered every corner of this town, and if there’s one thing we’ve learned, it’s this:

Amarillo doesn’t care if you understand it. It just wants you to look twice.

So if you’re driving through and tempted to skip it, don’t. Pull over. Wander. Let the wind slap your face and the stories sink in.

Because in Amarillo, the weird isn’t just a sideshow.

It’s the main event.

Maureen Wright and Robb Strobridge

The Stromads

The Stromads at a speakeasy for date night.

Entrepreneurs, Wanderlusters, Constant travelers, and Full-time RV Nomads since 2016.  We are fueled by life, love, and the pursuit of all things good.  Thanks for joining our journey and we hope to see you down the road!

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ROBB AND MAUREEN

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