The drive from the Holland Tunnel to the Stone Ridge foothills runs about ninety minutes in light traffic, a little more on a Friday afternoon in July. You come off the Thruway at Exit 19 in Kingston, cross the Esopus, and the elevation starts to climb almost immediately. By the time you've picked up a rotisserie chicken or a loaf from Bread Alone in Boiceville, you're already in [the Catskills](/catskills) proper, a different rhythm, a different sky, a slower grocery-store line.
This itinerary isn't a cannabis-maximalist bender. It's a slow-down weekend where cannabis is part of the rhythm instead of the point of the trip. A gummy before the hot tub. A preroll on the porch after dinner. A joint passed around a fire pit when the stars are out. You come up Friday, you stay two nights at a cabin or a small inn, and you head back down the Thruway on Sunday evening feeling like you actually went somewhere.
The version below is written for a rental in the Phoenicia/Woodstock corridor, the eastern Catskills, the default Catskills for anyone coming from the city. Regional variants for the western and Sullivan sides are at the bottom.
## Friday: the arrival
Plan to pull into the driveway before dark. Whatever light is left is worth spending outside, not on a laptop figuring out the hot tub.
If you're doing a proper grocery run, the stretch between Kingston and [Phoenicia](/catskills/town/phoenicia) has what you need. Boiceville has Bread Alone and a small IGA. Woodstock has a co-op and a handful of specialty shops. If you're passing through Stone Ridge on NY-213 and you want to start the weekend with a visit to the farm that grew your flower, [Back Home Cannabis Co.](/dispensaries/back-home-cannabis-co-000133) is at 3056 Route 213, one of the state's small micro-business licensees, meaning the flower on the shelf starts as seed on their own land in nearby High Falls. Owner William Leibee grows organically and hand-harvests, and the kitchen extends to the edibles. It's the kind of shop that makes the region worth the drive.
Heads up on the OCM's licensed-retailer verification system: every legal New York dispensary displays a state-issued QR code at the entrance. If you scan it with your phone and it doesn't resolve to a valid license, you're not in a licensed store. Licensed stores only, the unlicensed market in New York is still larger than the legal one, and the flower is unregulated.
Check in, unpack, put the perishables away. Pour something. The weekend has started.
## Saturday: the long day
### Morning
Start slow. Coffee from the cabin, ideally on a porch. If you're staying in the Phoenicia area, Phoenicia Diner is the anchor breakfast, a roadside diner that became a national name without losing its actual-diner bones. Expect a wait on summer Saturdays. If you'd rather skip the wait, the Woodstock side has Bread Alone and a cluster of village cafes.
If you're the kind of traveler who prefers to eat at the cabin, make Saturday breakfast the meal you cook. Eggs, good bread, the tomatoes you bought at the farm stand yesterday.
### Mid-morning: the dispensary stop
Decide this the night before, not in the car. If you're anchored in Phoenicia, the closest legal options are a short drive: [HERbal Woodstock](/dispensaries/herbal-woodstock-000112) on Tinker Street in Woodstock sits right on the main village stretch, walkable to the green and to Bread Alone. If you're willing to take the scenic route back through the foothills, Back Home in Stone Ridge is worth the detour for the farm-connected menu alone.
Bring cash or a debit card, most New York dispensaries can't process credit cards because of federal banking rules. Expect ID checks at the door (21+, no exceptions) and a menu that reads more like a small bottle shop than a pharmacy. Budtenders in a region this small tend to actually know the farms; it's worth asking where the flower comes from and what's in the edibles.
### Early afternoon: the trail
A short-to-moderate hike is the right scale for this weekend. Giant Ledge, the approach to Panther Mountain off NY-47 south of Phoenicia, gives you a summit view in about three miles round trip with reasonable elevation gain. It's the hike to do if you have half a day, not a full day. Parking at the trailhead fills early on summer and fall weekends; get there by mid-morning or plan on a weekday.
Two things about cannabis and the trail: **New York state law prohibits cannabis consumption on state-owned land and in public spaces.** The Catskill Forest Preserve is state land. That means the trailhead, the ledges, the summit, none of it is legal for consumption. The practical framing: if cannabis is part of your hike, use it at the cabin before you leave, or save it for after you're back on the porch. Don't pack a preroll for the overlook. Besides the legal issue, altitude and exertion turn edibles into a different experience than you'd expect, and a disoriented hiker two miles in is nobody's idea of a good Saturday.
For [more mountain options](/catskills/mountain-adventures), the pillar hub has the full set, shorter walks at Platte Clove, the Esopus Creek riverbank, Kaaterskill Falls on 23A if you're on the Tannersville side.
### Lunch
Post-hike lunch is one of the small pleasures of a [Phoenicia](/catskills/town/phoenicia) weekend. There's a pizza place, a general store with good sandwiches, and a handful of cafes in the two-block village. If you'd rather picnic, the Esopus riverbank off Woodland Valley Road is public and quiet. On summer weekends the creek is full of tubers drifting down from Town Tinker; in spring and fall it's one of the better fly-fishing runs in the eastern Catskills.
### Late afternoon: a cultural stop
The eastern Catskills have a density of low-key cultural stops that reward a slow afternoon. Opus 40 in Saugerties, Harvey Fite's six-acre bluestone sculpture environment, decades of one man's work on an old quarry, is the clearest single recommendation. It's outdoor, it's meditative, and it pairs well with the kind of quiet, attentive state the day has been building toward. A flat ticket, sensible hours, open through the fall.
If it's a music weekend, the Colony in Woodstock and Bearsville Theater just outside the village both book regularly; check what's on the calendar before you leave the city. Phoenicia Playhouse runs community theater on a smaller scale and is worth a look if there's a show up.
### Early evening: back to the cabin
This is the hinge of the day. Shower off the trail. Put something on the grill or start the oven. If your rental has a hot tub or a sauna, now's the moment.
If edibles are part of your evening, start low and go slow. A 5mg dose is a reasonable first step; 10mg is a full adult serving for most people; anything higher should wait for another weekend. Edibles take 60 to 90 minutes to come on, sometimes longer after a big meal, and the mistake nearly everyone makes is stacking a second dose before the first has arrived. Take one, pour a seltzer, put something on the speaker, and let the evening do the work.
### Dinner
Peekamoose in Big Indian is the marquee dinner in this corridor, a serious kitchen on Route 28 that books up on weekends. Reserve when you book the cabin, not the day of. A tier down and just as good for our purposes, the bar at the Spruceton Inn over in West Kill or the restaurant at the Hotel Dylan near Saugerties both punch above their weight.
If you're cooking, keep it simple. The point of the cabin kitchen is that you're not eating under fluorescents.
### Late night
Porch. Fire pit if the rental has one. A preroll shared between two people and a sky full of stars you don't see in the city. The mountains are quiet in a specific way, not silent, but structured; the Esopus is always running somewhere, an owl, a distant car on 28. The weekend pays off here.
Consumption is legal for adults 21+ on private property with the owner's or host's permission. On a short-term rental, that permission comes from the host, not from you. Message hosts before booking to confirm their cannabis policy; a lot of Catskills owners are fine with it, a meaningful number aren't, and the time to find out is not after you've unpacked.
## Sunday: the soft departure
Resist the urge to plan Sunday. The whole point of two nights instead of one is that you get a morning that isn't a countdown.
### Morning
Longer breakfast. If it's summer and you're in the Phoenicia orbit, the Esopus tube run at Town Tinker is the light-effort Sunday activity, a couple of hours floating downstream with a cooler tube, shuttled back to your car. In cooler months, a short walk through the Woodstock village green or the Saugerties lighthouse trail does the same job.
### Late morning: the second stop
One last dispensary visit, ideally a different shop than Saturday's. The point isn't to stockpile; the point is that the small retailers in this region are each doing something specific, and a weekend is a good chance to see two. If Saturday was Back Home, make Sunday HERbal in Woodstock or the drive east to [Budd's Dispensary](/dispensaries/budds-dispensary-000042) in Catskill, which sits just off Thruway Exit 21 and is an easy on-ramp back toward the city.
One legal note worth repeating: don't cross state lines with cannabis. New York product purchased from a New York licensed retailer is legal in New York only. A joint in the center console becomes a federal problem the moment you clip the Pennsylvania or Connecticut border.
### Early afternoon: last stop before the Thruway
Lunch on the way down. If you're heading toward Exit 19 in Kingston, the village's restaurant density gives you real options, Stockade District cafes, a couple of breweries, an ice cream stand if the kids are along. If you're coming out of Catskill toward Exit 21, the Main Street stretch near the Hudson has its own set. Fill the tank, pick up a gallon of water, and merge south.
You're back in Manhattan by early evening, weekend bag on the floor, a slightly different pace in your shoulders.
## Practical and legal checklist
- **21+ only**, everywhere, every step. ID at the dispensary door.
- **Licensed retailers only.** Scan the OCM QR code at the entrance. If it doesn't verify, walk out.
- **No consumption on state land.** New York state law prohibits cannabis consumption on state-owned land and in public spaces. The Catskill Forest Preserve, trailheads, state campgrounds, and roadside pull-offs all count.
- **Private property, with permission.** At a short-term rental, that means the host's written policy. Message hosts before booking to confirm their cannabis policy.
- **Don't drive under the influence.** Not on the way to the trail, not down the mountain road at dusk, not on the Thruway home. Build edible timing around the cabin, not the car.
- **Start low, go slow.** 5mg first, wait 90 minutes, reassess. Edibles are the single most common rookie mistake on a weekend like this.
- **Don't cross state lines.** Product stays in New York.
## Regional variants
**Eastern Catskills (Phoenicia / Woodstock / Tannersville)**, the default version above. The easiest first trip from the city, the densest concentration of dining and dispensaries, the most developed trail network. Stay in the Esopus valley or up on the Tannersville escarpment.
**Western Catskills (Livingston Manor / Roscoe / Margaretville)**, the fly-fishing version. Quieter villages, colder rivers, the Beaverkill and the Willowemoc instead of the Esopus. The dispensary scene out here is small and personal: [Knotweed Farm](/dispensaries/knotweed-farm-000095) in Hancock is a Delaware County micro-business run by Ben and Cindy Rinker (Ben is a fly-fishing guide, which tells you something about the shop), and [Lively Harvest](/dispensaries/lively-harvest-000014) in Margaretville is the western-corridor anchor. Book a [cabin](/catskills/cabins-colonies) along the Beaverkill, fish in the morning, read in the afternoon, cook at the cabin. The Andes Hotel is the dinner.
**Sullivan Catskills (Monticello / Bethel / Callicoon)**, the music-and-history version. Bethel Woods (site of the 1969 festival) anchors the eastern end; Callicoon and Narrowsburg along the Delaware River anchor the western. Dispensaries here include Canna Planet in both Ellenville and Monticello, Joint Jungle in Liberty, The Green House in Jeffersonville, and Amber Jane in White Lake. Pair a Bethel Woods concert weekend with a river afternoon on the Upper Delaware.
Whichever version you pick, the trip works for the same reason: the Catskills have always been a place the city comes to slow down. Cannabis, used the way a sensible adult uses a glass of wine, fits the rhythm. It's not the reason for the weekend. It's just part of what the weekend is.