Summer is when Bemus Point is most active. From Memorial Day through Labor Day, all fourteen restaurants are open, the Stow Ferry is running, kayaks and charter boats are on the water, and outdoor movie nights and Summer Fest fill the events calendar. This guide covers everything there is to do, organized the way a summer day in Bemus Point actually unfolds.
- Season: Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day — peak summer June through August
- All 14 restaurants open — the only time of year when the full dining scene is running
- Ferry running: Memorial Day through mid-September
- Water activities: Kayak rentals, private charters, fishing, swimming — all available
- Events: Summer Fest, outdoor movie nights, live music at waterfront venues
- Peak weeks: Last two weeks of July and first week of August see the most activity

Morning on Lake Chautauqua
Morning Coffee at Lake Life Café
Start the morning at Lake Life Café on Main Street. Quality coffee, light bites, and an easy atmosphere before the day gets going. On a July morning the lake is visible, the air is still cool, and the café is at its quietest.
★ The café fills up by mid-morning in peak season — arrive before 9 AM for the full quiet-morning experience.
Kayak or Paddleboard on the Lake — Bemus Bay Water Toys
Morning is the best time to get on Lake Chautauqua by kayak or paddleboard. The Bemus Point bay is calm before the afternoon wind picks up, the water is clear, and motorboat traffic is minimal. Bemus Bay Water Toys operates from the village waterfront: you can be on the water within minutes of finishing your coffee. The round trip to the Stow Ferry landing and back is a good morning loop.
★ Rent early — by 11 AM the wind has usually started and the bay gets busier. The best morning window is 8–11 AM.
Early Morning Fishing
The two hours after sunrise are the most productive fishing window on Lake Chautauqua across all summer species. Walleye feed actively in the low light, bass hit topwater lures on the weed edges before the sun gets high, and the lake has a particular quality — still, slightly misty, populated only by other anglers who understood the value of an early start.
★ Bring your NY fishing license — required for all anglers 16 and older. Purchase online at dec.ny.gov before you arrive.
Morning Round at Bemus Point Golf Club
A morning tee time at Bemus Point Golf Club gives you lakeside fairways, Chautauqua County views, and the option to be done before the temperature peaks.
★ Book tee times in advance for peak July and August weekends.
Afternoon: The Village and the Water
Ride the Bemus Point-Stow Ferry
The Stow Ferry is one of the oldest continuously operating ferries in North America, crossing Lake Chautauqua since the 1870s. The five-minute crossing puts you in the middle of the lake: the village behind you, the far shore approaching, 17 miles of water extending in both directions. Most visitors ride it at least twice.
★ The ferry runs approximately 10 AM–6 PM, Memorial Day through mid-September. Walk from Main Street in under five minutes.
Browse Main Street’s Independent Shops
Bemus Point’s shopping is as independent as its restaurants. Nine boutiques and specialty shops on Main Street and the waterfront area carry hand-thrown pottery, alpaca goods, specialty wines, and artisan gifts. An afternoon wandering Main Street in July, stopping into shops and ending with ice cream at The Happy Cow, is a good way to spend a few hours.
★ The Happy Cow is the quintessential afternoon treat — ice cream, a waterfront spot, and nowhere to be. Essential.
The Lawson Center — Bemus Point Boat Museum
At 73 Lakeside Drive, The Lawson Center is a nationally recognized small craft boat museum with a collection of historic wooden boats. Open Memorial Day through Labor Day, with free or low-cost entry. A good afternoon stop, especially on a rainy day.
★ The Lawson Center is steps from the ferry landing — combine them into a single waterfront afternoon.
Swimming on Lake Chautauqua
Lake Chautauqua is a swimming lake in the best sense — clear water, good quality, no ocean complications. The lake’s 1,300-foot elevation keeps summer water temperatures refreshing. The calm, protected Bemus Point bay area is ideal for families with children.
Private Boat Charter — One Fine Day Boat Charter
One Fine Day Boat Charter offers private lake cruises with Captain Paul handling the navigation: good for groups, celebrations, corporate outings, or simply a few hours on the open lake.
★ Book well ahead for summer weekend dates — sunset cruise slots fill quickly from mid-June onward.

Evening: Waterfront Dining and the Long Dusk
Dinner at The Village Casino
The Village Casino at 1 Lakeside Drive is a lakefront venue operating May through September with good food, cold drinks, live entertainment, and Lake Chautauqua at your feet. On a busy Friday night in July it has the energy of a village at full summer capacity.
★ Arrive before 6:30 PM on summer Friday and Saturday evenings — the waterfront tables fill fast. The atmosphere peaks around sunset.
Evening at Ellicottville Brewing or The Tap House
After dinner, or as the evening continues, Ellicottville Brewing on Chautauqua and the Bemus Point Golf Club & Tap House both offer craft beer and a quality evening atmosphere. Good beer, good company, and the particular ease of a summer night in a village where nobody has to drive far to get anywhere.
Sunset on the Waterfront
Lake Chautauqua faces west from Bemus Point, which means the sun sets directly over the far shore and the light on the water in the evening is striking. The waterfront at Lakeside Drive, the Casino patio, and the ferry dock are all good spots to watch the sun go down over a 17-mile lake. This costs nothing.
★ July sunsets typically peak around 8:15–8:45 PM local time. Position yourself on the waterfront by 7:45 PM for the full arc.
Summer Events: What’s Happening in the Village
The Bemus Point Business Association runs a calendar of summer events that gives the village its distinct social character. These aren’t imported entertainment — they’re organized by the community, for the community and its visitors.
- Outdoor Movie Nights (June–August): Free outdoor film screenings at the Bemus Point waterfront. A lakeside outdoor movie on a warm July night is one of those specifically Bemus Point experiences that can’t be replicated.
- Bemus Point Summer Fest: Live entertainment, local vendors, food, and the full energy of the village in peak season. One of the highlights of the summer calendar.
- Live Music at the Casino (throughout summer): The Village Casino hosts live music regularly through the summer season. Check the Casino’s schedule for specific dates.
- Farmers Market & Vendor Days (ongoing): Local producers and artisan vendors set up along Main Street and the waterfront throughout the summer season.
→ Full Events Calendar — What’s On in Bemus Point This Summer
Summer Dining: All 14 Restaurants Open at Once
Summer is the only season when all fourteen of Bemus Point’s independent restaurants are operating simultaneously — the waterfront spots, the taverns, the cafés, the pizza, the brewery, the ice cream, the specialty treats.
- The Village Casino
- Bemus Point Inn Restaurant
- See-Zurh House
- Guppy’s Restaurant & Tavern
- Hogan’s Hut
- Green Door Tavern
- VFW Post 557
- Coppola’s Pizzaria
- The Happy Cow
- Sweet Aleda’s
- Splash
- Lake Life Café
- Ellicottville Brewing
- Golf Club & Tap House
→ Best Restaurants in Bemus Point — Complete Dining Guide
Planning a Summer Visit: What to Know
How Long Do You Need?
A long weekend (Friday evening through Sunday) covers the essentials of a summer Bemus Point visit comfortably. Three nights gives you enough time for a morning paddle, the ferry, the main waterfront restaurants, some shopping, and at least one properly lingered evening. A full week gives you everything — multiple dining experiences, fishing mornings, the full event calendar if timing aligns, and the kind of slow familiarity with the village that summer regulars come back for year after year.
Peak Weeks and Practical Considerations
The last two weeks of July and first week of August are the busiest period. Accommodations book out early; restaurant waits at the Casino and The Fish on weekend evenings are real. Book accommodations well in advance for these windows. Shoulder weeks — late June and early September — offer nearly the full summer experience with noticeably fewer crowds.
Getting Around the Village
Bemus Point is exceptionally walkable. Main Street, the waterfront, the ferry landing, the shopping district, and the majority of restaurants are all within a ten-minute walk of each other. A car is only needed for reaching Guppy’s (Route 430), VFW Post 557 (Dutch Hollow Road), or for day trips to the Chautauqua Institution (~20 minutes away).
- Book accommodations early — peak July weeks fill up months in advance
- Arrive at the Casino before 6:30 PM on summer weekend evenings
- Rent kayaks in the morning — afternoon wind picks up and the bay gets busy
- Ride the Stow Ferry at least twice — once for novelty, once because it’s that good
- Walk Main Street before dinner to see what’s open and calling to you
- Bring a light jacket for evenings on the water — lake air cools quickly after sunset
- Check the events calendar before you go — a Summer Fest weekend is worth planning around
- Don’t skip the ice cream at The Happy Cow — non-negotiable part of the experience
→ How to Spend a Weekend in Bemus Point — Full Itinerary Guide




