Wine Bar Near Me
Pink Martini California Kitchen & Cocktails Rocklin California
Pink Martini California Kitchen & Cocktails
6700 Lonetree Blvd Suite 100, Rocklin, CA 95765
+1 916-773-7465
https://www.pinkmartinirestaurant.com/
Pink Martini California Kitchen & Cocktails Hours
Monday”: “Closed”
Tuesday: “3-10 PM”
Wednesday: “3-10 PM”
Thursday: “3-10 PM”
Friday: “3 PM-1 AM”
Saturday: “3 PM-1 AM”
Sunday: “Closed”
More about Pink Martini California Kitchen & Cocktails Rocklin California
Click here to learn moreError: API issue for tag [wine_locations]
People Love Pink Martini California Kitchen & Cocktails
4.2
Warning: Undefined variable $business_name in /home/wineandch1/public_html/wp-content/plugins/cpop_location_helper-master/public/class-cpop_location_helper-public.php on line 387
Warning: Undefined variable $business_name in /home/wineandch1/public_html/wp-content/plugins/cpop_location_helper-master/public/class-cpop_location_helper-public.php on line 493
Warning: Undefined variable $business_name in /home/wineandch1/public_html/wp-content/plugins/cpop_location_helper-master/public/class-cpop_location_helper-public.php on line 606
About My City
Rocklin is a city in Placer County, California, United States, about 22 miles (35 km) from Sacramento, and about 6.1 miles (9.8 km) northeast of Roseville in the Sacramento metropolitan area. Besides Roseville, it shares borders with Granite Bay, Loomis and Lincoln. As of the 2020 census, Rocklin's population was 71,601. == History == Before the California Gold Rush, the Nisenan Maidu occupied both permanent villages and temporary summer shelters along the rivers and streams that miners sifted, sluiced, dredged and dammed to remove the gold. Explorer Jedediah Smith and a large party of American fur trappers crossed the Sacramento Valley in April 1827. The group saw many Maidu villages along the river banks. Deprived of traditional foodstuffs, homesites and hunting grounds by the emigrants, the Nisenan were among the earliest California Indian tribes to disappear. During the 1850s, miners sluiced streams and rivers, including Secret Ravine, which runs through Rocklin. The piles of dredger tailings are still obvious today, between Roseville and Loomis southeast of Interstate 80. Secret Ravine, at the area now at the intersection of Ruhkala Road and Pacific Street, was later mined for granite, some of which was used as the base course of the California Capitol Building; the earliest recorded use of the rock was for Fort Mason at San Francisco in 1855.
Neighborhoods in Rocklin, California
Things to do in Rocklin, California
Directions