Sat. May 2 - Sun. May 3, 2026

The Springs Weekend

Saratoga Springs, NY

Hotel: Roll in to the Bluebird Spa City, a retro-fitted (and retro, period) motor lodge, with an airy, elevated feel that stays on the good side of too cool for school.

Dinner: You’ve got 7pm reservations at Hattie’s, a Southern and soul food legend that’s been operating out of its downtown ‘shack’ location since the 1930s.

Experience: We’re not going to invite you to Saratoga without some actual springs in the plan: reenergize with mineral waters bathing at the historic Roosevelt Baths & Spa. Set for Sunday morning.

All bookable in one click.


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—> 3 hrs. 15 minutes-ish from New York or Boston


Why here?

We planned a trip to Saratoga Springs (an Overnightist favorite) back in November, but think the time is right for a little revisitation in a warmer season.

So we’re headed back for a springtime whisking through through one of the country’s original resort towns, which is currently a-bloom, and of course, a-bubble.

Before the association with horse racing (which we at The Overnightist are not huge on), this upstate pocket of New York was renowned for its mineral waters.

The air here is charged with a surprisingly pleasant carbonation; trace gasses from the surrounding springs waft through town. Sometimes scent can shape your conception of a place more viscerally than anything else, and that’s the story here.

Set between the Adirondacks and Albany, the region has plenty of sophistication and burgeoning spring beauty, but the fizzy history is (for us at least) one of the most interesting parts.

The Mohawk people were appreciating the springs long before the Europeans began bottling them, and by the late 19th century Saratoga was a sort of proto-wellness resort. Franklin Roosevelt sought out the purportedly healing properties of the waters as he recovered from polio, and the town was once home to the largest hotel in the world.

The springs still fizz. 21 of them are public and visitable, and Saratoga’s legacy as a place of restoration and wellness (before all that was its own glossy industry) is alive in the water and on the new spring air.

This week in Saratoga Springs, discover…

The stay.

Bluebird Spa City

A hip-but-not-insufferably-hip reimagined motor lodge, right in the middle of downtown Saratoga.

It’s on Broadway, walkable to just about everything. Rooms are smaller, but comfortable and carefully designed.  

Also very dog friendly; bring up to two with you, and you’ll get a whole in-room setup including paw towels and a local treat. 

The Ovenrnightist covers the $45 pet fee, not to worry.

The day.

The Roosevelt Baths

Already booked for you on Sunday morning: a 40-minute mineral bath session in the naturally-effervescent waters of the Roosevelt Baths, a historic Saratoga resort.

The find.

Lyrical Ballad Books


A whole warren of wonderful finds. A twisting layout of eight rooms that house more than 100,000 books, unique prints and maps.  Local history is a specialty.

Very walkable from your hotel.

The food.

Hattie’s

Do not be off-put by the ‘shack’ sign above the door (seen here in an earlier mint-green vintage). This is somewhere special.

Hattie Moseley Austin Gray founded Hattie’s in 1938, and today— not just because of the food — it’s an absolute pillar. It’s now owned by a philanthropic group, and profits are donated to local foundations like Business for Good.

But we’ll talk food. Deep Southern soul smuggled into upstate New York. In addition to the signature fried chicken, there’s unmissable catfish, jambalya and curry salmon. All in a downtown atmosphere that’s simple and unmistakably authentic.

Adelphi Wine & Beer Garden

Duck in for cocktails, small plates and sushi in the rear garden of the glorious old Adelphi Hotel in downtown Saratoga. String-lit and umbrella’d.

The tucked away.

9 Maple Ave.

Get a good sense of a Saratoga evening at 9 Maple Ave,  a 40-seat jazz bar in the middle of downtown.

Telling sign: their drink list is a 23-page pdf. ”The largest selection of single malt scotches between Manhattan and Montreal,” they say. And there are 250 martinis alone.

Jazz every weekend, with just a $2 cover.

The evening mood.

Book it all in a click.

Questions, any and all:
hello@theovernightist.com

See here for full list of photo credits for this story.