Three Sons Cottage is located on the lake at Lake Louisa (Lake Anna area). While staying with us at Three Sons Cottage you will find plenty of activities nearby. Please make a selection below to find more things to do.
Three Sons Cottage offers plenty of options for boating and fishing. You can fish at Lake Louisa, feet from the cottage. For boating, you can only use small non-gas powered boats in Lake Louisa. For larger boats you must take advantage of Lake Anna, which is a quick drive.
Please find some good fishing spots and general boating spots below.
Enjoy!
Anna Point Marina
13717 Anna Point Lane
Mineral VA 23117
Boat Ramp: Yes
Short Term Docking Options: No
http://www.annapoint.com/launching.html
540-895-5900
info@annapoint.com
Directions from “Three Sons” to Anna Point Marina (Lake Anna)
Anna Point Marina
13721 Anna Point Lane
Mineral, VA 23117
540-895-5900
info@annapoint.com
Christopher Run Campground
7149 Zachary Taylor Hwy
Mineral, VA 23117
540-894-4744
kchilds569@aol.com
Dukes Creek Marina
3831 Breaknock Rd
Bumpass, VA 23024
540-895-5065
dukescreekmarina@aol.com
High Point Marina
4634 Courthouse Rd
Mineral, VA 23117
540-895-5249
hipoint2@earthlink.net
Duke Creek Marina
11932 Cherry Rd.
Bumpass, VA 23024
540-895-5065
dukescreekmarina@aol.com
Sturgeon Creek Marina
5107 Courthouse Rd.
Spotsylvania, VA 22553
540-895-5095
Lake Anna Jet Ski Rental
2298 Tuggle Road
Dowdy's Corner, VA 23901
540-205-9645
max@lakeannajetski.com
Wake Makers
P.O. Box 636
Ashland,VA 23005
540-538-7547
info@wakemakersonline.com
High Point Marina
4634 Courthouse Rd
Mineral, VA 23117
High Point Marina is a full-service, one-stop-shop for all your fishing and boating needs while you are visiting beautiful Lake Anna, Va. Our staff is friendly and courteous, and always willing to share their knowledge of the Lake (they will even will let you in on a few hot spots most of the locals don't know about). High Point is a hub of activity for all fishermen. Bass, striper, crappie, catfish, and walleye are the lake's most popular fish. There are several other species too, such as: perch, bluegills, and chain pickerel. Blue back herring, American shad, and Threadfin shad make up the lake's bait fish.
Boat Ramp: Yes
Short Term Docking Options: Yes, but this is based on availability and they would not take a reservation when I enquired. It was only $45 / week.
http://www.highpointmarina.com/
(540) 895-5249
highpoint@highpointmarina.com
Directions from “Three Sons” to High Point Marina (Lake Anna)
LAKE ANNA – The Second Largest Lake
Lake Anna is the second largest lake located entirely in Virginia. With over 200 miles of shoreline and 13,000 total acres, boaters have much to explore.
Pontoon boats and small runabouts, in the 17ft to 22ft range are the most common crafts. Sailing is best below the Route 208 bridge, providing about 8 miles of open water with several long creeks.
Jet skiing is popular in the summer, especially on the weekends. Fishing is popular year-round, but reaches a peak in April and May. There are no major boating restrictions on Lake Anna.
Access to Lake Anna is through several marinas open to the public and the Lake Anna State Park. Check our business directory for listings. Lake Anna is open year round.
The marinas provide the majority of essentials, including gas, food and drinks, fishing licenses and tackle. Visitors pay a day use ramp and parking fee. Some marinas are gated, so be sure to check for hours of operation.
Typically these hours are 1 hour before sunrise to 1 hour after dark. Boat engine repairs are available for most brand outboards and I/O’s. There are no public marinas on Lake Anna’s private or “warm side.”
Boaters may stay on the lake overnight. Most will anchor out-of-the-way in a quiet, shallow cove for the night. Fishing is allowed at night, and is common in the summer months, mainly for those in search of catfish. Boat and jet ski
Three Sons Cottage at Lake Louisa is located near several churches. Please find a list below:
St James Episcopal Church
www.stjameslouisa.org
102 Ellisville Dr, Louisa - (540) 967-1665
Louisa United Methodist Church
100 E Main St, Louisa - (540) 967-2657
Louisa Presbyterian Church
www.louisapres.com
212 Church Ave, Louisa - (540) 967-3207
Memorial Baptist Church-Louisa
98 Courthouse Sq., Louisa, VA 540-967-0636
Louisa Baptist Church
305 E Main St., Louisa, VA 540-967-1364
First Baptist Church
102 Meadow Ave., Louisa, VA 540-967-0703
Louisa Christian Church
104 Elm Ave., Louisa, VA 540-967-0543
New Life Community Church
509 E Main St., Louisa, VA 540-967-5655
Living Waters Fellowship
115 Jefferson Hwy, Louisa, VA 540-967-5083
Standing On the Promises
1201 Waldrop Church Rd, Louisa, VA 540-967-3303
Macedonia United Methodist Church
2974 Courthouse Rd., Louisa, VA 540-967-2555
Waldrops Baptist Church
868 Waldrop Church Rd., Louisa, VA 540-967-9727
Blue Ridge Shores Baptist Church
1230 Firehouse Dr, Louisa, VA 540-967-0796
Gold Mine Baptist Church
2039 Goldmine Rd., Louisa, VA 540-967-0099
Mount Zion Baptist Church
Louisa, VA 804-556-3124
St Jude's Roman Catholic Church
1937 Davis Hwy, Mineral, VA 540-894-4266
Mineral United Methodist Church
301 W Third St., Mineral, VA 540-894-0246
Shady Grove Baptist Church
20655 Monrovia Rd., Orange, VA 540-854-4647
Dining at Lake Anna can offer an enjoyable experience. While staying at one of Weekend Oasis vacation rental Lake Anna properties you will find yourself enjoying our remarkable vacation rental patios, lake front, but you also may want to dine out for an evening or two. Enjoy some of the links below for ideas. If you visit any of them, feel free to e-mail info@weekendoasis.net your review and we'll post it!
Lakeview Restaurant
6320 Belmont Rd
Mineral, VA 23117
540.854.8333
LakeviewRestaurant@msn.com
Lakeview Restaurant and the No Wake Zone. The place for great food and friends since 2002, located at Hunter's Landing on Lake Anna.

The Anna Cabana
4227 BOGGS DRIVE
BUMPASS, VA 23024
(540) 895-4022
theannacabana@gmail.com
Lake Anna's finest lakeside venue. Redefining waterfront dining by offering the freshest quality food, a soothing, fun atmosphere and great scenery. We combine a casual family environment with first rate fare at affordable prices. So come sit in the shade on our sprawling deck overlooking the lake, or join us inside in our dining room. Either setting offers breathtaking views of the lake and spectacular sunsets! With 20 boat slips and plenty of room for jet-skis, you can pull right up to the Cabana and let us take it from there.
While lodging with us at Three Sons Cottage enjoy one of the many vineyards in the southern part of Virginia near Lake Anna. Please select a vineyard below to learn more.

Barboursville Vineyards
17655 Winery Road, Barboursville, VA 22923
(540) 832-3824
http://barboursvillewine.net
Barboursville Winery and Vineyards are located in the hills near the Blue Ridge Mountains. Palladio Restaurant and 1804 Inn are located on the grounds. Award-winning Vintners since 1976.
Defying the unanimous advice of government officials, land owners, and bankers to plant tobacco at Barboursville, Gianni Zonin -- 6th generation heir to a family wine enterprise active since 1821 in the Veneto -- acquired this plantation in 1976 with the seemingly ridiculous expectation of creating a vineyard. Jefferson had attempted this, persistently into the 19th Century at Monticello, always failing to achieve a single harvest.
In 2006, on the occasion of celebrating the winery’s 30th anniversary as “setting the standard” for a region now populated by more than 100 vineyards, Gianni and Silvana Zonin opened a new wine museum at Barboursville, looking back upon centuries of Italian viticulture, and a barrel aging room for Octagon, where the history of their creation of the estate that gave birth to a new wine region is laid out upon the walls in illustrated chapters, culminating in the validation of Octagon, itself, as the crowning achievement of Virginia viticulture.
The Barbour Era
Requiring some 8 years to construct (beginning in 1814, a year of war with Britain) and assessed at the death of its creator, James Barbour, as the most valuable residence in a county including James Madison’s Montpelier and Philip Barbour’s Frascati, this second-generation estate house at Barboursville plantation was designed by Thomas Jefferson, one of only 3 residences he designed for his friends. The Barbour family continued to occupy this residence until it was destroyed by accidental fire at Christmas, 1884, and returned to the elegant Georgian villa next door for several generations, now The 1804 Inn.
Jefferson’s design embodied a number of his renowned signatures -- the integration of the structure into an elevated knoll, the dome (not erected), and an octagonal room at the focal point of the wings of the house. Here, the octagon forms a core for the three stories of the house; from the main level it rises as one room, 2 stories high. The grandeur of this room, projecting from the south facade, lends such power and elegance to this monumental house that it was irresistible to adopt its design in the nomenclature of Barboursville Vineyards’ ultimate red wine.
Approximately 8 miles south of James Madison’s Montpelier and 20 miles north of Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello in the same Southwest Mountain chain, parallelling the Blue Ridge, Barboursville was settled as a substantial plantation by Thomas Barbour, in the mid-1700s, occupying somewhat more than 5 times the estate’s present size of 900-plus acres.
The career of Barbour’s fourth son, James, cemented the rapport between these three leading families of the Virginia Piedmont -- as gentry and political allies in the nascent Republican Party, which Jefferson and Madison would lead into the White House, and James Barbour into the Virginia Governor’s Mansion, the U.S. Senate, and important Cabinet and diplomatic positions thereafter.
It was as President of the Albemarle Agricultural Society, as each man was in his time, that their character as farmers achieved even greater influence. But it was in their character as friends and neighbors, that the lives of these men are so palpable at Barboursville Vineyards, the remaining one of these 3 estates to sustain their leadership in agriculture, in a viticultural dimension which Jefferson foresaw and pursued with passion.
Lake Anna Winery
Lake Anna Winery
5621 Courthouse Road
Spotsylvania, VA 22551
The story of Lake Anna Winery began on a business trip to France in 1981. While traveling through the French countryside, Bill Heidig noticed that the climate and soil conditions of certain grape-growing regions were similar to those on his Spotsylvania farm, and an idea began to take root. Upon his return, he presented the notion of planting grapes to his wife, Ann. After a great deal of thought, the two decided to plant a vineyard and launch a family business. They hired a consultant and started taking seminars on grape growing and winemaking.
The Planting
In 1983, two years after Bill’s initial interest, the Heidigs planted more than 2,000 Seyval Blanc and 250 Cabernet Sauvignon vines. Three weeks later, on an extremely hot weekend, they planted 1,000 Chardonnay vines.
Bill and Ann soon learned first-hand how much care grape vines require. Each vine has to be trained to grow straight up a stake. As only a single shoot can be allowed to grow, laterals must be pruned constantly, and the vine’s initial fruit clusters have to be removed as they form. When the vines finally reached the first wire of the trellis, the Heidigs celebrated trading the painstaking work low to the ground for painstaking work they could do standing up.
Expansion
The first commercial sale came after the 1984 harvest when the Heidigs sold one-half ton of Seyval Blanc grapes to a Virginia winery. With the vines’ cooperation the yields rose steadily while Bill and Ann continued to expand the vineyard. In 1984 and 1985, they planted additional Chardonnay and Cabernet Sauvignon, and in 1988, after the memories of planting and nurturing had faded, they planted 1,000 Merlot vines. By 1988, over 28 tons of grapes from over 10 acres were being picked for delivery to several Virginia wineries—that were turning their grapes into award-winning wines. The Heidigs decided the time was ripe to make Lake Anna Winery a reality.
The Winery
The winery is housed in an old barn located on the Heidig farm. Built for dairy cows in the 1940s, adapting this structure for a winery proved to be a real challenge. The original floor was not strong enough to support the weight of the tanks, the ceiling was too low to accommodate the height of the tanks, and the roof leaked. The renovation began in earnest when the old cement floor was broken up and removed and replaced with reinforced concrete. The roof traded the old tin for new shingles, and four holes were cut into the loft floor to accommodate the taller fermenting tanks.
Remodeling the interior was the next task. To cut costs, the Heidigs did as much of the work as they could, stretching the forbearance of family and friends to the limit. Two neighbors, Elmo Proffitt and Charley Gentry, were of tremendous help. They spent many weekends constructing the large front door, framing all the doors and windows, and serving as advisors, telling Bill and Ann that certain jobs were not as easy as they thought, and then showing them the right way to do it. In the spring of 1990 the winery was completed.
The Next Phase
Upon the dawning of a new millenium, Bill, who ran the vineyard and had been sharing the winemaking duties with Ann, decided it was time to turn back the chronological progression of the winery. He felt they could either scale back to just growing grapes and selling them primarily to other wineries as in the 80s, or see if any of the four children had any interest in taking over the business. Two sons, Jeff and Eric were thrilled with the idea, and Bill recognized that for them to come on board, a commitment to expand the facility would need to be made. So in 2000, a major undertaking started with the concurrent building of a new, open, multi-use tasting room, a climate-controlled case-goods warehouse and a new tank room/crush pad that would more than double the present production area capacity. After a year of construction, work was finished, and the new tasting room opened in the spring of 2001.
About the same time, the well-respected winemaking consultant, Brad McCarthy, had been hired to oversee cellar operations and in the spring of 2001 suggested that the hiring of a winemaker would give Ann and Bill time to pursue their own interests and allow them to step back a bit from the day-to-day operations. In May of 2001, Graham Bell was brought on board and in late 2002, the winery business was sold to the two brothers. Bill continues to manage the vineyard, with Jeff and Eric owning and operating the winery business.
The goal for future expansion is to further expand production to 8-10,000 cases per year in order to be able to have Jeff involved full-time. In 2002, production grew to 4,000 cases, and 2003 production reached 5,500 cases.
The Heidig family’s time and effort over the years have made lake Anna Winery a reality, ready to produce the finest wines that only excellent grapes, the right growing conditions, and a caring vintner can offer.