The Ranunculus! North Coastal San Diego Flower Fields
March 30, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment

One of the great things about living in San Diego this time of year is that everything is in bloom and full of vivid color. There is no better example of that than the gigantic hillside of Ranunculus at the corner of Palomar Airport Rd and Paseo Del Norte in Carlsbad, located on North Coastal San Diego--famous for its perfect year-round weather. I visited the fields this past Sunday and it was a spectacular day- 80 degrees, sunny and the air was filled with the fragrant aroma of these beautiful flowers and the nearby Pacific Ocean!
The fields are at 65% of their full bloom as of today and should be at 100% by next weekend. You can get more information, read about the history and get directions by visiting their site : www.theflowerfields.com
If you get the chance, try to go in the next week or so. You will be glad you did!
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RANCHO SANTA FE/Morgan Run Golf Course: Celebs raise money for Fresh Start
March 30, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment

Grant Show and Alphonso Ribiero
On March 14, more than 150 guests attended the Fresh Start Surgical Gifts soiree overlooking Morgan Run Golf Course in Rancho Santa Fe.
“Fresh Start Surgical Gifts provides free, world-class reconstructive surgery and related services to disadvantaged children and young people with physical deformities caused by birth defects, accidents, abuse or disease,” said Nancy Kelly, development director.
“Children come from across the United States and all over the world to receive the gift of a fresh start.”
Since its inception in 1991, $17 million has helped 4,800 children and young people undergo life-changing surgical transformations.
Celebrity co-hosts and emcees for the evening Alfonso Ribeiro and Grant Show were delighted to be there.
“This is my sixth year hosting this event and I love doing it because it’s all about the kids,” Ribeiro said.
Other celebrities and professional athletes who took part in the fundraiser were Marcus Allen, Hank Bauer, Bucky Brooks, Willie Buchanon, Darren Carrington, Vince Coleman, Danny Farmer, Marshall Faulk, Michael Haynes, Rob Heidger, Seth Joyner, David Justice, Patricia Kara, James Lofton, Ursula Mayes, Craig McEwen, Tina Mickelson, Phil Nevin, Jeffrey Nordling, Leslie O’Neil, Andre Reed, Sam Scarber, Mike Scifres, Junior Seau, Pete Shaw, Lauren Shiohama, and Craig Whelihan.
Guests perused abundant silent auction tables. However, the Morgan Run Club & Resort full membership was the buzz.
Jason Lawhead served as auctioneer.
During the evening, patient Juan Hurtado delivered inspirational words after reconstructive surgeries to his cleft lip and palate. He thanked Fresh Start for making his dreams come true.
Event sponsors included EDCO Waste & Recycling Services, Marcus Allen All Stars Helping Kids, Inc., Davlyn Investments, Dowling & Yahnke, Godes & Preis LLP, The Handlery Hotel & Resort and MLSM.
Members of the 2010 Golf Classic Committee were chair Vanessa Jackson, Brian Ferguson, Jason Finley, Mike Gainey, Jim Godes, Rob Heidger, Mike Kozlowski, Pete Lassalette, Annette Legaspi, Pete Lizarraga, Pete Middleton, Erik Moore, Cindy Reed, and John Rubey.
How Many Rancho Santa Fe Homes Will IncludeThese? ‘Gee-Whiz’ products that will rocket your kitchen into the future!
March 24, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Remember the Jetsons’ kitchen? The one with the robot maid who whipped up entire meals that were the size of vitamins? We’re not quite there — yet. But Betty Crocker wouldn’t recognize some of the innovations available in today’s futuristic kitchens, including talking refrigerators and brainy ovens. Check out these innovations and you might actually feel the itch to do some cooking tonight instead of warming up Chinese takeout or eating out in one of our tasty Rancho Santa restaurants.
The lickety-split oven
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Do you like to cook but hate waiting for that roast? Here’s a Jetsons-esque oven for you impatient types. The TurboChef oven cooks in insanely short times. Imagine cooking a 12-pound turkey in 42 minutes instead of four hours. Or steaming family-size quantities of asparagus in less than a minute. Or a 2-pound roasted chateaubriand in 11 minutes instead of an hour. Using patented technology, the oven circulates currents of heated air from the top and bottom of the oven cavity to brown, sear and caramelize food, up to 15 times faster than conventional cooking. Microwaves assist when needed. Such convenience doesn’t come cheap: Ovens run $7,900 to $10,000.
The liquid floor
Tired of the same old flooring options? Jockimo’s Living Surfaces Liquid Lava is a fun flooring and countertop material made of liquid sealed between panels. When pressure (like a hand or a foot) is applied, that liquid moves and smooshes around, creating swirls and shapes. A homeowner can also back-light them to make the nontoxic panels glow with psychedelic trippiness.
Through a glass darkly (or in pink, or in green, or …)
“Color is hot, on a huge trend,” says Susan Serra, a certified kitchen designer. Another place color is shining is through countertops — literally. ThinkGlass makes textured and colored countertops that can be lit by LED lights so they literally glow. The countertops also can be made to glow in hundreds of different colors, programmable with a remote control — including the option to change the colors or even have them fade out or strobe.
The do-it-all oven
Appliances that can do multiple things for people are really taking off. So are ones that can be controlled remotely. To wit: the Tmio Oven. The oven ($5,895 and up) functions like a regular oven — except that you can call it from your cell phone, PDA or computer, and it will switch from refrigerating food and begin cooking what’s inside.
Kid Korps 2010 Gala to be Hosted in a Private Rancho Santa Fe Residence
March 24, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment

To Purchase tickets or for more information Contact…
Kid Korps USA
C/O McFarlane Promotions
656 Fifth Ave. Suite B
San Diego, CA 92101
(619) 233-5008
laurel@mcfarlanepromotions.com
A Little St. Pat’s History
March 16, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
It is said that Patrick became Ireland’s patron saint by driving the snakes from the Emerald Isle (throwing down the witty challenge, “All snakes wishing to remain in Ireland, raise your right hand”). It’s a great story, but not literally true.
Since the Ice Age, the country most likely had no snakes; however, serpent symbols were prominent in the pagan rituals that dominated Ireland. Over the 3 decades that Patrick spread Christianity throughout the country, those ancient practices were “driven” away.
March 17th is believed to be the day St. Patrick died (in 460 A.D.) and is observed as a religious holiday throughout Ireland. Here in America, we mark it by adopting some of the symbols and practices of the Irish, hoping some of their “luck” will rub off on us.
* Finding a penny and picking it up
* Finding a four-leaf clover
* Sneezing 3 times before breakfast
* Spilling wine while proposing a toast
* Having a ladybug land on you
* Seeing a spider spinning in the morning
* Dropping a glove
* Picking up a pencil in the street
* An itch on the top of your head
Interestingly many people wonder what is the meaning of ‘Erin Go Bragh’. It is mostly translated to mean ‘”Ireland Forever’.
Origin: Speakers of the Irish language assume that the phrase is a corruption of the Irish Éire go Brách or Éireann go Brách. The term brách is equivalent to “eternity” or “end of time”, meaning the phrase may be translated literally as “Ireland until eternity” or “Ireland until the end (of time)”. The form Éireann go Bráth or Éire go Bráth is also used in Irish and means the same thing.
St. Patrick’s Day holds a special place in my heart. My Great Grandmother came to America from Ireland in the early 1900′s. I never did get a chance to meet her as she passed away a year before I was born.
Mary Mc Anteer was her name and she spoke Gaelic. My Grandmother ( Mary’s daughter ) told me great tales of the famine and eating potatoes and onion sandwiches for months when there was nothing else. How her mother and father struggled to make it to America and ended up raising 13 children here. I loved listening to those stories and always wanted more information. I heard she was one tough broad. I guess she had to be.
I vowed that if I ever went to Ellis Island, I would look for her name. When I finally did make it there, I was sadly unsuccessful in finding her paperwork. But, I was able to imagine what it must have been like by looking at all of those other transcripts, photos and items left behind so long ago.
I have often looked at Mary’s old photographs and can see the resemblance in my own Mother, sister and myself. I love that we are truly Irish but that she made the decision to leave that barren land to better her life and ours.
So, tomorrow I will raise a mug of coffee and Irish whiskey and make a toast to her, eat cabbage and corned beef and try to keep the memory alive. Erin Go Bragh!
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Tennis Options in Rancho Santa Fe, CA
March 11, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Many tennis enthusiasts, novice and pro, seek out to make Rancho Santa Fe their place of residence. And why not when you have near – perfect year round climate and multiple choices of either private or public tennis courts?
100′s of homes located within The Covenant of Rancho Santa Fe have their own private tennis courts. If not, there is the Rancho Santa Fe Tennis Club ( WWW.RSFTENNIS.COM ) that offers 12 championship courts and overlooks the golf club. Membership is an amenity for Covenant residents only.
The Rancho Valencia Resort was voted by Tennis Magazine as the #1 Resort in the US. They provide match arranging, daily clinics, private and group instruction and a pro shop. WWW.RANCHOVALENCIA.COM. Rancho Valencia is located on the South side of Rancho Santa Fe and open to anyone who wishes to join.
Many of the gated communities in Rancho Santa Fe also offer tennis courts to their residents as well including Fairbanks Ranch, RSF Lakes, The Crosby, Santaluz , Morgan Run and Del Mar Country Club to name a few.
One of our listings locate in the prestigious community of Spyglass Estates offers a fantastic court and would be ideal for you Jalena if your building does not go according to plan ….AND a very large Master Suite and an 8 car garage capacity! See link for details and photos.
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Jankovic making home here. Top Of The Crosby Estates
March 11, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
INDIAN WELLS — Life high on a hill atop Rancho Santa Fe soon is to begin for Jelena Jankovic. Would that her tennis have similar elevation. Jankovic’s game has been askew since she began the 2009 season as the ranking player on the WTA Tour, but no player around here was talking more animatedly yesterday than the Serbian woman. It’s not tennis that excites her as much as the prospect of occupying the home she is having built in Rancho Santa Fe. Jankovic said she visited the site before coming here for the BNP Paribas Open. “They were putting the roof on. It’s like a dream come true,” she said of a home that, by her measurements, is to have three levels with 20,000 square feet of living space and have a garage large enough for 10 vehicles. “I have five (cars) for now,” said Jelena, who evidently does a lot of driving. Jankovic became aware of the joys of living in the San Diego area when she was competing in tennis events at La Costa. “I picked a lot on a hill,” she said. Its cost, according to San Diego County records: $1.5 million. Jelena advised her architect the place must include a tennis court (it does). “And I wanted a big master bedroom and a huge bathroom,” she said. Done. She is hopeful of moving in by the end of the year. Jankovic’s season, meantime, has not begun positively, with a first-round loss (to Agnes Szavay ) at Sydney and a third-round defeat (to Alona Bondarenko ) at the Australian Open. “But I am working hard,” she said. “I feel every day I am getting better and better. I want to work on coming forward.” Jankovic is the No. 6 seed here. Nothing all that dramatic is apt to occur in the opening round of a tennis tournament with a 96-player draw that hands out 32 seeds and awards all 32 byes. The women’s phase of the Paribas did, however, show off a Justine Henin who soundly eliminated Magdalena Rybarikova of Slovakia 6-2, 6-2. “I need tennis; I need to play,” said Henin. “Emotionally, I feel much better when I am playing.”
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Located just outside of Fairbanks Ranch, New Restaurant is A Hit
March 8, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Rancho Santa Fe lifestyle just got that much sweeter. North County foodies can’t get enough of the new Dolce Pane E Vino wine bar and restaurant, which celebrated a soft opening in RSF’s Del Rayo Center in late 2009, and has since become a neighborhood favorite. Dolce serves handmade small plates of Italian favorites for lunch and dinner, including wood-fired pane rusticos and Panini sandwiches, paired with a tempting wine list designed by Sommelier Michael Melone. Chef Chris O’Donnell is a firm believer in farm-to-table traditions, and makes daily trips to local farms–specifically to the nationally famous Chino’s farm– to ensure the freshest ingredients every day. For those on the go, the attached Dolce Formaggeria wraps up signature small plates and bottles of wine for convenient quick stops.
Rancho Santa Fe Resident, Enberg excited to announce Padres games
February 23, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
It’s been enormously productive. Part of it is just being in the environment, around the lexicon of the game, the strategy of the game and just talking baseball. Because baseball is so intimate, I have had the opportunity to talk with a lot of people. I had dinner with manager Bud Black and then with general manager Jed Hoyer. And just being able to go up to a player or a coach and they’ll give you time has been helpful. I’ve tried to keep as much contact as possible and keep my ears open.
I have seen you outside watching workouts on the field, watching pitchers throw off the mound and watching hitters in the cage. It seems you’re really getting a kick out of this experience.
Last night my wife called and we’re talking and she said, “I can tell it in your voice, you are really happy.” For me, it’s really been the right call at the right time. The other day I was watching Dave Roberts [former player, now special assistant to baseball operations] school some of the young guys on stealing bases. He’s talking about taking a lead, how not to get caught by the left-hander’s move. These are all the things I love about baseball. It’s a perfect time to be here. You can talk to so many people here without the pressure of a game later in the day.
This won’t be your first time being a play-by-play broadcaster for a Major League baseball team. Tell me about your experience calling California Angels games (1969-1978 and again in 1985)
I resisted it initially, even though it’s my favorite sport and my favorite game. But at the time, I was doing the pre- and postgame show on the Angels telecasts, which allowed me to do some little essays and interviews. I had a half-hour show and it was only me. I was doing the Rams radio, I was the UCLA television broadcaster, I was doing boxing from the Olympic Auditorium and the sports on the newscast in the evenings. I had a wonderful, full plate. They told me that if I took baseball, I would have to give up these other things. I said how about if I do it one year? I tried to quit my first year. The Angels were terrible. Fortunately, wiser heads prevailed.
You started working with Don Drysdale in 1973, doing the Angels games. What was that experience like?
When Don Drysdale became my partner … life became brilliant. It didn’t matter if you were winning or losing. With Drysdale, the broadcasts were fun. Being with Don … he wouldn’t let you get down. I would take the losses too seriously and he would say, “C’mon professor” — he would always call me professor — “they don’t care, so you shouldn’t care. I’ll buy you a drink.” I’ve been fortunate to have so many great colleagues. With baseball, you’re with that man more than in any other sport. He was always happy. It was a shame he went too quickly.
You didn’t arrive at the decision to accept this job calling games for the Padres easily, did you?
There were a lot of brain cells burned trying to think this through. I have an ESPN deal where I do three of the [tennis] majors — the Australian Open, Wimbledon and the French — and also the NFL package on CBS. I had shaped my life perfectly. There had been a few flirtations about baseball in the past. But how could I greedily keep doing the things I had been doing and do baseball? I learned in 1985, when Gene Autry hired me back to do 40 games, that baseball is a day-to-day-to-day games. You can’t just do a game here and a game there and miss two weeks.
With that in mind, how did you reach an agreement for a schedule that would allow for 120 or so Padres games while still doing the Australian Open and Wimbledon?
After the initial discussions, their original thought was they would structure a schedule where I did the games within the division and home games. That was a wonderful concession on their part. We gave it a lot of thought and said if I’m going to do this, I’m going to do it. We came back and said, ‘What if we do all the games, except the US Open?” I felt like if I’m going to be the announcer, I want to be the announcer.
What are some of the things you’re looking to most this season?
Had the Yankees, Red Sox or any other club called and offered me the same opportunity, I would have said, “No, thanks.” To be one of the baseball announcers in your hometown is important and it played a major part of this decision. When you think about the impact a baseball announcer has in his hometown, how many hours he’s on the air, it’s like 600 hours maybe, where you are exposed to your community — you’re an ambassador to your community. I really relish the opportunity to play that role. I look forward to a perfectly executed double play. There’s a rhythm and artistry about a double play that’s a beautiful thing. It’s four seconds and two outs, but it’s so much more than that. My creative juices are flowing. I was kidding with Bud Black and said, “Hey, look what I did for John Wooden.” [Enberg called eight of the Bruins' NCAA championship seasons].
Housing Prices Buck Trend
January 28, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
A home in the Allied Gardens neighborhood of San Diego on Jan. 27, 2010 indicates it has a buyer despite the slowdown in the economy. The Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller index shows housing prices continue to climb across the nation.
San Diego County, where housing prices rose and fell ahead of most of the country, was one of only four areas nationally to see an upturn beginning late last year, according to a widely watched housing index released yesterday.
Standard & Poor’s Case-Shiller Home Price Index for November showed San Diego-area prices up nearly 0.4 percent from both October 2009 and November 2008. On a seasonally adjusted basis, it was up 1 percent from October and up 0.4 percent year over year.
The only other markets to be up year over year were Dallas , Denver and San Francisco .
However, the 20 metro areas in the index collectively were down over the same period — off 0.2 percent for the month and 5.3 percent year over year — an indication that any housing recovery is uneven around the country. At the extremes, prices in Dallas were up 1.4 percent and those in Las Vegas were down 24.5 percent from November 2008.
The index was set at 100 for all areas as of January 2000, based on a three-month, rolling average of single-family resale homes involving the same property over time.
San Diego’s index for November was 156.06, meaning that prices here were up roughly 56.1 percent from 10 years ago. The index rose as high as 250.34 in November 2005, before falling to a low of 144.43 in April. Since then the index has risen steadily and, when seasonally adjusted, is up 6.9 percent from the trough.
The Case-Shiller index, limited to certain transactions and averaged in three-month chunks, has risen a bit slower than the MDA DataQuick monthly median price report that include all sales. Its November median for single-family resale homes was $365,000, up 1.4 percent from October and 9 percent from November 2008.
David M. Blitzer, S&P index chairman, said in a statement that despite four metro areas being up, there were four others that set index lows since the housing boom peaked.
“On balance, while these data do show that home prices are far more stable than they were a year ago, there is no clear sign of a sustained, broad-based recovery,” Blitzer said.
David Goldberg, an analyst for UBS, predicted that prices could fall between 3 percent and 5 percent before unemployment levels out.
“We’re probably in the latter stages of seeing home price declines,” Goldberg said.
S&P reported indexes in all metro areas except Detroit were higher than where they stood in January 2000, not factoring in inflation. Detroit’s index stood at 72.59, meaning its prices are roughly 27 percent below their 2000 starting point. Washington, D.C., with an index of 179.2, had the highest index value among the 20 areas; it fell from a peak 251.07 to 165.93 before rising again.
As further signs of a seesawing housing market, the Federal Housing Finance Agency said yesterday that its price index, based on mortgages, was up 0.7 percent from October to November, after having revised the October figure down. First American CoreLogic, a data firm, reported a decline of 0.2 percent in its November report issued last week.
Analysts said the apparent slowdown in housing recovery may be connected to a burst of activity last fall, when buyers rushed to close escrow to take advantage of an $8,000 federal tax credit for first-time home buyers. The credit was extended and expanded in November, reducing the urgency to buy until the next deadline, April 30.
Norm Miller, a housing expert at the University of San Diego and vice president for analytics at the CoStar Group , a commercial real estate company, said the future is uncertain because of an expected rise in foreclosures, which could depress prices, and interest rates, which could hurt affordability.
But San Diego may not feel much of a backslide because of the relative shortage of homes for sale.
“We’re one of the least-affordable markets in the country on a long-term basis,” Miller said. “When things become more affordable (as they have since 2005), there’s more a sense of urgency than in Cincinnati . OK, prices are down (there) a little bit, but here they’re three times down as much as in the Midwest. So, gosh, now’s a good time to buy.”
Miller said San Diego is likely to continue seeing a sluggish upper-end market as owners refrain from listing their homes for sale because they hope prices will return to their previous highs and buyers hope for additional bargains.
But for buyers, Miller said now may be an opportune time to get a property, even if prices might dip a bit over the next few months, because any rise in interest rates would wipe out any marginal drop in prices.
“If you can get interest rates at 10 percent less than a year from now, that means more than missing the bottom of the housing cycle,” he said.




















Rancho Santa Fe lifestyle just got that much sweeter. North County foodies can’t get enough of the new 







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