Blog
Some cool San Diego Homes images:
Nate Colbert – San Diego – 1972 Home

Image by BaseballBacks
Nate Colbert – San Diego – 1972 Home
Click on ‘View All Sizes’ or Right-Click on the picture and select ‘Original’ to download it in full resolution…
Use the BACK button to return to Baseball Backs or click here .
Dave Winfield – San Diego – 1979 Home

Image by BaseballBacks
Dave Winfield – San Diego – 1979 Home
Click on ‘View All Sizes’ or Right-Click on the picture and select ‘Original’ to download it in full resolution…
Use the BACK button to return to Baseball Backs or click here .
Category : Blog
Why Invest In Clairemont Homes?
With the economy in shambles and the unemployment rate at record highs, it’s hard to think that now is the time to buy a home. However, according to many real estate investors, there is no better time than now. This is the perfect reasons why Clairemont homes for sale are a great buy. Imagine setting up a wonderful retirement for an investment of pennies on the dollar. Purchasing and then renting various Clairemont homes is the perfect way to add residual income to your bank account now and later in life.
Clairemont Homes: An investment worth keeping
Housing prices are currently at an all-time low and taking advantage of this situation will only benefit you in the long run. Using the same logic as the stock market, it’s safe to say that investing in real estate now is the best time possible in terms of making a solid profit over the course of a long term investment. Experts like Warren Buffet say buying stocks in an economic down turn is the perfect way to invest your cash because you get more bang for your buck. This is exactly the same when it comes to purchasing Claremont homes. Purchasing now gives you the opportunity to get more bang for your buck and to make a lot of income for the course of this long term investment.
Buying Clairemont homes for more than an investment
Even if you are not the type that wants to invest in real estate, or you’re unsure how your property would hold up in this unstable market, that’s okay. Clairemont homes are a great investment for those who are looking to settle down from the city life in San Diego for something a little more suburban without committing to a completely rural area. Near Mission Bay Park, it’s the perfect place to enjoy the surf and sun while still being close to the city.
Whether you’re an investor or looking for a new or first home, Clairemont homes are definitely worth looking at. With property being as low as it has been in decades, it’s safe to say that now is the time to buy, and buying will be an investment for the future whether you’re purchasing for an investment or not.
Start your Clairemont homes search now by clicking here!
Category : Blog &Clairemont Housing News

San Diego Real Estate Home Search — Free, Quick, Easy — All San Diego Homes & Condos For Sale! San Diego Real Estate Agent Sam Khorramian explains how FreeSDHomeSearch.com is helping San Diego home hunters find the perfect place! Free San Diego home search was designed to give everyone looking for a home or condo for sale in San Diego instant access to the San Diego MLS. This revolutionary home search tool gives you the ability to search all San Diego homes for sale, La Jolla beach front homes, Rancho Santa Fe homes and estates, Del Mar, Encinitas, Little Italy, Ramona, San Marcos homes for sale, Oceanside, Carlsbad, Poway, Point Loma, UTC, Pacific Beach and everything in between! Whether you are looking for a San Diego beach house or a Downtown condo, free SD home search is the way to start! The easy to use home search tool lets you search by square footage, bedrooms, baths, locations and more. Searching for the perfect San Diego home for sale has never been easier! To start searching the San Diego MLS without being a San Diego Realtor all you have to do is visit: www.FreeSDHomeSearch.com This dynamic Sand Diego focused home searching site will give access to – San Diego Homes For Sale – San Diego Condos For Sale – Cheap San Diego Foreclosures – San Diego Short Sales – Investment properties – Every single home for sale in the San Diego MLS Now you can have the same access as the top San Diego Real Estate Agents like Sam Khorramian and Oliver Graf. Doesn’t matter if you …
sandiego.houserebate.com San Diego Foreclosure listings are online. Learn how to get access to the San Diego foreclosure list for free. Find San Diego Bank Owned property and REO deals. San Diego Foreclosure Home Buying Strategies #1 youtube.com Foreclosures in San Diego Home Buying Strategies #2 youtube.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5
Category : Blog
Search new Clairemont apartment rentals and Clairemont house rentals daily. We have the largest selection in California. Landlords and owners list free of charge. All types of credit welcome as well as section 8 welcome. If you have pets we will find you a place. Please visit www.Rentwave.com to set up an appointment and view other property availabilities.
Category : Blog
Some cool Clairemont Mesa Homes images:
But Soft

Image by mliu92
What light through yon window breaks?
Not Home 0297

Image by mliu92
Thankfully these neighbors were not home to hear figgy yelling at them.
Prepare Him Room 0302

Image by mliu92
She kept sipping from the cup absently tonight.
Category : Blog
Question by ElGuapoDeSantaBarbara: Can you afford to buy property in San Diego if you make 50K yr.?
I have 20-40K for a home down payment. Can I buy a decent piece of property in San Diego County?
Best answer:
Answer by BIGG AL
You should be able to find something decent, just not in La Jolla.
Good luck!
Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!
Category : Blog
A few nice Clairemont Houses images I found:
House on the corner.

Image by shindoverse
This reminds me both of my uncle’s house in Mira Mesa and my late great grandfather’s house in Clairemont Mesa.
Every House 10929.jpg

Image by mliu92
Literally, every house. Each more impressive, too.
Clairemont: Morris L. Clothier Mansion

Image by road_less_trvled
Morris L. Clothier’s Clairemont, with 161 acres, a stunning white mansion with classical columns and other Greek details, was perhaps the most imposing of all the Clothier homes.
Category : Blog
This home is a must see! Gorgeous throughout! Beautifully designed and remodeled! Don’t miss this exciting opportunity to own a like-new home in Clairemont!
Horizon Christian Fellowship, North Clairemont teamed up with a cast of thousands to build a home for a dear family in Ensenada, Mexico.
Video Rating: 0 / 5
Category : Blog
Home invasion suspect caught after chase in Arizona
SAN DIEGO — A man suspected in the violent home invasion robbery of former San Diego City Councilman Harry Mathis has been arrested after a chase in Arizona. Parolee Harvey Henry Duson, 45, was caught after crashing a rental car during a police …
Read more on fox5sandiego.com
Home Invasion, Standoff Suspect Arrested After Crash
The arrest of one San Diego man started with a brutal home invasion, turned into a 2-hour standoff with police, and finally ended with a crash. Harvey Henry Duson, 45, is wanted by San Diego police officers in connection with the Jan.
Read more on NBC San Diego
Driving traffic on the Web
"It's like real estate in San Diego. There's only so much buildable land." The Roanoke-Blacksburg region got a foothold early, however, thanks to budding interest in technology and early advances in infrastructure to connect people to the Web.
Read more on Roanoke Times
Category : Blog
Some cool San Diego Property images:
2008 San Diego Wildfire Roundtable

Image by Tricia Wang 王圣捷
wildfire-roundtable2008.pbwiki.com
Come this Wednesday night to UCSD for a roundtable of local urban planners, activists and lawyers who will give presentations on the unequal treatment of immigrants during the fire and misleading explanations for the causes of the fire.
Please check out the wiki above for speaker’s bio and resources on the fire.
Presenters:
Andrea Guerrero – ACLU (American Civil Liberties Union)
Pedro Rios – American Friends Service Committee
Rick Brady – City of Santee (UCSD Urban Studies Planning alumni)
Enrique Morones – Border Angels
The San Diego Wildfires Crisis: Hidden Consequences of Urban Sprawl and Unequal Media Representation
A Roundtable follow up to the 2008 Culture Conference: Crisis, Emergency, Global Processes
Sponsored by the UCSD Sociology Department
It was only last fall that San Diego County experienced its own crisis, the county-wide fires. The wildfires were truly emphasized for their out-of-control "wildness," while the real reasons of urban sprawl were downplayed or flat-out ignored. This crisis, like many others crisis around the world, such as famines, was framed as a case of "natural
disaster," instead of a case of mismanaged urban planning, ill-led concepts of fire "prevention." Therefore the causes fell on to nature, instead of socio-political reasons.
For many around the world who watched the news coverage of our local crisis, it appeared that only middle- to upper-class, Caucasian home-owners were affected by this disaster. Newscasters biasedly compared the state-of emergency disaster to New Orleans’s Hurricane Katrina in a fashion that portrayed San Diegans as wealthy, coordinated, charitable and peaceful in contrast to New Orleaneans who were portrayed as poor, disorganized, and violent. Essentially, San Diego "citizens" were framed as united, while New Orleans "refugees" were portrayed as lacking in unity. Just like Hurricane Katrina, the media coverage and the treatment of the San Diego fires were embedded in long-standing issues of class, race and ethnicity.
This roundtable aims to bring out many the socio-political reasons that contributed to the fire and the politics of who’s stories were represented in the media and which ones remained untold. For example, many of the fires’ human victims were migrant workers living in canyons who, largely because of their extreme marginalization, were not able to be reached and informed about the fires. In stark contrast to the mainstream coverage of property owners (like the TV reporter standing outside his own house for hours of coverage). The human toll of the fires was largely ignored, or even blamed on these victims for consuming UCSD Regional Burn Center resources for instance.
We hope you will join us for this special roundtable that will follow up on the global and theoretical themes of UCSD’s Sociology Dept’s 2008 Culture Conference.
2008 San Diego Wildfire Roundtable

Image by Tricia Wang 王圣捷
wildfire-roundtable2008.pbwiki.com
Come this Wednesday night to UCSD for a roundtable of local urban planners, activists and lawyers who will give presentations on the unequal treatment of immigrants during the fire and misleading explanations for the causes of the fire.
Please check out the wiki above for speaker’s bio and resources on the fire.
Presenters:
Andrea Guerrero – ACLU (American Civil Liberties Union)
Pedro Rios – American Friends Service Committee
Rick Brady – City of Santee (UCSD Urban Studies Planning alumni)
Enrique Morones – Border Angels
The San Diego Wildfires Crisis: Hidden Consequences of Urban Sprawl and Unequal Media Representation
A Roundtable follow up to the 2008 Culture Conference: Crisis, Emergency, Global Processes
Sponsored by the UCSD Sociology Department
It was only last fall that San Diego County experienced its own crisis, the county-wide fires. The wildfires were truly emphasized for their out-of-control "wildness," while the real reasons of urban sprawl were downplayed or flat-out ignored. This crisis, like many others crisis around the world, such as famines, was framed as a case of "natural
disaster," instead of a case of mismanaged urban planning, ill-led concepts of fire "prevention." Therefore the causes fell on to nature, instead of socio-political reasons.
For many around the world who watched the news coverage of our local crisis, it appeared that only middle- to upper-class, Caucasian home-owners were affected by this disaster. Newscasters biasedly compared the state-of emergency disaster to New Orleans’s Hurricane Katrina in a fashion that portrayed San Diegans as wealthy, coordinated, charitable and peaceful in contrast to New Orleaneans who were portrayed as poor, disorganized, and violent. Essentially, San Diego "citizens" were framed as united, while New Orleans "refugees" were portrayed as lacking in unity. Just like Hurricane Katrina, the media coverage and the treatment of the San Diego fires were embedded in long-standing issues of class, race and ethnicity.
This roundtable aims to bring out many the socio-political reasons that contributed to the fire and the politics of who’s stories were represented in the media and which ones remained untold. For example, many of the fires’ human victims were migrant workers living in canyons who, largely because of their extreme marginalization, were not able to be reached and informed about the fires. In stark contrast to the mainstream coverage of property owners (like the TV reporter standing outside his own house for hours of coverage). The human toll of the fires was largely ignored, or even blamed on these victims for consuming UCSD Regional Burn Center resources for instance.
We hope you will join us for this special roundtable that will follow up on the global and theoretical themes of UCSD’s Sociology Dept’s 2008 Culture Conference.
Category : Blog
Justin Brennan takes a quick look at the San Diego real estate market in the 4th quarter 2011. What is the market doing, San Diego media home prices, days on market, inventory levels and where the market may be headed. Go to www.TheLajollaLife.com to check out more videos and information on Justin Brennan. San Diego Real Estate market San Diego real estate 2011 San Diego real estate 4th quarter 2011 Justin Brennan
Video Rating: 5 / 5
Category : Blog
Check out these San Diego Property images:
San Diego

Image by Carsten Schertzer
My trip to San Diego was "interesting" to say the least. My adventure started like any other awesome adventure, In a Bay view hotel room over looking the San Diego Yatch club and harbor. The fun started when we met a really Sketchy guy Who was in the business of reselling Comic con tickets, After a bit of haggling and two Crispy 0 bills, we were then from that point on, known as MR. Mike Jacobson, and Ms. Micah Cano. Using our new names and professional looking neck Badges, we gained entry to Comic con, made our way through the booths, super heroes, venders, and celebrities. We learned that Pushing you’re way though a crowd of zombies, harry potter geeks, and slutty dressed girls is alot harder than it seems. Once we got our fill of comic con, we made our way to the roof of the 30 story Hilton hotel with a view overlooking the San Diego-Coronado Bridge. Our Ocean bridge view marked the end of day one. Day two started with a complimentary Breakfast offered by the hotel, with a stomach filled with eggs, potatoes, Bacon, and pancakes. We we’re ready to make our way to Day two of our comic con adventure, Under our assumed names of MR. Mike Jacobson and Ms. Micah Cano we made our way through the doors of Comic Con, but didn’t make it far, Turns out that our sketchy friend in the business of reselling Comic Con badges is also in the business of stealing Official Comic Con card stock and counterfeiting Badges. Once it was discovered that we, MR. Mike Jacobson and Ms. Micah Cano were in possession of Stolen and fake badges, We were promptly escorted by security, Badges we’re confiscated, and then were we escorted off the property. Pissed that we got Kicked out of comic con, and a little hungry, we made our way to the Horton Plaza where we engorged our selves with Witzles pretzels, Tea, And other various Fat cell Increasing foods. We eventually made our way to the down town area of San Diego, To release our slight aggression for sketchy counterfeiters, comic con security, and our Now conceived food babies, We ended the day with a good old fashion scream off in the city streets of San Diego, with the sound of the word "PENIS!" Echoing off the Sky scraper walls around us, and even the cracked out, mentally unstable homeless people were staring at us wondering what on earth would possibly cause us to yell penis as loud we can.
San Diego Bay’s Waterfront Transformation

Image by Port of San Diego
The tidelands in Imperial Beach are made up of 403 acres of oceanfront property that was transferred to the Port by the State of California in 1990, along with the pier.
(Courtesy of Port of San Diego)
Category : Blog
