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October 12, 2009 at 11:50 AM #468189October 12, 2009 at 10:38 PM #468531waiting hawkParticipant
oh ya murf I know fontana very well. Grew up on Citrus and Randel. The area of alta loma was tough because we wanted above banyan in those 1/2 acre horse properties with the horse trails behind all the houses. Leaving fontana to live on a boat in SD was a better move in any year. My freind lives above baseline off hemlock. That area has gotten worse.
October 12, 2009 at 10:38 PM #468743waiting hawkParticipantoh ya murf I know fontana very well. Grew up on Citrus and Randel. The area of alta loma was tough because we wanted above banyan in those 1/2 acre horse properties with the horse trails behind all the houses. Leaving fontana to live on a boat in SD was a better move in any year. My freind lives above baseline off hemlock. That area has gotten worse.
October 12, 2009 at 10:38 PM #468459waiting hawkParticipantoh ya murf I know fontana very well. Grew up on Citrus and Randel. The area of alta loma was tough because we wanted above banyan in those 1/2 acre horse properties with the horse trails behind all the houses. Leaving fontana to live on a boat in SD was a better move in any year. My freind lives above baseline off hemlock. That area has gotten worse.
October 12, 2009 at 10:38 PM #468102waiting hawkParticipantoh ya murf I know fontana very well. Grew up on Citrus and Randel. The area of alta loma was tough because we wanted above banyan in those 1/2 acre horse properties with the horse trails behind all the houses. Leaving fontana to live on a boat in SD was a better move in any year. My freind lives above baseline off hemlock. That area has gotten worse.
October 12, 2009 at 10:38 PM #467918waiting hawkParticipantoh ya murf I know fontana very well. Grew up on Citrus and Randel. The area of alta loma was tough because we wanted above banyan in those 1/2 acre horse properties with the horse trails behind all the houses. Leaving fontana to live on a boat in SD was a better move in any year. My freind lives above baseline off hemlock. That area has gotten worse.
October 12, 2009 at 11:08 PM #468111cabalParticipantCongrats on your purchase. Alta Loma is one of the better locations in the Inland Empire is terms of value retention; sticky on the way down and bullish on the way up. If I remember correctly, the rule of thumb was to stay north of Foothill, north of Baseline if possible, and obviously west of I-15 away from Fontana. I owned two houses in Alta Loma in the late 80s before moving down to SD in the early 90s. It was there that I first tasted the RE Kool-Aid (yummy). The last house was in the Victoria tract near Baseline & Haven. Where abouts is your home? What is the area like these days? From memory, Alta Loma and the adjacent towns of Upland and Claremont were beautiful communities, particularly in winter when the smog is sparse and the views to the mountains are simply majestic. Some of the homes particularly on the northern fringes of town are simply spectacular, certainly on par with homes in SD communities like Olivenhein. On balance, it’s a great area to raise a family. I miss the 30 min drive time to ski Mt Baldy, the charm of old Claremont and the Claremont Colleges, the fairgrounds, and Vince’s Spaghetti (is it still there?).
October 12, 2009 at 11:08 PM #468469cabalParticipantCongrats on your purchase. Alta Loma is one of the better locations in the Inland Empire is terms of value retention; sticky on the way down and bullish on the way up. If I remember correctly, the rule of thumb was to stay north of Foothill, north of Baseline if possible, and obviously west of I-15 away from Fontana. I owned two houses in Alta Loma in the late 80s before moving down to SD in the early 90s. It was there that I first tasted the RE Kool-Aid (yummy). The last house was in the Victoria tract near Baseline & Haven. Where abouts is your home? What is the area like these days? From memory, Alta Loma and the adjacent towns of Upland and Claremont were beautiful communities, particularly in winter when the smog is sparse and the views to the mountains are simply majestic. Some of the homes particularly on the northern fringes of town are simply spectacular, certainly on par with homes in SD communities like Olivenhein. On balance, it’s a great area to raise a family. I miss the 30 min drive time to ski Mt Baldy, the charm of old Claremont and the Claremont Colleges, the fairgrounds, and Vince’s Spaghetti (is it still there?).
October 12, 2009 at 11:08 PM #467928cabalParticipantCongrats on your purchase. Alta Loma is one of the better locations in the Inland Empire is terms of value retention; sticky on the way down and bullish on the way up. If I remember correctly, the rule of thumb was to stay north of Foothill, north of Baseline if possible, and obviously west of I-15 away from Fontana. I owned two houses in Alta Loma in the late 80s before moving down to SD in the early 90s. It was there that I first tasted the RE Kool-Aid (yummy). The last house was in the Victoria tract near Baseline & Haven. Where abouts is your home? What is the area like these days? From memory, Alta Loma and the adjacent towns of Upland and Claremont were beautiful communities, particularly in winter when the smog is sparse and the views to the mountains are simply majestic. Some of the homes particularly on the northern fringes of town are simply spectacular, certainly on par with homes in SD communities like Olivenhein. On balance, it’s a great area to raise a family. I miss the 30 min drive time to ski Mt Baldy, the charm of old Claremont and the Claremont Colleges, the fairgrounds, and Vince’s Spaghetti (is it still there?).
October 12, 2009 at 11:08 PM #468541cabalParticipantCongrats on your purchase. Alta Loma is one of the better locations in the Inland Empire is terms of value retention; sticky on the way down and bullish on the way up. If I remember correctly, the rule of thumb was to stay north of Foothill, north of Baseline if possible, and obviously west of I-15 away from Fontana. I owned two houses in Alta Loma in the late 80s before moving down to SD in the early 90s. It was there that I first tasted the RE Kool-Aid (yummy). The last house was in the Victoria tract near Baseline & Haven. Where abouts is your home? What is the area like these days? From memory, Alta Loma and the adjacent towns of Upland and Claremont were beautiful communities, particularly in winter when the smog is sparse and the views to the mountains are simply majestic. Some of the homes particularly on the northern fringes of town are simply spectacular, certainly on par with homes in SD communities like Olivenhein. On balance, it’s a great area to raise a family. I miss the 30 min drive time to ski Mt Baldy, the charm of old Claremont and the Claremont Colleges, the fairgrounds, and Vince’s Spaghetti (is it still there?).
October 12, 2009 at 11:08 PM #468753cabalParticipantCongrats on your purchase. Alta Loma is one of the better locations in the Inland Empire is terms of value retention; sticky on the way down and bullish on the way up. If I remember correctly, the rule of thumb was to stay north of Foothill, north of Baseline if possible, and obviously west of I-15 away from Fontana. I owned two houses in Alta Loma in the late 80s before moving down to SD in the early 90s. It was there that I first tasted the RE Kool-Aid (yummy). The last house was in the Victoria tract near Baseline & Haven. Where abouts is your home? What is the area like these days? From memory, Alta Loma and the adjacent towns of Upland and Claremont were beautiful communities, particularly in winter when the smog is sparse and the views to the mountains are simply majestic. Some of the homes particularly on the northern fringes of town are simply spectacular, certainly on par with homes in SD communities like Olivenhein. On balance, it’s a great area to raise a family. I miss the 30 min drive time to ski Mt Baldy, the charm of old Claremont and the Claremont Colleges, the fairgrounds, and Vince’s Spaghetti (is it still there?).
October 13, 2009 at 7:58 AM #468146smshorttimerParticipant[quote=Cabal]Congrats on your purchase. Alta Loma is one of the better locations in the Inland Empire is terms of value retention; sticky on the way down and bullish on the way up. If I remember correctly, the rule of thumb was to stay north of Foothill, north of Baseline if possible, and obviously west of I-15 away from Fontana. I owned two houses in Alta Loma in the late 80s before moving down to SD in the early 90s. It was there that I first tasted the RE Kool-Aid (yummy). The last house was in the Victoria tract near Baseline & Haven. Where abouts is your home? What is the area like these days? From memory, Alta Loma and the adjacent towns of Upland and Claremont were beautiful communities, particularly in winter when the smog is sparse and the views to the mountains are simply majestic. Some of the homes particularly on the northern fringes of town are simply spectacular, certainly on par with homes in SD communities like Olivenhein. On balance, it’s a great area to raise a family. I miss the 30 min drive time to ski Mt Baldy, the charm of old Claremont and the Claremont Colleges, the fairgrounds, and Vince’s Spaghetti (is it still there?).[/quote]
I love sneaking glances of homes in Claremont/San Antonio Hghts on way up to the ski lifts. Would be on my short list if I had to live in the area and had the $.
October 13, 2009 at 7:58 AM #467963smshorttimerParticipant[quote=Cabal]Congrats on your purchase. Alta Loma is one of the better locations in the Inland Empire is terms of value retention; sticky on the way down and bullish on the way up. If I remember correctly, the rule of thumb was to stay north of Foothill, north of Baseline if possible, and obviously west of I-15 away from Fontana. I owned two houses in Alta Loma in the late 80s before moving down to SD in the early 90s. It was there that I first tasted the RE Kool-Aid (yummy). The last house was in the Victoria tract near Baseline & Haven. Where abouts is your home? What is the area like these days? From memory, Alta Loma and the adjacent towns of Upland and Claremont were beautiful communities, particularly in winter when the smog is sparse and the views to the mountains are simply majestic. Some of the homes particularly on the northern fringes of town are simply spectacular, certainly on par with homes in SD communities like Olivenhein. On balance, it’s a great area to raise a family. I miss the 30 min drive time to ski Mt Baldy, the charm of old Claremont and the Claremont Colleges, the fairgrounds, and Vince’s Spaghetti (is it still there?).[/quote]
I love sneaking glances of homes in Claremont/San Antonio Hghts on way up to the ski lifts. Would be on my short list if I had to live in the area and had the $.
October 13, 2009 at 7:58 AM #468504smshorttimerParticipant[quote=Cabal]Congrats on your purchase. Alta Loma is one of the better locations in the Inland Empire is terms of value retention; sticky on the way down and bullish on the way up. If I remember correctly, the rule of thumb was to stay north of Foothill, north of Baseline if possible, and obviously west of I-15 away from Fontana. I owned two houses in Alta Loma in the late 80s before moving down to SD in the early 90s. It was there that I first tasted the RE Kool-Aid (yummy). The last house was in the Victoria tract near Baseline & Haven. Where abouts is your home? What is the area like these days? From memory, Alta Loma and the adjacent towns of Upland and Claremont were beautiful communities, particularly in winter when the smog is sparse and the views to the mountains are simply majestic. Some of the homes particularly on the northern fringes of town are simply spectacular, certainly on par with homes in SD communities like Olivenhein. On balance, it’s a great area to raise a family. I miss the 30 min drive time to ski Mt Baldy, the charm of old Claremont and the Claremont Colleges, the fairgrounds, and Vince’s Spaghetti (is it still there?).[/quote]
I love sneaking glances of homes in Claremont/San Antonio Hghts on way up to the ski lifts. Would be on my short list if I had to live in the area and had the $.
October 13, 2009 at 7:58 AM #468575smshorttimerParticipant[quote=Cabal]Congrats on your purchase. Alta Loma is one of the better locations in the Inland Empire is terms of value retention; sticky on the way down and bullish on the way up. If I remember correctly, the rule of thumb was to stay north of Foothill, north of Baseline if possible, and obviously west of I-15 away from Fontana. I owned two houses in Alta Loma in the late 80s before moving down to SD in the early 90s. It was there that I first tasted the RE Kool-Aid (yummy). The last house was in the Victoria tract near Baseline & Haven. Where abouts is your home? What is the area like these days? From memory, Alta Loma and the adjacent towns of Upland and Claremont were beautiful communities, particularly in winter when the smog is sparse and the views to the mountains are simply majestic. Some of the homes particularly on the northern fringes of town are simply spectacular, certainly on par with homes in SD communities like Olivenhein. On balance, it’s a great area to raise a family. I miss the 30 min drive time to ski Mt Baldy, the charm of old Claremont and the Claremont Colleges, the fairgrounds, and Vince’s Spaghetti (is it still there?).[/quote]
I love sneaking glances of homes in Claremont/San Antonio Hghts on way up to the ski lifts. Would be on my short list if I had to live in the area and had the $.
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