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June 13, 2008 at 6:11 PM #222887June 13, 2008 at 6:21 PM #222727jmrrobbie1Participant
JMR
Paramount – always good to see everyone’s take on the area … the more info the better. I am not much of a blogger for blogging sake – really only look at Piggs for insight to real estate in SD and Efficient Frontier for general finance insight.
Not sure of your thoughts why Temecula will become another Escondido – even if it does is this a bad thing? If lack of a hospital is the key to this view I am not sure how many communities in North County would be placed in this same light … CV, Encinitas, RSF, Del Mar, Fallbrook – basically everything north of Ted Williams Parkway would be placed in this category. I am not defending Temecula – the wine industry and the valley offer a different feel then that of Escondido and is far enough removed from San Diego to give distinctness separate from the other developments on the 15 corridor. Any additional takes on this view. If the city of Temecula really will have nothing to do with the hospital planned for this area it would be one of the first cities to do so – even totally private healthcare institutions (very few these days) have strong alliances with the city/population they serve in all facets of operation.
Reguarding “out of towners/transplants” – is there a portion of N County where only native San Diegoians live & is this where you reside… kind of a unique area I would think? Globalization & power of the internet has drastically altered localization. I vividly remember when I lived in Sunset Cliffs (1985-99) and drove back to Colo for the first time to visit family – as I pulled into Vail for gas a women in her Colo pick-up vehemently screaming at me to take my Calf license plates and to return to the “hole” where I came from. Not everyone is an advocate of S Calf as a paradise or a place they would ever want to put down roots. …
Paramount – you have a different take on Temecula from the other post and I would value your thoughts … would this be a place you could live if you only needed to commute to Fallbrook? The quarry is still pending?
June 13, 2008 at 6:21 PM #222829jmrrobbie1ParticipantJMR
Paramount – always good to see everyone’s take on the area … the more info the better. I am not much of a blogger for blogging sake – really only look at Piggs for insight to real estate in SD and Efficient Frontier for general finance insight.
Not sure of your thoughts why Temecula will become another Escondido – even if it does is this a bad thing? If lack of a hospital is the key to this view I am not sure how many communities in North County would be placed in this same light … CV, Encinitas, RSF, Del Mar, Fallbrook – basically everything north of Ted Williams Parkway would be placed in this category. I am not defending Temecula – the wine industry and the valley offer a different feel then that of Escondido and is far enough removed from San Diego to give distinctness separate from the other developments on the 15 corridor. Any additional takes on this view. If the city of Temecula really will have nothing to do with the hospital planned for this area it would be one of the first cities to do so – even totally private healthcare institutions (very few these days) have strong alliances with the city/population they serve in all facets of operation.
Reguarding “out of towners/transplants” – is there a portion of N County where only native San Diegoians live & is this where you reside… kind of a unique area I would think? Globalization & power of the internet has drastically altered localization. I vividly remember when I lived in Sunset Cliffs (1985-99) and drove back to Colo for the first time to visit family – as I pulled into Vail for gas a women in her Colo pick-up vehemently screaming at me to take my Calf license plates and to return to the “hole” where I came from. Not everyone is an advocate of S Calf as a paradise or a place they would ever want to put down roots. …
Paramount – you have a different take on Temecula from the other post and I would value your thoughts … would this be a place you could live if you only needed to commute to Fallbrook? The quarry is still pending?
June 13, 2008 at 6:21 PM #222843jmrrobbie1ParticipantJMR
Paramount – always good to see everyone’s take on the area … the more info the better. I am not much of a blogger for blogging sake – really only look at Piggs for insight to real estate in SD and Efficient Frontier for general finance insight.
Not sure of your thoughts why Temecula will become another Escondido – even if it does is this a bad thing? If lack of a hospital is the key to this view I am not sure how many communities in North County would be placed in this same light … CV, Encinitas, RSF, Del Mar, Fallbrook – basically everything north of Ted Williams Parkway would be placed in this category. I am not defending Temecula – the wine industry and the valley offer a different feel then that of Escondido and is far enough removed from San Diego to give distinctness separate from the other developments on the 15 corridor. Any additional takes on this view. If the city of Temecula really will have nothing to do with the hospital planned for this area it would be one of the first cities to do so – even totally private healthcare institutions (very few these days) have strong alliances with the city/population they serve in all facets of operation.
Reguarding “out of towners/transplants” – is there a portion of N County where only native San Diegoians live & is this where you reside… kind of a unique area I would think? Globalization & power of the internet has drastically altered localization. I vividly remember when I lived in Sunset Cliffs (1985-99) and drove back to Colo for the first time to visit family – as I pulled into Vail for gas a women in her Colo pick-up vehemently screaming at me to take my Calf license plates and to return to the “hole” where I came from. Not everyone is an advocate of S Calf as a paradise or a place they would ever want to put down roots. …
Paramount – you have a different take on Temecula from the other post and I would value your thoughts … would this be a place you could live if you only needed to commute to Fallbrook? The quarry is still pending?
June 13, 2008 at 6:21 PM #222877jmrrobbie1ParticipantJMR
Paramount – always good to see everyone’s take on the area … the more info the better. I am not much of a blogger for blogging sake – really only look at Piggs for insight to real estate in SD and Efficient Frontier for general finance insight.
Not sure of your thoughts why Temecula will become another Escondido – even if it does is this a bad thing? If lack of a hospital is the key to this view I am not sure how many communities in North County would be placed in this same light … CV, Encinitas, RSF, Del Mar, Fallbrook – basically everything north of Ted Williams Parkway would be placed in this category. I am not defending Temecula – the wine industry and the valley offer a different feel then that of Escondido and is far enough removed from San Diego to give distinctness separate from the other developments on the 15 corridor. Any additional takes on this view. If the city of Temecula really will have nothing to do with the hospital planned for this area it would be one of the first cities to do so – even totally private healthcare institutions (very few these days) have strong alliances with the city/population they serve in all facets of operation.
Reguarding “out of towners/transplants” – is there a portion of N County where only native San Diegoians live & is this where you reside… kind of a unique area I would think? Globalization & power of the internet has drastically altered localization. I vividly remember when I lived in Sunset Cliffs (1985-99) and drove back to Colo for the first time to visit family – as I pulled into Vail for gas a women in her Colo pick-up vehemently screaming at me to take my Calf license plates and to return to the “hole” where I came from. Not everyone is an advocate of S Calf as a paradise or a place they would ever want to put down roots. …
Paramount – you have a different take on Temecula from the other post and I would value your thoughts … would this be a place you could live if you only needed to commute to Fallbrook? The quarry is still pending?
June 13, 2008 at 6:21 PM #222892jmrrobbie1ParticipantJMR
Paramount – always good to see everyone’s take on the area … the more info the better. I am not much of a blogger for blogging sake – really only look at Piggs for insight to real estate in SD and Efficient Frontier for general finance insight.
Not sure of your thoughts why Temecula will become another Escondido – even if it does is this a bad thing? If lack of a hospital is the key to this view I am not sure how many communities in North County would be placed in this same light … CV, Encinitas, RSF, Del Mar, Fallbrook – basically everything north of Ted Williams Parkway would be placed in this category. I am not defending Temecula – the wine industry and the valley offer a different feel then that of Escondido and is far enough removed from San Diego to give distinctness separate from the other developments on the 15 corridor. Any additional takes on this view. If the city of Temecula really will have nothing to do with the hospital planned for this area it would be one of the first cities to do so – even totally private healthcare institutions (very few these days) have strong alliances with the city/population they serve in all facets of operation.
Reguarding “out of towners/transplants” – is there a portion of N County where only native San Diegoians live & is this where you reside… kind of a unique area I would think? Globalization & power of the internet has drastically altered localization. I vividly remember when I lived in Sunset Cliffs (1985-99) and drove back to Colo for the first time to visit family – as I pulled into Vail for gas a women in her Colo pick-up vehemently screaming at me to take my Calf license plates and to return to the “hole” where I came from. Not everyone is an advocate of S Calf as a paradise or a place they would ever want to put down roots. …
Paramount – you have a different take on Temecula from the other post and I would value your thoughts … would this be a place you could live if you only needed to commute to Fallbrook? The quarry is still pending?
June 13, 2008 at 7:00 PM #222762temeculaguyParticipantjm, if you are planning to relocate here and you will be commuting to S.D., don’t do it, gas prices and traffic make Temecula a non option. If you are like dharma and work locally or like others who work from home mostly and don’t depend on local dollars to support your business, it is an ideal location with a nice variety of of activities and people for a bedroom community. It is primarily designed for families but I have three generations of my family living in the valley and they love it.
With regards to paramount, he and I disagree on a lot of things but I am not an out of towner or a transplant and have lived here longer than most anyone on the boards, 17+ years. Without posting my resume, let’s just say I know far more about demographics and civil planning than I do about real estate. Temecula is actually almost at build out, every piece of dirt is either built, planned and definately zoned. It has the luxury of being designed in the last two decades so there is almost no mixed use areas (houses next to businesses), something Escondido has a lot of. There are only a few apartment buildings in the city, confined to a few locations, multi housing is the key to urban decay. The city also has no debt and runs a budget surplus every year, it also has healthy reserves. If revenue went down 20%, they wouldn’t have to cut a thing. Temecula was designed to have no downtown, no place to live and be a pedestrian, something in existence in almost every ghetto. Go to escondido and you will find thousands of people living within walking distance to the 99 cent store or the mexican markets, they dont have cars and they can walk to the store, it is actually what makes those apartments attractive, the proximity to what they need, in temecula, you need a car or you will die. The city also purposely has a weak transit system, until recently it was completely cut off from it’s neighbors and still you cant get to elsinore, fallbrook, escondido or hemet without taking greyhound, in Esco you can take a bus or train almost anywhere and to the other cities. It was designed to be that way. Temecula also is routinely fined or threatened because they have so little section 8 housing or rental assistance, they get out of that by purchasing some of the existing apartments and converting them to 55+ complexes and providing the elderly with rental assistance, they do everything to avoid poor people under 55 so to meet the minimum they recruit the over 55. Escondido is more than half Spanish speaking, the environment fit their needs and they were attracted to the area, Temecula has a B/P checkpoint in it and is designed to not meet their needs so even though a house in Temecula is cheaper than Escondido, it never became an Escondido. The hospital thing is irrelevent, esco has a big hospital, the Temecula Valley has two small ones but more are needed since the region grew and the two are both on the North side of the Valley. The one that is planned in the South is being held up because it is being placed next to million dollar homes so there is a little tussle but it will come there or on another lot because there is money to be made, most of the citizens are insured.
Temecula doubled in size during the bubble so it took the brunt of the meltdown, but this too shall pass and on the other side of this we will be fine, I’m going to bet my money on it and buy in the next 12 months. Some will counter with anectdotal tales of some crime or some poor person they saw, make them bring the actual crime rates. The number of foreclosures wont bring masses of poor people buying them, actually those that couldn’t really afford them are the ones being kicked out, there will be no downgrade in demographics because a repo costs half what it sold for new, the buyer now needs to prove they can afford it so there may actually be the opposite affect. And the repos all wont be turned into rental stock, they are being sold quite qickly right now and it’s to fence sitting families from everything I have seen, there isn’t a rental market big enough to support thousands of 3k sq ft houses and those same rentals are already available in other towns more suitable to poor people for the reasons stated above, if anything the demographics will improve.
June 13, 2008 at 7:00 PM #222864temeculaguyParticipantjm, if you are planning to relocate here and you will be commuting to S.D., don’t do it, gas prices and traffic make Temecula a non option. If you are like dharma and work locally or like others who work from home mostly and don’t depend on local dollars to support your business, it is an ideal location with a nice variety of of activities and people for a bedroom community. It is primarily designed for families but I have three generations of my family living in the valley and they love it.
With regards to paramount, he and I disagree on a lot of things but I am not an out of towner or a transplant and have lived here longer than most anyone on the boards, 17+ years. Without posting my resume, let’s just say I know far more about demographics and civil planning than I do about real estate. Temecula is actually almost at build out, every piece of dirt is either built, planned and definately zoned. It has the luxury of being designed in the last two decades so there is almost no mixed use areas (houses next to businesses), something Escondido has a lot of. There are only a few apartment buildings in the city, confined to a few locations, multi housing is the key to urban decay. The city also has no debt and runs a budget surplus every year, it also has healthy reserves. If revenue went down 20%, they wouldn’t have to cut a thing. Temecula was designed to have no downtown, no place to live and be a pedestrian, something in existence in almost every ghetto. Go to escondido and you will find thousands of people living within walking distance to the 99 cent store or the mexican markets, they dont have cars and they can walk to the store, it is actually what makes those apartments attractive, the proximity to what they need, in temecula, you need a car or you will die. The city also purposely has a weak transit system, until recently it was completely cut off from it’s neighbors and still you cant get to elsinore, fallbrook, escondido or hemet without taking greyhound, in Esco you can take a bus or train almost anywhere and to the other cities. It was designed to be that way. Temecula also is routinely fined or threatened because they have so little section 8 housing or rental assistance, they get out of that by purchasing some of the existing apartments and converting them to 55+ complexes and providing the elderly with rental assistance, they do everything to avoid poor people under 55 so to meet the minimum they recruit the over 55. Escondido is more than half Spanish speaking, the environment fit their needs and they were attracted to the area, Temecula has a B/P checkpoint in it and is designed to not meet their needs so even though a house in Temecula is cheaper than Escondido, it never became an Escondido. The hospital thing is irrelevent, esco has a big hospital, the Temecula Valley has two small ones but more are needed since the region grew and the two are both on the North side of the Valley. The one that is planned in the South is being held up because it is being placed next to million dollar homes so there is a little tussle but it will come there or on another lot because there is money to be made, most of the citizens are insured.
Temecula doubled in size during the bubble so it took the brunt of the meltdown, but this too shall pass and on the other side of this we will be fine, I’m going to bet my money on it and buy in the next 12 months. Some will counter with anectdotal tales of some crime or some poor person they saw, make them bring the actual crime rates. The number of foreclosures wont bring masses of poor people buying them, actually those that couldn’t really afford them are the ones being kicked out, there will be no downgrade in demographics because a repo costs half what it sold for new, the buyer now needs to prove they can afford it so there may actually be the opposite affect. And the repos all wont be turned into rental stock, they are being sold quite qickly right now and it’s to fence sitting families from everything I have seen, there isn’t a rental market big enough to support thousands of 3k sq ft houses and those same rentals are already available in other towns more suitable to poor people for the reasons stated above, if anything the demographics will improve.
June 13, 2008 at 7:00 PM #222878temeculaguyParticipantjm, if you are planning to relocate here and you will be commuting to S.D., don’t do it, gas prices and traffic make Temecula a non option. If you are like dharma and work locally or like others who work from home mostly and don’t depend on local dollars to support your business, it is an ideal location with a nice variety of of activities and people for a bedroom community. It is primarily designed for families but I have three generations of my family living in the valley and they love it.
With regards to paramount, he and I disagree on a lot of things but I am not an out of towner or a transplant and have lived here longer than most anyone on the boards, 17+ years. Without posting my resume, let’s just say I know far more about demographics and civil planning than I do about real estate. Temecula is actually almost at build out, every piece of dirt is either built, planned and definately zoned. It has the luxury of being designed in the last two decades so there is almost no mixed use areas (houses next to businesses), something Escondido has a lot of. There are only a few apartment buildings in the city, confined to a few locations, multi housing is the key to urban decay. The city also has no debt and runs a budget surplus every year, it also has healthy reserves. If revenue went down 20%, they wouldn’t have to cut a thing. Temecula was designed to have no downtown, no place to live and be a pedestrian, something in existence in almost every ghetto. Go to escondido and you will find thousands of people living within walking distance to the 99 cent store or the mexican markets, they dont have cars and they can walk to the store, it is actually what makes those apartments attractive, the proximity to what they need, in temecula, you need a car or you will die. The city also purposely has a weak transit system, until recently it was completely cut off from it’s neighbors and still you cant get to elsinore, fallbrook, escondido or hemet without taking greyhound, in Esco you can take a bus or train almost anywhere and to the other cities. It was designed to be that way. Temecula also is routinely fined or threatened because they have so little section 8 housing or rental assistance, they get out of that by purchasing some of the existing apartments and converting them to 55+ complexes and providing the elderly with rental assistance, they do everything to avoid poor people under 55 so to meet the minimum they recruit the over 55. Escondido is more than half Spanish speaking, the environment fit their needs and they were attracted to the area, Temecula has a B/P checkpoint in it and is designed to not meet their needs so even though a house in Temecula is cheaper than Escondido, it never became an Escondido. The hospital thing is irrelevent, esco has a big hospital, the Temecula Valley has two small ones but more are needed since the region grew and the two are both on the North side of the Valley. The one that is planned in the South is being held up because it is being placed next to million dollar homes so there is a little tussle but it will come there or on another lot because there is money to be made, most of the citizens are insured.
Temecula doubled in size during the bubble so it took the brunt of the meltdown, but this too shall pass and on the other side of this we will be fine, I’m going to bet my money on it and buy in the next 12 months. Some will counter with anectdotal tales of some crime or some poor person they saw, make them bring the actual crime rates. The number of foreclosures wont bring masses of poor people buying them, actually those that couldn’t really afford them are the ones being kicked out, there will be no downgrade in demographics because a repo costs half what it sold for new, the buyer now needs to prove they can afford it so there may actually be the opposite affect. And the repos all wont be turned into rental stock, they are being sold quite qickly right now and it’s to fence sitting families from everything I have seen, there isn’t a rental market big enough to support thousands of 3k sq ft houses and those same rentals are already available in other towns more suitable to poor people for the reasons stated above, if anything the demographics will improve.
June 13, 2008 at 7:00 PM #222912temeculaguyParticipantjm, if you are planning to relocate here and you will be commuting to S.D., don’t do it, gas prices and traffic make Temecula a non option. If you are like dharma and work locally or like others who work from home mostly and don’t depend on local dollars to support your business, it is an ideal location with a nice variety of of activities and people for a bedroom community. It is primarily designed for families but I have three generations of my family living in the valley and they love it.
With regards to paramount, he and I disagree on a lot of things but I am not an out of towner or a transplant and have lived here longer than most anyone on the boards, 17+ years. Without posting my resume, let’s just say I know far more about demographics and civil planning than I do about real estate. Temecula is actually almost at build out, every piece of dirt is either built, planned and definately zoned. It has the luxury of being designed in the last two decades so there is almost no mixed use areas (houses next to businesses), something Escondido has a lot of. There are only a few apartment buildings in the city, confined to a few locations, multi housing is the key to urban decay. The city also has no debt and runs a budget surplus every year, it also has healthy reserves. If revenue went down 20%, they wouldn’t have to cut a thing. Temecula was designed to have no downtown, no place to live and be a pedestrian, something in existence in almost every ghetto. Go to escondido and you will find thousands of people living within walking distance to the 99 cent store or the mexican markets, they dont have cars and they can walk to the store, it is actually what makes those apartments attractive, the proximity to what they need, in temecula, you need a car or you will die. The city also purposely has a weak transit system, until recently it was completely cut off from it’s neighbors and still you cant get to elsinore, fallbrook, escondido or hemet without taking greyhound, in Esco you can take a bus or train almost anywhere and to the other cities. It was designed to be that way. Temecula also is routinely fined or threatened because they have so little section 8 housing or rental assistance, they get out of that by purchasing some of the existing apartments and converting them to 55+ complexes and providing the elderly with rental assistance, they do everything to avoid poor people under 55 so to meet the minimum they recruit the over 55. Escondido is more than half Spanish speaking, the environment fit their needs and they were attracted to the area, Temecula has a B/P checkpoint in it and is designed to not meet their needs so even though a house in Temecula is cheaper than Escondido, it never became an Escondido. The hospital thing is irrelevent, esco has a big hospital, the Temecula Valley has two small ones but more are needed since the region grew and the two are both on the North side of the Valley. The one that is planned in the South is being held up because it is being placed next to million dollar homes so there is a little tussle but it will come there or on another lot because there is money to be made, most of the citizens are insured.
Temecula doubled in size during the bubble so it took the brunt of the meltdown, but this too shall pass and on the other side of this we will be fine, I’m going to bet my money on it and buy in the next 12 months. Some will counter with anectdotal tales of some crime or some poor person they saw, make them bring the actual crime rates. The number of foreclosures wont bring masses of poor people buying them, actually those that couldn’t really afford them are the ones being kicked out, there will be no downgrade in demographics because a repo costs half what it sold for new, the buyer now needs to prove they can afford it so there may actually be the opposite affect. And the repos all wont be turned into rental stock, they are being sold quite qickly right now and it’s to fence sitting families from everything I have seen, there isn’t a rental market big enough to support thousands of 3k sq ft houses and those same rentals are already available in other towns more suitable to poor people for the reasons stated above, if anything the demographics will improve.
June 13, 2008 at 7:00 PM #222927temeculaguyParticipantjm, if you are planning to relocate here and you will be commuting to S.D., don’t do it, gas prices and traffic make Temecula a non option. If you are like dharma and work locally or like others who work from home mostly and don’t depend on local dollars to support your business, it is an ideal location with a nice variety of of activities and people for a bedroom community. It is primarily designed for families but I have three generations of my family living in the valley and they love it.
With regards to paramount, he and I disagree on a lot of things but I am not an out of towner or a transplant and have lived here longer than most anyone on the boards, 17+ years. Without posting my resume, let’s just say I know far more about demographics and civil planning than I do about real estate. Temecula is actually almost at build out, every piece of dirt is either built, planned and definately zoned. It has the luxury of being designed in the last two decades so there is almost no mixed use areas (houses next to businesses), something Escondido has a lot of. There are only a few apartment buildings in the city, confined to a few locations, multi housing is the key to urban decay. The city also has no debt and runs a budget surplus every year, it also has healthy reserves. If revenue went down 20%, they wouldn’t have to cut a thing. Temecula was designed to have no downtown, no place to live and be a pedestrian, something in existence in almost every ghetto. Go to escondido and you will find thousands of people living within walking distance to the 99 cent store or the mexican markets, they dont have cars and they can walk to the store, it is actually what makes those apartments attractive, the proximity to what they need, in temecula, you need a car or you will die. The city also purposely has a weak transit system, until recently it was completely cut off from it’s neighbors and still you cant get to elsinore, fallbrook, escondido or hemet without taking greyhound, in Esco you can take a bus or train almost anywhere and to the other cities. It was designed to be that way. Temecula also is routinely fined or threatened because they have so little section 8 housing or rental assistance, they get out of that by purchasing some of the existing apartments and converting them to 55+ complexes and providing the elderly with rental assistance, they do everything to avoid poor people under 55 so to meet the minimum they recruit the over 55. Escondido is more than half Spanish speaking, the environment fit their needs and they were attracted to the area, Temecula has a B/P checkpoint in it and is designed to not meet their needs so even though a house in Temecula is cheaper than Escondido, it never became an Escondido. The hospital thing is irrelevent, esco has a big hospital, the Temecula Valley has two small ones but more are needed since the region grew and the two are both on the North side of the Valley. The one that is planned in the South is being held up because it is being placed next to million dollar homes so there is a little tussle but it will come there or on another lot because there is money to be made, most of the citizens are insured.
Temecula doubled in size during the bubble so it took the brunt of the meltdown, but this too shall pass and on the other side of this we will be fine, I’m going to bet my money on it and buy in the next 12 months. Some will counter with anectdotal tales of some crime or some poor person they saw, make them bring the actual crime rates. The number of foreclosures wont bring masses of poor people buying them, actually those that couldn’t really afford them are the ones being kicked out, there will be no downgrade in demographics because a repo costs half what it sold for new, the buyer now needs to prove they can afford it so there may actually be the opposite affect. And the repos all wont be turned into rental stock, they are being sold quite qickly right now and it’s to fence sitting families from everything I have seen, there isn’t a rental market big enough to support thousands of 3k sq ft houses and those same rentals are already available in other towns more suitable to poor people for the reasons stated above, if anything the demographics will improve.
June 13, 2008 at 7:30 PM #222777jmrrobbie1ParticipantJMR
Temeculaguy – Excellent inside scoop on the area! Wow – it has changed as I remember open fields – also remember when they built Redhawk Golf Course with no homes in the area but the community still in the “planning” stages. If we end up there my commute for any work related needs would be no further than Fallbrook. Again, T.V. was not on our orginal search until we came across post/threads on Piggs … most on the views here support a vibrant & progessive community in T.V. well into the future. Another thought I have not heard in these postings is of the Indian land and any inpact it has? I am following the T.V. bubble burst with great interest … although a micro-market in itself, the area is ahead of the curve in the downsilde of the burst.
June 13, 2008 at 7:30 PM #222880jmrrobbie1ParticipantJMR
Temeculaguy – Excellent inside scoop on the area! Wow – it has changed as I remember open fields – also remember when they built Redhawk Golf Course with no homes in the area but the community still in the “planning” stages. If we end up there my commute for any work related needs would be no further than Fallbrook. Again, T.V. was not on our orginal search until we came across post/threads on Piggs … most on the views here support a vibrant & progessive community in T.V. well into the future. Another thought I have not heard in these postings is of the Indian land and any inpact it has? I am following the T.V. bubble burst with great interest … although a micro-market in itself, the area is ahead of the curve in the downsilde of the burst.
June 13, 2008 at 7:30 PM #222893jmrrobbie1ParticipantJMR
Temeculaguy – Excellent inside scoop on the area! Wow – it has changed as I remember open fields – also remember when they built Redhawk Golf Course with no homes in the area but the community still in the “planning” stages. If we end up there my commute for any work related needs would be no further than Fallbrook. Again, T.V. was not on our orginal search until we came across post/threads on Piggs … most on the views here support a vibrant & progessive community in T.V. well into the future. Another thought I have not heard in these postings is of the Indian land and any inpact it has? I am following the T.V. bubble burst with great interest … although a micro-market in itself, the area is ahead of the curve in the downsilde of the burst.
June 13, 2008 at 7:30 PM #222925jmrrobbie1ParticipantJMR
Temeculaguy – Excellent inside scoop on the area! Wow – it has changed as I remember open fields – also remember when they built Redhawk Golf Course with no homes in the area but the community still in the “planning” stages. If we end up there my commute for any work related needs would be no further than Fallbrook. Again, T.V. was not on our orginal search until we came across post/threads on Piggs … most on the views here support a vibrant & progessive community in T.V. well into the future. Another thought I have not heard in these postings is of the Indian land and any inpact it has? I am following the T.V. bubble burst with great interest … although a micro-market in itself, the area is ahead of the curve in the downsilde of the burst.
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