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sddreamingParticipant
This is for all you future Mira Mesan home owners. This is what Mira Mesa looks like in ForeClosureRadar. Each red dot is a foreclosure. Each blue spot is a house up for auction. Each green dot is a pre-foreclosure. Doesn’t look healthy to me.
[img_assist|nid=8532|title=Mira Mesa Foreclosures|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=77]
sddreamingParticipantThis is for all you future Mira Mesan home owners. This is what Mira Mesa looks like in ForeClosureRadar. Each red dot is a foreclosure. Each blue spot is a house up for auction. Each green dot is a pre-foreclosure. Doesn’t look healthy to me.
[img_assist|nid=8532|title=Mira Mesa Foreclosures|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=77]
sddreamingParticipantThis is for all you future Mira Mesan home owners. This is what Mira Mesa looks like in ForeClosureRadar. Each red dot is a foreclosure. Each blue spot is a house up for auction. Each green dot is a pre-foreclosure. Doesn’t look healthy to me.
[img_assist|nid=8532|title=Mira Mesa Foreclosures|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=77]
sddreamingParticipantThis is for all you future Mira Mesan home owners. This is what Mira Mesa looks like in ForeClosureRadar. Each red dot is a foreclosure. Each blue spot is a house up for auction. Each green dot is a pre-foreclosure. Doesn’t look healthy to me.
[img_assist|nid=8532|title=Mira Mesa Foreclosures|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=77]
sddreamingParticipantHey, Raptorduck, thanks. I looked up your top 25 reasons. They’re good. Totally with y’all here. Toward the end of my 15 years in SD, I was bored with the place and took it for granted. I was ready for real weather and a change. I forgot that real weather means you can comfortably spend about 5 days in the year outside. Since school ended this year, we’ve had a moderate to severe thunderstorm every single day.
For a couple years I commuted back and forth to the Bay area (Cupertino) from San Diego. Being a software geek type, it was fun to be there, but it always felt good to be back in SD.
NYC was a great place to visit and I thought I would enjoy it there. After a year, I decided it was a nicer place to visit than live, and I can’t imagine raising a family there. But, I’d still like to have an apartment in midtown someday.
SD is not a world class city like New York, Paris, London,… It doesn’t have the best educational center in the country. You could fairly say it’s fairly bland and vanilla. But you know, it still is just a really nice place to live. I can’t wait to get back.
sddreamingParticipantHey, Raptorduck, thanks. I looked up your top 25 reasons. They’re good. Totally with y’all here. Toward the end of my 15 years in SD, I was bored with the place and took it for granted. I was ready for real weather and a change. I forgot that real weather means you can comfortably spend about 5 days in the year outside. Since school ended this year, we’ve had a moderate to severe thunderstorm every single day.
For a couple years I commuted back and forth to the Bay area (Cupertino) from San Diego. Being a software geek type, it was fun to be there, but it always felt good to be back in SD.
NYC was a great place to visit and I thought I would enjoy it there. After a year, I decided it was a nicer place to visit than live, and I can’t imagine raising a family there. But, I’d still like to have an apartment in midtown someday.
SD is not a world class city like New York, Paris, London,… It doesn’t have the best educational center in the country. You could fairly say it’s fairly bland and vanilla. But you know, it still is just a really nice place to live. I can’t wait to get back.
sddreamingParticipantHey, Raptorduck, thanks. I looked up your top 25 reasons. They’re good. Totally with y’all here. Toward the end of my 15 years in SD, I was bored with the place and took it for granted. I was ready for real weather and a change. I forgot that real weather means you can comfortably spend about 5 days in the year outside. Since school ended this year, we’ve had a moderate to severe thunderstorm every single day.
For a couple years I commuted back and forth to the Bay area (Cupertino) from San Diego. Being a software geek type, it was fun to be there, but it always felt good to be back in SD.
NYC was a great place to visit and I thought I would enjoy it there. After a year, I decided it was a nicer place to visit than live, and I can’t imagine raising a family there. But, I’d still like to have an apartment in midtown someday.
SD is not a world class city like New York, Paris, London,… It doesn’t have the best educational center in the country. You could fairly say it’s fairly bland and vanilla. But you know, it still is just a really nice place to live. I can’t wait to get back.
sddreamingParticipantHey, Raptorduck, thanks. I looked up your top 25 reasons. They’re good. Totally with y’all here. Toward the end of my 15 years in SD, I was bored with the place and took it for granted. I was ready for real weather and a change. I forgot that real weather means you can comfortably spend about 5 days in the year outside. Since school ended this year, we’ve had a moderate to severe thunderstorm every single day.
For a couple years I commuted back and forth to the Bay area (Cupertino) from San Diego. Being a software geek type, it was fun to be there, but it always felt good to be back in SD.
NYC was a great place to visit and I thought I would enjoy it there. After a year, I decided it was a nicer place to visit than live, and I can’t imagine raising a family there. But, I’d still like to have an apartment in midtown someday.
SD is not a world class city like New York, Paris, London,… It doesn’t have the best educational center in the country. You could fairly say it’s fairly bland and vanilla. But you know, it still is just a really nice place to live. I can’t wait to get back.
sddreamingParticipantHey, Raptorduck, thanks. I looked up your top 25 reasons. They’re good. Totally with y’all here. Toward the end of my 15 years in SD, I was bored with the place and took it for granted. I was ready for real weather and a change. I forgot that real weather means you can comfortably spend about 5 days in the year outside. Since school ended this year, we’ve had a moderate to severe thunderstorm every single day.
For a couple years I commuted back and forth to the Bay area (Cupertino) from San Diego. Being a software geek type, it was fun to be there, but it always felt good to be back in SD.
NYC was a great place to visit and I thought I would enjoy it there. After a year, I decided it was a nicer place to visit than live, and I can’t imagine raising a family there. But, I’d still like to have an apartment in midtown someday.
SD is not a world class city like New York, Paris, London,… It doesn’t have the best educational center in the country. You could fairly say it’s fairly bland and vanilla. But you know, it still is just a really nice place to live. I can’t wait to get back.
sddreamingParticipantSan Diego is just a great place to live. I lived in SD for 15 years. I loved having out of town visitors over to share SD with. Taking a midwesterner to the mountains, the desert, and the beach in one day is a real trip.
I had clients visiting from Kansas City once. At the time I did a lot of sailing out of Harbor Island Yacht Club. For dinner I rented a sailboat and took them over to Peohe’s on Coronado Island. They were floored that they sailed to an island for dinner. Can’t do that in KC.
SD doesn’t have the shopping of OC. It doesn’t have the culture of NYC (lived there too). SD seems mostly to be burbs and strip malls that all look alike. But all in all it’s a great place to be, where it’s not at all hard to enjoy life.
BTW, Marion, lately I’ve been looking at Temecula instead of waiting longer for SD to turn around. One of the Temecula cons for me is that it’s so far from any major universities. How did you manage to get your Masters while living up there?
sddreamingParticipantSan Diego is just a great place to live. I lived in SD for 15 years. I loved having out of town visitors over to share SD with. Taking a midwesterner to the mountains, the desert, and the beach in one day is a real trip.
I had clients visiting from Kansas City once. At the time I did a lot of sailing out of Harbor Island Yacht Club. For dinner I rented a sailboat and took them over to Peohe’s on Coronado Island. They were floored that they sailed to an island for dinner. Can’t do that in KC.
SD doesn’t have the shopping of OC. It doesn’t have the culture of NYC (lived there too). SD seems mostly to be burbs and strip malls that all look alike. But all in all it’s a great place to be, where it’s not at all hard to enjoy life.
BTW, Marion, lately I’ve been looking at Temecula instead of waiting longer for SD to turn around. One of the Temecula cons for me is that it’s so far from any major universities. How did you manage to get your Masters while living up there?
sddreamingParticipantSan Diego is just a great place to live. I lived in SD for 15 years. I loved having out of town visitors over to share SD with. Taking a midwesterner to the mountains, the desert, and the beach in one day is a real trip.
I had clients visiting from Kansas City once. At the time I did a lot of sailing out of Harbor Island Yacht Club. For dinner I rented a sailboat and took them over to Peohe’s on Coronado Island. They were floored that they sailed to an island for dinner. Can’t do that in KC.
SD doesn’t have the shopping of OC. It doesn’t have the culture of NYC (lived there too). SD seems mostly to be burbs and strip malls that all look alike. But all in all it’s a great place to be, where it’s not at all hard to enjoy life.
BTW, Marion, lately I’ve been looking at Temecula instead of waiting longer for SD to turn around. One of the Temecula cons for me is that it’s so far from any major universities. How did you manage to get your Masters while living up there?
sddreamingParticipantSan Diego is just a great place to live. I lived in SD for 15 years. I loved having out of town visitors over to share SD with. Taking a midwesterner to the mountains, the desert, and the beach in one day is a real trip.
I had clients visiting from Kansas City once. At the time I did a lot of sailing out of Harbor Island Yacht Club. For dinner I rented a sailboat and took them over to Peohe’s on Coronado Island. They were floored that they sailed to an island for dinner. Can’t do that in KC.
SD doesn’t have the shopping of OC. It doesn’t have the culture of NYC (lived there too). SD seems mostly to be burbs and strip malls that all look alike. But all in all it’s a great place to be, where it’s not at all hard to enjoy life.
BTW, Marion, lately I’ve been looking at Temecula instead of waiting longer for SD to turn around. One of the Temecula cons for me is that it’s so far from any major universities. How did you manage to get your Masters while living up there?
sddreamingParticipantSan Diego is just a great place to live. I lived in SD for 15 years. I loved having out of town visitors over to share SD with. Taking a midwesterner to the mountains, the desert, and the beach in one day is a real trip.
I had clients visiting from Kansas City once. At the time I did a lot of sailing out of Harbor Island Yacht Club. For dinner I rented a sailboat and took them over to Peohe’s on Coronado Island. They were floored that they sailed to an island for dinner. Can’t do that in KC.
SD doesn’t have the shopping of OC. It doesn’t have the culture of NYC (lived there too). SD seems mostly to be burbs and strip malls that all look alike. But all in all it’s a great place to be, where it’s not at all hard to enjoy life.
BTW, Marion, lately I’ve been looking at Temecula instead of waiting longer for SD to turn around. One of the Temecula cons for me is that it’s so far from any major universities. How did you manage to get your Masters while living up there?
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