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February 10, 2011 at 3:50 PM in reply to: OT – Beach Culture. Florida, Texas, Hawaii, California? Which is best? #665120February 10, 2011 at 3:50 PM in reply to: OT – Beach Culture. Florida, Texas, Hawaii, California? Which is best? #665258
UCGal
Participant[quote=briansd1][quote=UCGal]What no mention of the Jersey Shore? Of course people don’t go “to the beach” they go “down the shore”.[/quote]
Good point. I still have not seen the TV show.[/quote]
Either have I.I was talking about the non-reality tv, but actual real life Jersey shore. My husband’s family has a bungalow (owned by several aunts/uncles – used by all the cousins, etc.) in North Wildwood. It’s a definite beach culture… but unrecognizable from what we would call beach culture. Folks migrate there for the season or for weekends. People buy shares in a rental (so you may be sharing a seasonal rental with 12 other people… and any friends they bring along.) Off season many of these towns become ghost towns.
Different towns have different cultures.
Cape May – quaint bed and breakfasts, lots of yuppies, very refined. Big money yachts.
Wildwood Crest – families, suburbia visitors.
Wildwood – lots of tatoo shops, a great boardwalk, drunk teenagers on weekends.
North Wildwood – somewhere between Wildwood and Wildwood Crest – more family oriented again – but watch out for the drunks on Irish weekend.
Stone Harbor Avalon, Sea Isle City – etc… Young yuppies. Folks with money who don’t want to deal with Wildwood. Again some serious dough in the marinas.
Ocean City, Margate, Ventnor… no these aren’t just properties on Monopoly…
Atlantic City – well… The donald likes it there.
Brigantine, Dover, Long Branch… I’m less familiar with the towns north of AC.
Etc… on up to New York.
Each town has it’s own culture.It’s a different beach culture than San Diego. But it still involves sand, waves, etc.
Where the Jersey shore has San Diego beat – there are roaming ice cream vendors on the beach… My kids have been trained to listen for the “fudgie wudgie” guy. I’m sure it’s against the law, here.
February 10, 2011 at 3:50 PM in reply to: OT – Beach Culture. Florida, Texas, Hawaii, California? Which is best? #665593UCGal
Participant[quote=briansd1][quote=UCGal]What no mention of the Jersey Shore? Of course people don’t go “to the beach” they go “down the shore”.[/quote]
Good point. I still have not seen the TV show.[/quote]
Either have I.I was talking about the non-reality tv, but actual real life Jersey shore. My husband’s family has a bungalow (owned by several aunts/uncles – used by all the cousins, etc.) in North Wildwood. It’s a definite beach culture… but unrecognizable from what we would call beach culture. Folks migrate there for the season or for weekends. People buy shares in a rental (so you may be sharing a seasonal rental with 12 other people… and any friends they bring along.) Off season many of these towns become ghost towns.
Different towns have different cultures.
Cape May – quaint bed and breakfasts, lots of yuppies, very refined. Big money yachts.
Wildwood Crest – families, suburbia visitors.
Wildwood – lots of tatoo shops, a great boardwalk, drunk teenagers on weekends.
North Wildwood – somewhere between Wildwood and Wildwood Crest – more family oriented again – but watch out for the drunks on Irish weekend.
Stone Harbor Avalon, Sea Isle City – etc… Young yuppies. Folks with money who don’t want to deal with Wildwood. Again some serious dough in the marinas.
Ocean City, Margate, Ventnor… no these aren’t just properties on Monopoly…
Atlantic City – well… The donald likes it there.
Brigantine, Dover, Long Branch… I’m less familiar with the towns north of AC.
Etc… on up to New York.
Each town has it’s own culture.It’s a different beach culture than San Diego. But it still involves sand, waves, etc.
Where the Jersey shore has San Diego beat – there are roaming ice cream vendors on the beach… My kids have been trained to listen for the “fudgie wudgie” guy. I’m sure it’s against the law, here.
February 10, 2011 at 3:30 PM in reply to: spin off – when is it a remodel, when is it a custom home #664449UCGal
ParticipantAnd is it semi-custom if it uses fiberglass windows? LOL
February 10, 2011 at 3:30 PM in reply to: spin off – when is it a remodel, when is it a custom home #664511UCGal
ParticipantAnd is it semi-custom if it uses fiberglass windows? LOL
February 10, 2011 at 3:30 PM in reply to: spin off – when is it a remodel, when is it a custom home #665115UCGal
ParticipantAnd is it semi-custom if it uses fiberglass windows? LOL
February 10, 2011 at 3:30 PM in reply to: spin off – when is it a remodel, when is it a custom home #665252UCGal
ParticipantAnd is it semi-custom if it uses fiberglass windows? LOL
February 10, 2011 at 3:30 PM in reply to: spin off – when is it a remodel, when is it a custom home #665588UCGal
ParticipantAnd is it semi-custom if it uses fiberglass windows? LOL
UCGal
ParticipantI did. Until I sold all my vinyl last year. After having my turntable disconnected from the stereo for 8 years, I decided it was time to get rid of the old LPs.
UCGal
ParticipantI did. Until I sold all my vinyl last year. After having my turntable disconnected from the stereo for 8 years, I decided it was time to get rid of the old LPs.
UCGal
ParticipantI did. Until I sold all my vinyl last year. After having my turntable disconnected from the stereo for 8 years, I decided it was time to get rid of the old LPs.
UCGal
ParticipantI did. Until I sold all my vinyl last year. After having my turntable disconnected from the stereo for 8 years, I decided it was time to get rid of the old LPs.
UCGal
ParticipantI did. Until I sold all my vinyl last year. After having my turntable disconnected from the stereo for 8 years, I decided it was time to get rid of the old LPs.
UCGal
ParticipantAre you in the bottom of a canyon, or top of a mesa? If you’re at a high point, flood insurance seems pointless.
As far as earthquake insurance… more info is needed. What year was the house built? Building standards have changed through the years – but most of the earthquake standards were in place form the mid 80’s on.
And, how close are you to fault lines.
http://www.sandiego.gov/development-services/hazards/hazardsmaps.shtmlFWIW – we live on a mesa above a canyon and don’t have flood insurance. And since my husband did his “seismic retrofit” to our early 60’s house, we canceled the earthquake insurance. (He added sheer walls, increased foundation bolts and strapping between 1st/2nd floor, added diagonal bracing… brought it up to better than current code.) He did all this because we’re pretty close to the Rose Canyon fault.
UCGal
ParticipantAre you in the bottom of a canyon, or top of a mesa? If you’re at a high point, flood insurance seems pointless.
As far as earthquake insurance… more info is needed. What year was the house built? Building standards have changed through the years – but most of the earthquake standards were in place form the mid 80’s on.
And, how close are you to fault lines.
http://www.sandiego.gov/development-services/hazards/hazardsmaps.shtmlFWIW – we live on a mesa above a canyon and don’t have flood insurance. And since my husband did his “seismic retrofit” to our early 60’s house, we canceled the earthquake insurance. (He added sheer walls, increased foundation bolts and strapping between 1st/2nd floor, added diagonal bracing… brought it up to better than current code.) He did all this because we’re pretty close to the Rose Canyon fault.
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