“See those gouges, where the ponds are?” He points to what look like two giant tank-tracks through the middle of the valley. “Those are what happened here the first time man interfered. In 1917, Teamsters cut the trees out of the valley to grow pasture to feed their cattle. That winter, storms came and gouged out those two ditches. Thirty feet deep and 70 feet wide. The valley has never fully recovered.
By Bill Manson, Oct. 6, 1994 | Read full article
I used to ride my horse at night to the top of one of the hills above Valley Center. When the weather was clear I could see the lights on the valley floor. Tonight from the same view I see my house as a light in the twinkling grid. As the drive to Escondido grows shorter and shorter each year. I’m shopping at the new stores by Lyle Songer’s ranch out on East Valley Parkway.
By Brandon Cesmat, April 26, 1984 | Read full article
I had spent only a day with the Verbooms, yet I came to respect and admire, even envy, them. What I had come here for was not the farm, I realized. I had no overwhelming nostalgia for my own past. I was looking for a family. but for one that embodied an ideal, an ideal that has a lot to do with fairness, and hard, honest work, and independence, and generosity, and integrity.
By Tom Lux, July 25, 1996 | Read full article
“That should be oak woodland over there. Instead that area has been used for grazing and the grass has taken over. You can see over to the right, in that rocky area which is too steep for the animals to walk in, the native foliage is still hanging on. That's what it should all be like. The Native Americans tell stories about being able to walk barefoot for hundreds of miles on the dirt between the bushes”
By Ernie Grimm, Apr 27, 2000 | Read full article
"You should see the casino [the Pala Band] are building up there," Verboom says. "It's the Taj Mahal. They're going to employ something like 1200 people. And they plan to open it in March. Then you've got three more coming: one in Rincon, one in Pauma Valley, and another one on the La Jolla Reservation. All that traffic has to come right up this road, and Caltrans has an easement right through our milking barns."
By Ernie Grimm, Dec. 7, 2000 | Read full article
Flying over North County, in the vicinity of Fallbrook Airpark, you can spot about 30 private and personal airstrips. One every few miles or so. Most are no more than a bulldozer’s wake of cleared brush with a huge X scored at either end. the owner’s message of “Closed” or “Keep Out.” Others are smooth and inviting. Of flawless blacktop, they serve the country clubs and the spiderlike hilltop homes of the gentry.
By Joe Applegate, May 24, 1990 | Read full article
“See those gouges, where the ponds are?” He points to what look like two giant tank-tracks through the middle of the valley. “Those are what happened here the first time man interfered. In 1917, Teamsters cut the trees out of the valley to grow pasture to feed their cattle. That winter, storms came and gouged out those two ditches. Thirty feet deep and 70 feet wide. The valley has never fully recovered.
By Bill Manson, Oct. 6, 1994 | Read full article
I used to ride my horse at night to the top of one of the hills above Valley Center. When the weather was clear I could see the lights on the valley floor. Tonight from the same view I see my house as a light in the twinkling grid. As the drive to Escondido grows shorter and shorter each year. I’m shopping at the new stores by Lyle Songer’s ranch out on East Valley Parkway.
By Brandon Cesmat, April 26, 1984 | Read full article
I had spent only a day with the Verbooms, yet I came to respect and admire, even envy, them. What I had come here for was not the farm, I realized. I had no overwhelming nostalgia for my own past. I was looking for a family. but for one that embodied an ideal, an ideal that has a lot to do with fairness, and hard, honest work, and independence, and generosity, and integrity.
By Tom Lux, July 25, 1996 | Read full article
“That should be oak woodland over there. Instead that area has been used for grazing and the grass has taken over. You can see over to the right, in that rocky area which is too steep for the animals to walk in, the native foliage is still hanging on. That's what it should all be like. The Native Americans tell stories about being able to walk barefoot for hundreds of miles on the dirt between the bushes”
By Ernie Grimm, Apr 27, 2000 | Read full article
"You should see the casino [the Pala Band] are building up there," Verboom says. "It's the Taj Mahal. They're going to employ something like 1200 people. And they plan to open it in March. Then you've got three more coming: one in Rincon, one in Pauma Valley, and another one on the La Jolla Reservation. All that traffic has to come right up this road, and Caltrans has an easement right through our milking barns."
By Ernie Grimm, Dec. 7, 2000 | Read full article
Flying over North County, in the vicinity of Fallbrook Airpark, you can spot about 30 private and personal airstrips. One every few miles or so. Most are no more than a bulldozer’s wake of cleared brush with a huge X scored at either end. the owner’s message of “Closed” or “Keep Out.” Others are smooth and inviting. Of flawless blacktop, they serve the country clubs and the spiderlike hilltop homes of the gentry.
By Joe Applegate, May 24, 1990 | Read full article
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