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The Pacific Ocean

San Diego Travel Blog › entry 1 of 12 › view all entries

I'll try to make this useful as a guide to the city if you come here for a visit. Let me know if you need something reviewed and I'll try to get it up... This is more like a set of reviews, but I have a lot of pictures and you're limited in the review section of the site : )
Just west of San Diego....
Lots of things to see underwater off San Diego. The water is cold, but not bad during the summer, or with a wetsuit year-round. Much of the shoreline is difficult for entry because of the surf, but there are a few sheltered areas with an easy entry. Of course any surf related inconvenience is mitigated by good surfing.

Snorkeling: head to La Jolla Cove. Sheltered entry and a kelp forest just feet from the shore. Swim around the rocks and big, friendly kelp bass will swim up and look into your mask. Bright orange garibaldi will follow you of their territories. A little deeper and you'll see bat rays and maybe giant seabass. As a bonus, there is a lifeguard who can give you the current conditions, and even free showers for washing off. Parking is really difficult though, so allow time to search, or come during a week day when everyone's at work..

Snorkeling with sharks: A ways to the south is the Marine Room restaurant. Park and sneak through the narrow ally on the left side. You'll end up on a sandy beach and you'll see hundreds of leopard sharks, guitarfish, and every kind of ray and skate on the sandy bottom in just a few feet of water between June and October. Shuffle your feet though when you walk in so you don't step on one of the hundreds of stingrays on the bottom in the waves.

Shore diving: Off of La Jolla Shores, a marine canyon drops to thousands of feet within an easy swim from the shore. Here you can see what comes up from the depths to the canyon rim at around 60 feet. A deeper wall at Scripps Canyon, just north of the Scripps pier is covered with life. Millions of squid lay eggs on the canyon edges in the winter and are quite a sight. La Jolla Cove is again a good sheltered entry point. You'll be surrounded by marine life from the shoreline out into the shallows and the canyon edge. The Cove attracts interesting visitors- 6-gill sharks, giant seabass, even gray whales have shown up in 30 feet of water there.

Offshore diving: There are a number of dive boats to charter for offshore diving. The best spots are the kelp forests off Point Loma, a series of sunken ships (artificial reefs), and the Los Coronados Islands. The water clarity can be challenging along the shore (usually 5-20 feet), but at the islands, a half hour offshore, you'll usually see the bottom 50 feet down. Not to mention seabird colonies, sea lions and elephant seals.

Even if you don't dive, make sure to rent a wetsuit, mask and fins from one of the many rental places near La Jolla shores and stick your head in the water. It's worth getting wet!
Leopard sharks in 3 feet of wate
Giant seabass and a kelp bass in
Curious kelp bass follow you in
Ok, the visibility isn't always
California giant kelp
HeatherHop says:
You know, I haven't done La Jolla Cove yet...I have my own snorkeling gear, and I keep meaning to go there, but never do. hmmm maybe that will be tomorrow's activity...but maybe not, considering all the tourist traffic right now. Maybe sometime this week after work.....
Posted on: Aug 01, 2009
Jelly says:
This looks so stinking fun!!
Posted on: Jun 17, 2008
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California - Asian food in the Gaslamp Quarter
Some of the best food downtown. Asian- California fusion. There is one in Orange County as well.

It looks like a bar, dark with hip stainless steel, red lights, booths nestled in various corners, but it's a restaurant. Everything on the menu is good, and not something you've tried before...

Last time was Roasted Chili Yunnan Yams, Strawberry-Cinnamon Ribs, Hot & Sour Jungle Shellfish Curry shared- each better than the last!

Open until midnight, important in the Gaslamp Quarter!

Invite me if you eat there...
lisa says:
hahaha i love vances' comment. this place sounds interesting! i've never heard of it before!
Posted on: May 01, 2009
vances says:
Sounds excellent - though 'hip stainless steel' makes me think about joint replacement, lol.

:^)
Posted on: Jan 24, 2009
All of the good beaches in San Diego - an ongoing project...
The big reason you're coming to San Diego is probably... the beaches. Good news is that by law all California beaches are free and must have public access!

I'll try to get some descriptions in here, but for my friends who have asked, here's at least a list of good ones to get you started, from south to north. I'll rate them with 1 to 3 stars *** You can print this out as a guide.

___________________________________________________________________

*Imperial Beach: sort of a forgotten beach area near the Mexican border. It's the same sun and sand as up north, but can be a whole lot cheaper to stay beachfront. Unfortunately, beaches are closed a lot in the winter for water quality problems, but not a problem during the summer since it never rains

***Coronado: Cross the Coronado Bay Bridge to "Coronado Island" (really a sand spit). Coronado is basically all beach- ocean on one side, bay on the other. Beautiful sand beaches, in front of the Hotel Del Coronado is nice. The beaches around the city of Coronado are free, there's a nice beach in the middle is a state beach and has a fee, but has facilities and lifeguards. The rest is a military base, marked No Entry, and I of course have never been to that part : )

***Point Loma - bay side: There are a couple tiny "secret" beaches on the Bay side of the point, very quiet and uncrowded.

-at the Shelter Island Boat Launch is a little beach with fire rings. Sweet - no one uses them! Anywhere else in the city you have to stake out a ring early in the morning to use it at night.

-Kellogg Beach. Follow Rosecrans out to Kellogg Street. Usually deserted, you can launch kayaks, swim, fish, and watch the ships inter the harbor.

***Ocean Beach: Just north of downtown (see my Ocean Beach review). Nice wide laid back beach with a surfing, a really long pier, and a cool beach community with taco shops and street bars right on the shore. Surf shops and rental places will set you up. Free fire pits for a night time bonfire. Watch your step on Dog Beach at the far north end : )

*Mission Bay: Skip the beaches on Mission Bay unless you're boating, kind of a stinky, man-made "aquatic recreation area" dredged in the 60s from a salt marsh. Fiesta Island is kind of cool at night, there are plenty of places to have a bonfire or barbecue, even when the beaches are full. On the water you can ski, jetski, sail - you can rent about anything there.

*Mission Beach: the shore is beach party central- wide sandy beach lined with rental condos, apartments, and taco shops. This is where you live with your 14 roommates in 2 rooms when you're in school. Don't trip over the empty kegs...

**Pacific Beach: This is a wide, sandy beach packed with a sea of bikinis, volleyball nets, towels, and umbrellas during the summer, probably the most popular beach. The Boardwalk runs along the beach head- skateboards, bikes, rollerblades... bring something with wheels or get run over. The beach-side community is loaded with bars, clubs, restaurants, and surf shops. Parking is impossible except on the coldest days...

***Windandsea: A hard to find little paradise in an upscale residential area. You'll swear you're in the tropics with sugar sand beach, turquoise water, nice surf. The beach is just south of La Jolla with access through a grassy little park. Google "Neptune Place", the nearest street. Pretty hard to find, but worth it.

***La Jolla (along the cliffs): This is the rocky section of our coastline below the ritzy community of La Jolla. This is the best dive and snorkeling spot in southern California (see my Pacific Ocean review). See the seal colony at the Children's Pool, snorkel or swim at La Jolla Cove, explore the sea caves to the north. There are little sandy beaches to be had between the rocky points, and an ocean front walk and park along the top of the cliffs. There are even free showers at La Jolla Cove. The only bad part is the parking, you just have to keep circling.... It's worth it though.

***The Marine Room: One of my favorite beaches. You can get to it by parking near the Marine Room restaurant in La Jolla (google it). There's a secret little alley on the left of the restaurant that leads to the beach. It's a lot less crowded and there's usually parking. Really small surf and a kayak launch. In the summer you can see hundreds of harmless leopard sharks in just a few feet of water. Really great snorkeling. Only down sides area that Kayak schools kind of take the water over in the summer, and the beach submerges at really high tides.

***La Jolla Shores: Another wildly popular, wide, sandy beach just north of La Jolla. 200,000 people can visit on a summer weekend. Not bad during the winter. There is a huge beach rental industry here, you can get lessons on everything from surfing to diving, sea kayaking, snorkeling... You'll see the flotilla of hundreds of kayakers offshore some days. More info in my Pacific Ocean review. Well equipped with lifeguards, restrooms, even free outdoor showers to rinse the sand off. Fire pits for bonfires, but hard to get during the summer.

*Black's: Difficult to find or access, best known as San Diego's only nude beach (don't get too excited, think 60 year old gay men). Either risk climbing down a 300-foot cliff, or walk waaaaay back at low tide from Torrey Pines to the north.

***Torrey Pines State Park: Named after an endemic coastal pine tree that grows only at this spot. This is a fun place- hike the trails through the hills above the cliff. Better, park at the state beach just to the north, take a walk south along the beach, then climb the trail up through the park back to the parking lot. Good surfing.

**Torry Pines State Beach: Nice, uncrowded sandy beach along the Pacific Coast highway (101). Lots of parking and access to the State Park to the north.

*Del Mar and Solana Beach beaches: Nice beach, but difficult access because of the high cliffs.

**San Elijo: on Highway 101 between Loma Santa Fe and Manchester Ave. This is a good, uncrowded beach for sitting or body surfing, lots of parking and some good restaurants you can walk to across the Highway (try Los Olas!) Like many north county beaches, the sand can wash away in the winter leaving cobbles, but not always.

Cardiff State Beach: San Diego has these linear state beach campgrounds that are basically parking lots along the cliff tops with hookups for camping. There are numerous trails and stairs leading down to nice beaches below. Decent surf, nice sand.

**Carlsbad State Beach: Another linear campground. Cheap camping on the cliffs above a nice beach. Set up for motorhomes, trailers (caravans), or tents. Make reservations well in advance- months in the summer, weeks in the winter

**Tamarak: an huge, wide, sandy beach running for miles. More family oriented than the southern beaches and quieter. Accessed from Tamarak Avenue off the freeway. Where all the kids from the inland towns hang out. Good surf.

**Oceanside: Miles of wide, sandy beach (though sometimes cobble during the winter). Oceanside is like Imperial Beach at the top of the review, nice beaches, less expensive community to stay in. Really long fishing pier in the middle, little harbor at the north end.

**San Onofre State Beach: Like Carlsbad and Cardiff, a campground on cliffs above a beach. This one is interesting, it's part of an inholding along with a nuclear power plant in the middle of a huge military reservation. No other public access from Oceanside to the Orange County border. Really nice beach, make reservations really early. Careful you specify camping on the beach rather than the other part of the campground across the freeway.


More beaches, a map, and pictures coming soon...

The Children's Pool at La Jolla
Kellogg Beach in Point Loma - sh
Ocean Beach
Surf from the Ocean Beach Pier
Leopard sharks at Marine Room
North county beaches are nice, b
Seals at La Jolla Cove
Wide beach at Oceanside Pier, em
Big surf off Pacific Beach in th
HeatherHop says:
You were able to review quite a few of them!
Posted on: Aug 01, 2009
cneoridium says:
I forgot all about this project, I was going to keep adding to it!
Posted on: May 01, 2009
lisa says:
oh, i was about to comment but i guess i already did! haha, well i still think this is an awesome post. funny and thorough! high five.
Posted on: Apr 30, 2009
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