Encinitas advocate 06 09 17

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Volume 3, Issue 41

June 9, 2017

Coast Highway project wins first permit approval

Community

Cancer survivor hopes to spread positivity at Scripps Encinitas event.A3

Lifestyle

BY BARBARA HENRY A proposal to build a system of sand dunes to protect Coast Highway 101 in south Encinitas from coastal flooding and erosion cleared its first hurdle last week. On June 1, the Encinitas Planning Commission approved a permit for the plan, which now heads to the state Coastal Commission. The goal is to have construction begin in January and conclude before Memorial Day 2018. "It is a unique project for the state — a lot of people have eyes on it," said consulting engineer Brian Leslie. He said he'll submit the paperwork to the Coastal Commission this week. Coast Highway 101 dips as it approaches the city’s Cardiff neighborhood, where the road and nearby restaurant parking lots often get inundated during big storms that cause the tide to swell. Plans call for a series of what are termed "living" sand dunes — huge hummocks covered with native plants — to SEE DUNES, A15

Alleged kidnapping attempt unverified so far, authorities say

■ See inside for a variety of photos of community events.

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BY BRITTANY WOOLSEY Authorities say an alleged attempted kidnapping case at Park Dale Elementary on June 6 is still unverified (as of press- time for this newspaper). The Encinitas Union School District in an email June 7 warned Park Dale Elementary parents about a possible attempted kidnapping that happened at the school the day before. Principal Erin Terry informed school staff and parents that an unknown woman allegedly approached a student and told him, "Your mom told me to pick you up." The student did not recognize the woman and ran away, according to the email. Terry said immediately after learning of the incident, she informed the student's family. The parents made a report to authorities,

according to Terry's email. But the San Diego County Sheriff's Department said there is not enough evidence to justify if an attempted kidnapping did take place since no one else saw the woman. "We cannot substantiate an attempted kidnapping occurred at this point but the investigation is ongoing and detectives are following up," said Detective Sgt. Joe Tomaiko. The female suspect was described by Terry as pale, Caucasian, 5'7", with brown straight hair and was last seen wearing a dress. In the email, Terry said additional supervision would be provided before and after school. "I know this incident is frightening and I would like to assure you that we take our student safety very seriously and it is a top priority," she said.

Glow in the flow

BRITTANY WOOLSEY

Scott Leason, a world champion blind surfer, and his coach Pat Weber amp up volunteers at a Blind Surf event at South Ponto Beach in Carlsbad on June 4.

Blind surfers ride the waves in Carlsbad “ W ”

BY BRITTANY WOOLSEY hen Nicole Bissett returned to her home of San Diego after a year away for work, she knew the beach would be one of the first places she would visit. On June 4, she climbed on her surfboard, paddled out in the water and stood up, catching waves and feeling free from life's stresses. She felt happy and safe, even though she was in complete darkness. Bissett has been legally blind since birth. The Mira Mesa woman began surfing a few years ago with the San Diego Blind Community Center, and took part in a the 22nd annual Blind Surf event on Sunday, June 4, at South Ponto Beach in Carlsbad. "I gotta have me some beach. I love it. It feels great, nice and refreshing to have some time outside. I love anything to do with the ocean," she said. "Everybody thinks, 'Oh, you're blind. You're in a prison of darkness.' It's not like that. It's all in what you make it and your attitude toward life. If you want to feel sorry for yourself, sure, that option is there. But

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PAGE A2 - JUNE 9, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

City hires contractor for Birmingham Drive project

BY BRITTANY WOOLSEY The City of Encinitas entered an agreement June 7 with a contractor to design the Birmingham Drive Complete Streets Improvement Project. The city council approved a contract with Michael Baker International in the amount of $748,000 plus 20 percent contingencies to redesign Birmingham through Cardiff. “With Birmingham Drive being a neighborhood collector street corridor with a significant amount of pedestrian and bicycle usage, it is a prime candidate for a complete streets improvement project,” a city document reads. City staff said several issues on the street need to be addressed, including: utility poles that should be undergrounded to improve aesthetics and so residents can enjoy panoramic views of the ocean; adding ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act) compliant sidewalks and ramps for pedestrians to use on both sides of the street; adding a bike lane (dedicated or shared); constructing a roundabout to improve safety at Birmingham Drive and Newcastle Drive, an

BRITTANY WOOLSEY

City staff says a horizontal curve at Birmingham Drive and Newcastle Drive creates a potential safety hazard. A roundabout in the area has been proposed. area that has a horizontal curve and has additional traffic movements from the retail parking at the southerly corners; planting bioretention areas between the curb and sidewalk for

runoff; extending a reclaimed water line to provide recycled water opportunities for both Cardiff Elementary School and Glen Park; and rehabilitating the pavement, which has not been improved since the city was incorporated in 1986. The city in March received proposals from eight contractors but ultimately decided to work with Michael Baker International, which has been involved in similar projects in San Diego County, including Encinitas’ North Coast Highway 101 Streetscape project. “In their proposal, Michael Baker International proposed some innovative design alternatives that will help minimize right-of-way impacts to adjacent private properties, expedite the environmental permitting process and help get the project out to construction sooner,” according to a city staff report. City staff anticipates the design and permitting will be completed by mid-August 2018, and the project will go out to bid for construction at that time. Based on that timeline, construction could go from November 2018 to April 2020.

Rancho Santa Fe slaying ‘savage and brutal,’ prosecutor says

BY J. HARRY JONES A man suspected of beating his father to death in the victim’s sprawling Rancho Santa Fe home pleaded not guilty on Friday, June 2, to charges of first-degree murder, with a special allegation of torture. Leighton Dorey IV, 39, was arrested early Wednesday, May 31, in Idyllwild, a mountain town about 100 miles north of Rancho Santa Fe where his father’s body was discovered the previous day. Vista Superior Court Judge Cynthia Freeland ordered Dorey held without bail after a prosecutor described a “savage, brutal” killing.

Leighton Dorey III was strangled during a beating so ferocious that his spine was fractured in three places, his skull was cracked, his ribs on both sides were broken and his face was cut in multiple spots, Deputy District Attorney Paul Greenwood said. He said even experienced homicide detectives described the scene as one of the most brutal they had ever come across. The special allegation of torture means it is possible the death penalty could be sought in the case. That decision will not be made for some time, Greenwood said. The prosecutor added that father and son had a well-documented “fractious”

relationship for years. He said Tuesday morning, May 30, the victim’s wife — the younger Dorey’s stepmother — left the house at 9 a.m., then called home about two hours later to check on her husband who told her his son had arrived unexpectedly. She rushed back to the house within 15 minutes and found a Jeep in the driveway and her husband dead in the home. After calling 911, she noticed the Jeep was gone. The son had been living in France over the last several years and returned to the U.S. two weeks ago using airfare paid for by his mother, who lives on the East Coast and was

described by Greenwood as wealthy. Greenwood said the woman purchased the Jeep for her son and he then drove it to California. Dorey IV had been living in Europe, mostly in France, and was a freelance computer programmer. A former employer said the father and son had a rocky relationship, but added that their troubles didn’t seem out of the ordinary. Greenwood said the victim’s wife and other siblings have been afraid of the younger Dorey for years. – J. Harry Jones is a writer for The San Diego Union-Tribune

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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - JUNE 9, 2017 - PAGE A3

Cancer survivor hopes to spread positivity at Scripps Encinitas event

La Jolla Cultural Partners

BY BRITTANY WOOLSEY For Dennis Baca, a cancer diagnosis did not mean all hope was lost. It was a chance for experts to fix a problem and for him to inspire others. Last August, the tow truck driver began experiencing severe exhaustion, which he attributed to a persistent cough. He decided to visit a doctor, who ordered blood tests and soon after informed Baca he had colorectal cancer and had likely been unknowingly fighting it for about two years. He underwent surgery the next day. “My reaction was, ‘You found it, you know what to do with it, you know how to fix it,’” said 59-year-old Baca, who lives in Oceanside. “In the meantime, my wife was breaking down completely. With me still being upbeat about things, it helped both of us.” Baca’s surgeon, Dr. Ujwala Rajgopal, general surgeon at Scripps Memorial Hospital Encinitas, commended Baca for his attitude. “He had a remarkably calm demeanor, in spite of knowing that he had a large mass in his colon,” she said. Baca is hoping to spread that positivity by sharing his story at a public cancer survivors day event June 24 at Scripps Memorial Hospital Encinitas. The event takes place from 10 a.m. to noon at the Scripps Encinitas Conference Center, 354 Santa Fe Drive. It will include stories from survivors, presentations on advances in cancer care and research, complimentary brunch and live entertainment. Baca said he wants people to “understand that [cancer] is not such a bad thing after all.” “When people get told they have cancer,

their day, all of a sudden, goes to crap,” he said. “I understand that. That’s the day someone said you had a problem, but they could also fix it. That’s actually not such a bad day. That’s a pretty good day in my world.” Baca completed chemotherapy treatments about three months ago and is currently attending follow-up appointments and scans. Even through the treatment, he’s kept up an active lifestyle, going on six-mile hikes and picking up an amateur radio hobby as part of his volunteer work with Oceanside’s emergency response team. He said he’s able to continue living his life, even with all of the appointments, because of his positive attitude. “It helps kicks things down the road a lot easier and faster,” he said. The hardest thing for him, he said, was following instructions to take six months off work. He hopes to return to work sometime this year. Rajgopal encourages people to receive colorectal cancer screening when they turn 50. “Colorectal cancer is preventable if it is caught early, when it is a polyp,” she said. “Once a polypectomy is done, that particular polyp will never become cancer as it is resected. Colonoscopy is the gold standard. It is completed within half an hour. However, if it is not possible to get a colonoscopy done, any form of colorectal screening is better than no screening. There are a variety of other methods for screening with radiology virtual colonography and stool DNA tests. It is important to get the screening done and follow up on the results with the doctor.”

COURTESY

Cancer survivor Dennis Baca breathes a sigh of relief on the Friday after surgery at Scripps Memorial Hospital Encinitas.

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PAGE A4 - JUNE 9, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

Students act up against bullying in Positive Community Action Theatre BY BARBARA HENRY Rachel Redmon says she knows for certain that the skits performed by Positive Community Action Theatre — showing “social bullies” using cruel words, cell phone recordings and insider knowledge to torment fellow classmates — reflect real life. She wrote the dialogue based on her own experience in middle school, she said. “Everyone was picking on me,” 14-year-old Rachel recalled in an interview two weeks ago, after a rehearsal for the theater group, which offers year-round workshops in improvisational theater and performing arts to teens and young adults on the autism spectrum. She said her encounter with bullying began when someone she thought of as a friend started spreading false rumors about her. Eventually, things escalated to the point that many of her classmates were ostracizing her and she was eating her lunches in the counseling office to escape the bullying behavior. Ultimately, Rachel said, she transferred out of the school. Kathryn Campion founded the Positive Community Action Theatre in 2008 and serves as the company’s director. She said she came up with the idea for the traveling troupe and its “Beyond Bullying” production after reading a news story about a bullied teen who committed suicide. “I was aware that people with autism get bullied more than most because they ‘seem different,’” she said in an email interview. “I was myself bullied in middle school and know from personal experience the harm it can do.” Sandy Redmon, the company’s artistic director and Rachel’s mother, said kids with autism can be “a bit more of a target” for bullies, so the theater training is helpful for them. But several teens in the production said they didn’t think having autism —- a developmental disorder that impairs people’s ability to communicate and interact with others —- made bullies target them. Rachel, who describes herself as on the autism spectrum but extremely high

BILL WECHTER

Jovyn Anderson, 18, center, plays the part of a student being bullied while other actors, from left, Eli Anderson, 14, Jacob Redmon, 20, and David Frieder, 25, portray his tormentors during a rehearsal of Positive Action Community Theatre in Encinitas. functioning, said bullying can happen to anyone and many people are surprised when she tells them she has autism. “A lot people don’t notice, they can’t tell,” she said. Eighteen-year-old Jovyn Anderson, who also has autism, said that he can recall being bullied when he was in kindergarten and first grade, but, like Rachel, he thinks it can happen to anyone. Anderson, who is now homeschooled, acted as the “victim” when the troupe rehearsed a skit last week about how some boys use physical bullying techniques — shoving, hitting and grabbing the victim’s possessions — to intimidate people they see as weak. In the first act, he cringes back from one bully and plaintively asks him, “Why do you pick on me? I never do anything to you.”

Later, at the end of the 90-minute production — which also includes film clips and quotations from famous people — the actors revisit the physical bullying skit. Anderson stands up straight in what’s described as a “superman” power position with his feet spread apart and his shoulders thrown back. He jokes that he’s “only an aspiring nerd” who is “flattered” to be called a full nerd by the biggest bully, and he yanks his arm back when bullies tried to grab his stuff. “I did end up becoming friends with one my bullies,” he said after the rehearsal concluded. In the last two months, Anderson and the other members of the troupe have performed their “Beyond Bullying” production at Pacific Ridge School in Carlsbad, San Dieguito High School

Academy in Encinitas and the Boys & Girls Clubs of San Dieguito. The group has six members —- four young people with autism and two volunteer mentor teens who do not have it. They’ll give a performance for the general public from 7 to 8:30 p.m. on June 11 in the ballroom at Dance County North, 535 Encinitas Blvd., Suite 101, Encinitas. And, they’re available for new bookings at area schools, Campion said. The production has been funded through the California Arts Council and the National Endowment for the Arts, so the performances are free. Campion said her long-range goal is to eventually have the traveling troupe become independent and earn an income from its performances. — Barbara Henry is a freelance writer in Encinitas for The San Diego Union-Tribune.

Walk for Sobriety to raise awareness June 17

BY BRITTANY WOOLSEY An event will raise awareness for those who are sober, going through recovery and their families. The fifth annual 5K Walk for Sobriety, hosted by the McAlister Institute, will take place June 17 at NTC Park at Liberty Station. Shane Poppen, board member of the McAlister Institute, believes this is an important event. “The Walk for Sobriety is an opportunity to bring help and hope to thousands of individuals and families braving the unforgiving cycle of addiction,” the Encinitas resident said, adding he has known people in his own life who have battled addiction. “Our goal is to save lives and beat addiction by illuminating the path to recovery and ensuring affordable, quality treatment for every individual and family who needs us.” He described the vibe for the day as “electric,” with hundreds of people who are in recovery or their supporters joining together to raise awareness. Tommy Sablan, producer of Jeff and the Show on KyXy, will serve as emcee. Proceeds from the event benefit the McAlister Institute, one of San Diego’s leading resources to help people and

families affected by addition. “Your tax-deductible donation helps bring life-saving services in substance abuse treatment, mental health counseling, life skills education, and vocational training to individuals who could not otherwise afford help,” Poppen said. The walk has raised more than $200,000 since it was launched in 2012. “Our goal is to save lives and beat addiction by illuminating the path to recovery and ensuring affordable, quality treatment for every individual and family who needs us,” said Jeanne McAlister, founder and CEO of McAlister Institute, in a statement. “Since 1977, hundreds of thousands of individuals suffering from addiction have passed through the doors of McAlister Institute, and not one of them – not one – has chosen to become an addict, any more than a person chooses to contract cancer or heart disease. In the same way, treatment solutions shouldn’t discriminate who gets help. That’s why we keep our doors open to everyone.” It will begin at 8 a.m. on June 17. People can sign up ahead of the event at http://bit.ly/2rXWZH6 or on the day. Individual registration costs between $5 and $35.

COURTESY

Attendees participate in a past Walk for Sobriety event.


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Ask the

ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - JUNE 9, 2017 - PAGE A5

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TOP 10 QUESTIONS PEOPLE H AVE A BOUT ACUPUNCTURE What problems can be treated with acupuncture and how would you describe this traditional form of Chinese medicine? People come in for a variety of concerns. Acupuncture can help with anxiety and stress, back pain, allergies and skin conditions. It is based on the belief that a person’s health depends on the smooth flow of energy in the body called Qi (pronounced Chee). Emotional or physical pain may occur if the energy is blocked. If Qi is moving better, you can think clearer and have more energy. Not only can this relieve pain, but it can help you achieve overall health.

Can I combine acupuncture with treatments such as massage and chiropractic care and do I need to believe in acupuncture for it to work? Yes, each has its own benefits and acupuncture often complements other treatments. Acupuncture has been practiced for centuries. You don’t need to believe it, but it really works!

What is your background? I learned about Chinese herbs at a young age from my family who has been in the herb pharmacy business for three generations. After studying Chinese and Western medicine in China, I came to the U.S. in 1990. I’ve operated other acupuncture businesses and two years ago I opened Acupuncture4U in Encinitas.

Do you treat pregnant women and children? I’ve helped patients from two to 98. We’ve treated pregnant women throughout their pregnancies with problems such as morning sickness and fatigue. Children who come in may want help with sinus problems, digestion and the common cold. Some have also come in to treat anxiety, depression and concentration.

Do the needles hurt? Tiny, thin needles are inserted throughout the body to help with energy flow. The needles are as fine as a strand of hair and flexible. I find that most patients feel no pain at all and others feel minimal discomfort when the needles are inserted.

How many treatments will I need and can I treat more than one health issue? It depends on the individual and what the issue is. Sometimes a few treatments are needed, while chronic conditions usually take longer to address. We often treat multiple problems at the same time.

Is there anything I need to do before or after receiving a treatment? We recommend eating before coming in but not too close to the appointment. After treatment, it is fine to resume your daily activity. Patients usually feel more relaxed and some even feel energized.

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PAGE A6 - JUNE 9, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

‘Win Place Show’ leaves gate with a crowded field

BY SEBASTIAN MONTES That one bet in 1970 still stands, all these years later, as Helen Watts’ biggest payout — and her most momentous. The 50-1 longshot bankrolled her and her husband’s bid that summer for the Del Mar home she lives in to this day. Every summer that followed, Watts and her husband devoted their days to Del Mar, never missing a season until her husband died last year. And now, the 84-year-old is hoping to beat the odds again and become one of 16 contestants who will battle it out this summer in the TV competition “Win Place Show.” “I’ve been doing this for about 60 years, and now I have lots of time and no responsibilities,” she said with a sly smile. More than 100 hopefuls — from seasoned handicappers to total newbies — lined up on Saturday, May 27, in Surfside Race Place to talk their way onto “Win Place Show.” The selected 16 contestants will break into two-man teams and battle it out every weekend of the race season over nine episodes until one team is standing. Then, in the finale, the duo will face off on Sept. 3. Episodes begin airing on Sept. 5, the day after race season closes. Hosted by Jimmy “The Hat” Allard and co-produced by Ben Dominguez — Peabody Award and multiple Emmy winner — the show will reach nearly 60 million households on TVG and TVG2, the world’s foremost horse-racing TV network. The broadcast is fulfilling the years-long mission that director and executive producer Francine Filsinger has devoted herself to: propelling the San Diego region to its rightful place as a film and TV hotspot. Filsinger, an Encinitas resident of nearly two decades, counts among her many accomplishments having helped catalyze last year’s relaunch of the San Diego Film Office. Eighty percent of the “Win Place Show” crew hails from San Diego. “That’s part of why this is so exciting to me as a filmmaker in the San Diego region, it’s truly a national and worldwide production. We haven’t had that in a long time,” she said.

Helen Watts was among the 100 people on May 27 vying to become 16 contestants on “Win Place Show,” which will film this summer at the Del Mar Racetrack.

Chase Bushor is trying to parlay his childhood at Del Mar Racetrack into a big payoff on “Win Place Show.”

“This is really an organically-created production, and Del Mar was the perfect backdrop for that. It’s a beautiful, iconic race track with incredible history. It has this very romantic feel that I love.” Having grown up only a few furlongs from the track, Chase Bushor and Brian Finley – who are also among those who auditioned for the show – have that feel practically in their blood. And their love of handicapping, too. The duo of Santa Fe Christian alums — now rising seniors at the University of Southern California — weren’t averse to skipping the occasional class or two in high school if it meant an afternoon ingratiating themselves among the seasoned regulars at the track. But it’s the summer race season that really gets their blood going. “Opening day, for me, is a full-on holiday,” Finley says. “I think it’s the greatest day of the year. We’d just sit right on the fence on the inside of the track. My dad would

give me two bucks a race. I’d hit the occasional winner and it was just like the greatest day of my life.” That may have started even earlier for Bushor, since before he can actually remember — the 2-year-old in the stroller from his family photos. But his first big payout, that does jog his memory. “I won my first big bet when I was 4,” he says. “I hit the superfecta and it paid something like $600, and I walked out of there cash in hand.” To hear them tell it, handicapping at Del Mar is the only way they can imagine spending their summers. “There is not a better track in America,” said Chase, who has staked himself at Santa Anita, Churchill Downs, Los Alamos and the former Hollywood Park. “It’s not even comparable. None of those are anywhere close to Del Mar.” The 16 contestants will be announced as early as this week. For more information, visit www.pennslaneent.com

PHOTOS BY SEBASTIAN MONTES

Dad has a thousand fond memories of you. Let’s make 1,001. Father’s Day Weekend

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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - JUNE 9, 2017 - PAGE A7

CCA grad wins Emmy College Television award BY BRITTANY WOOLSEY A woman who attended Canyon Crest Academy has been honored with a prestigious filmmaking award. Becky Prolman, 25, a Chapman University graduate, won the Children's Television Programming distinction at the Emmy College Television Awards on May 24 for her senior project titled "A Taylor's Story." The award was presented to her by popular television personality and scientist Bill Nye. The film, in which Prolman served as executive producer, follows a 15-year-old girl with cancer who spends Halloween night out with her friends. She decides whether to go through with an experimental trial treatment or spend her last days living life to the fullest, Prolman said. "The film was written by the director, Alex Yonks, and I was drawn to produce this film because the story touched my heart," Prolman said, adding it took eight months to produce. "We made it our goal to raise additional funds to donate to St. Jude Children’s Hospital, and were able to donate $2,000. It was important to both myself and the director to give back to the community through the making of the film." Prolman — who first got into filmmaking while attending CCA, where she graduated from in 2010 — said she was encouraged by a faculty member at Chapman to submit "A

Taylor's Story" into the contest. "The faculty at Chapman does a great job of helping us find contests and festivals that are a good fit for our films," she said. "It is an absolute honor to have won and have the work recognized by professionals in the film and television industry." Madeline Di Nonno, chair of the Television Academy Foundation, said in a press release that the College Television Awards aims to recognize "the exceptional work of these diverse students and leverage our platform to spotlight the next generation of creators and executives in the television industry." In a recorded interview with Nye following her award, Prolman said she hopes to work more with social emotional learning in her films because she believes children should learn how to understand their feelings, how to communicate their feelings and how to have compassion for others. Currently, she is pursuing a job with a company that teaches social emotional learning to children and teens. She said she wants to create films and television shows that "act as a catalyst for positive change in our society." To see a video of Prolman accepting her award, visit http://bit.ly/2rv2snC. To view her interview with Nye, visit http://bit.ly/2stccvT.

COURTESY

Becky Prolman, 25, a CCA graduate and Chapman University graduate, won the Children's Television Programming distinction at the Emmy College Television Awards on May 24 for her senior project titled "A Taylor's Story."

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San Dieguito River Valley Conservancy to host new ‘Watershed Explorers Experiences’ The San Dieguito River Valley Conservancy (SDRVC) recently announced a new nature-adventure program called “Watershed Explorers Experiences.” Said Trish Boaz, executive director of the SDRVC, “This is part of our Watershed Explorers Program that we developed with several of our partners to highlight the wonders of the San Dieguito River watershed—something the whole family can enjoy together.” The programs to date are as follows: June 17: Lake Hodges Family Adventure including kayaking and hiking, in partnership with Outdoor Outreach; June 24: Hodges and Horses. A short hike from Lake Hodges to

Freedom song Ranch to see Andalusian horses, a very special pony, and some new foals; explore a nature trail on the property; July 15: The Science of Flight at the Birdwing Open Air Classroom, in partnership with the Living Coast Discovery Center; Sept. 9: Raptors at the Birdwing Open Air Classroom, in partnership with the Sky Hunters; Oct. 28: Radical Reptiles at the Birdwing Open Air Classroom, in partnership with the Living Coast Discovery Center; March 10, 2018: Seashore Splash at the Birdwing Open Air Classroom, in partnership with the Living Coast Discovery Center. For more information or to register, visit www.sdrvc.org

Peter Pupping to hold guitar classes Noted Encinitas-based guitar performer and teacher Peter Pupping is inviting guitarists of all genres to improve their skills, musicianship and technique with hands-on teaching and musical training in a small group setting. The class will focus on improving chord vocabulary, music reading, scales and improvisation for intermediate through advanced students. The class will meet for six Mondays from 7 to 9:30 p.m. at Ranch View Baptist Church, 416 Rancho Santa Fe Rd., in Encinitas, beginning Monday, June 12 and ending July 24. There is no class July 3. Participation is $225, and includes course materials. “We find that students who play and perform in a small group setting improves musicianship, while everyone learns from other guitarists’ challenges,” Pupping said.

“Our environment is supportive, low-key and fun, and our students always end up stretching their skills.” Pupping has been teaching and performing in Southern California for more than 30 years. His band, the Peter Pupping Band, has released several CDs and performed countless professional concerts. Pupping earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in music from San Diego State University. In addition to teaching private lessons, recording and performing, he organizes and directs the Encinitas Guitar Orchestra twice each year. For more information, contact Peter Pupping at Guitar Sounds, (760) 815-5616 or peter@guitarsounds.com, or register at www.encinitasguitarorchestra.com on the registration tabs. — Submitted press release

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PAGE A8 - JUNE 9, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

Cardiff Library presents scholarships

T

he Friends of the Cardiff-by-the-Sea Library presented four $1,500 scholarships to local graduating seniors on June 3 in the Cardiff-by-the-Sea Library community room. All awardees have

submitted an essay addressing how their library experiences have influenced their lives and educations, as well as two letters of recommendation from non-family members. Online: www.encinitasadvocate.com

Encinitas Mayor Catherine S. Blakespear, Friends of the Cardiff-by-the-Sea Library Vice President Irene Kratzer, President Lisa Bentson, Director Jenny Paschal, board member Susan Hays, board member Gunilla Garcia

San Diego County Library Deputy Director Donna Ohr, Friends of the Cardiff-by-the-Sea Library Director Jenny Paschal, Guiliana F. Carder (will be attending Boston University), Ana and Marshall Carder, grandparents Fran and Brooks Carder PHOTOS BY MCKENZIE IMAGES

Friends of the Cardiff-by-the-Sea Library President Lisa Bentson, Director Jenny Paschal, Sophia Kazmierowicz (will be attending Stanford), Encinitas Mayor Catherine S. Blakespear

Jacob, Dave and Melissa Clark, Kate Lee Clark (will be attending UC Irvine), Encinitas Mayor Catherine S. Blakespear

Friends of the Cardiff-by-the-Sea Library President Lisa Bentson, Andrew Vincent Naimark (will be attending UC Berkeley), Patricia and David Naimark

Crystal Apple Awards honor 10 teachers in local school districts Ten teachers, one from each of the represented middle and high schools of the San Dieguito and Rancho Santa Fe school districts, were honored for their excellence in teaching at the 24th Annual Crystal Apple Awards on May 18. The Del Mar Stake, a local branch of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, has hosted this event annually at the Del Mar Stake building in Carmel Valley since 1994. The award ceremony, which is open to the public, included San Dieguito Union High School District’s board president Amy Herman and board member Beth Hergesheimer, and principals within the districts. “The Crystal Apple Award is unique from other teaching recognitions in that the teachers are nominated for the award by their very own students by writing essays describing events or specific situations of teachers that they

have witnessed or observed,” said Drew Page, president of the Del Mar Stake. “The rigorous balloting process ends with hundreds of nominations. We love and appreciate our teachers who do so much for our youth and this is a small way to say thank you.” This year’s recipients include: Casey Rector of La Costa Canyon High School, Jacqueline Parks of San Dieguito High School Academy, Angelina Allen of Torrey Pines High School, Andrew Primes of Canyon Crest Academy, Christopher Faist of Carmel Valley Middle School, Stephanie Lewis of Diegueño Middle School, Krista Baldwin of Earl Warren Middle School, Michele Brown of Oak Crest Middle School, Kajyo Yamamoto of Pacific Trails Middle School, and Darcy Gleisberg of R. Roger Rowe School (Rancho Santa Fe School District). Regarding award winner Angela

ADMINISTRATOR

Back row, l-r: Christopher Faist, Jacqueline Parks, Andrew Primes, Krista Baldwin, Darcy Gleisberg; Front row, l-r: Angelina Allen, Kajyo Yamamoto, Stephanie Lewis, Casey Rector, Michele Brown Halpin of Carmel Valley Middle School, one nominating student said, “Mrs. Halpin is an outstanding

teacher. She cares about each student needs, interest, and has a great love for reading. She always has a positive

attitude about life no matter what gets in her way.” A student from Canyon Crest Academy says about special award winner Hector Gutierrez, “Hector has a smile on his face every day. He’s always positive and cheerful and knows everyone’s name and makes your day so much better. He comes to all our volleyball games, even some of the away games.” The award recipients teach a wide variety of subjects, including English, science, math and ASB Leadership. Kelli Lessie, chairperson of the Crystal Apple Awards, stated “These awards started 24 years ago to give students a way to publicly express their appreciation for teachers who have had a positive influence in their lives. Few could fail to be moved by the sincerity of the students' remarks and the appreciation expressed by their teachers in return.”


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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - JUNE 9, 2017 - PAGE A9

Local student dresses in costume for entire school year On the final day of history class at Pacific Ridge School, junior Paige Hellinger arrived on campus early in order to fit her hoop skirt through the door. Hellinger came to each class period of the year dressed up as a real or fictional historical figure for her project, “A Paige in History.” She saved her favorite character, Scarlett O’Hara, for the final day. She created the elaborate costume completely from scratch. The list of figures spanned borders and centuries, including men, women and even a Cyclops. She dressed as Marie Antoinette, Betsy Ross, a gladiator, an accused member of the Salem witch trials, and many, many more. Hellinger came up with the idea last September when students at the Carlsbad school were joking about ways to avoid taking a final exam. Her teacher, Phil Consuegra, was intrigued by the idea and challenged Hellinger to continue her costume project for the entire school year. He said that if she was successful, she could opt out of taking the final exam. Consuegra and Hellinger created terms for the arrangement and a classmate drafted a formal contract. Hellinger couldn’t repeat outfits or characters and had to come to every class in a costume that proved she put in

COURTESY

Switchfoot performs at a past Bro-Am event in Encinitas.

COURTESY

Pacific Ridge School junior Paige Hellinger dresses up as Marie Antoinette for her history class. significant effort. “She couldn’t just roll out of bed, it had to be legit costuming,” said Consuegra. Each costume had to be of historical significance and had to represent someone easily recognizable. If it was a lesser known figure, Hellinger had to SEE COSTUME, A19

Annual Switchfoot Bro-Am to take place June 24 Switchfoot will host its 13th annual Bro-Am, presented by Hurley and iHeartMedia, on Saturday, June 24 at Moonlight Beach in Encinitas. The day will be full of unique surf contests and a beach fest concert with performances from Switchfoot, Lifehouse, Jamtown, the 91X Battle of the Bands Winner and a very special appearance by the VH1 Save The Music Foundation Youth Choir. Numerous vendors and partners help put on this event including Suja Juice, BMW

Encinitas, LaCie and ViaSat. As this is an epic beach event, there will be many different surf events, including the More “BRO” than Pro Team Surf Contest, where a four-person team competes riding one wave regular and one wave switch; the Rob Machado Bro Junior Surf Contest, which is all about who has the most fun on their board; the Challenged Athletes Foundation Kids’ Surf Contest, giving an opportunity for kids SEE BRO-AM, A19

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PAGE A10 - JUNE 9, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - JUNE 9, 2017 - PAGE A11

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PAGE A12 - JUNE 9, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

Gardening and history go hand in hand in Encinitas GARDENING WITH EVELYN BY EVELYN WEIDNER tep out your door and you are probably walking on land that once grew poinsettias, carnations, chrysanthemums, geraniums and much more. Perhaps your land supported lima beans, barley, cattle or even acres of tomatoes during World War II. How much do you know about what once grew under your feet? Fourteen young Torrey Pines High School art students devoted many Sunday afternoons painting a large mural of the flowers and plants that once were grown in our San Dieguito area. Jennifer Richards, a talented professional artist, gave the use of her studio, her time and expertise. She was there for all those Sunday afternoons guiding and encouraging the young artists. Every flower, every plant has a story to tell. The San Dieguito Heritage Museum’s Flowers, Farms and Families project is Evelyn Weidner collecting the stories behind these flowers. Who were the growers, where were they located? How many growers are still here in Encinitas? Real life stories about flowers we all know and love are a part of our local floral heritage. Because these dedicated young artists chose to give up their Sundays, the museum now has a beautiful flower mural depicting that unique part of our history. The mural will be unveiled on Saturday, June 10, at 1 p.m. at the San Dieguito Heritage Museum, 450 Quail Gardens Rd., with a special Flower Board

S

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Some of the Torrey Pines High School students who helped create the Flower Board Mural. Mural Celebration ceremony to recognize and thank these talented young people. These teenagers embody all that is good about our younger generation. Young people who had no connection to our flower-growing history had a love of art and a willingness to give of their time and their talents. That is something to celebrate. The many different flowers and plants that are so much a part of our floral history are on this mural. This mural will illustrate this history. This Flower Board Mural will be an invitation to learning for young and old. The museum is also going to display useful gardening advice like how to safely keep the caterpillars from devouring your tomatoes or geraniums.

COURTESY

When to cut back that Ecke Poinsettia to make sure of blooms for the next holiday. Why your indoor foliage plant needs to take a shower now and then. Fun historical facts like why Leucadia Boulevard has so many Bird of Paradise plants by the golf course. (By the way, have you ever really looked at a Bird of Paradise seed? Try it, you’ll be amazed.) The June 10 celebration will be all about saying thank you to these young people. Come to the celebration on June 10 or visit the mural at the museum Thursday through Sunday from noon to 4 p.m., 450 Quail Gardens Dr. You can also visit San Dieguito Heritage Museum’s Facebook page to meet the artists and offer a message of thanks.

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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - JUNE 9, 2017 - PAGE A13

Corner Bakery Cafe opens in Encinitas Corner Bakery Cafe is now satisfying cravings for fresh, ingredient-inspired food with the opening of a new cafe in Encinitas on June 3. The new cafe is located at 1476 Encinitas Blvd., in the newly remodeled Village Square. To celebrate the new cafe, Corner Bakery Cafe will add excitement on Monday, June 19 with several delicious prizes and giveaways. That day, the first 100 guests through the doors at 7 a.m. will receive a commemorative Corner Bakery Cafe travel mug with free daily refills of hand-roasted coffee for one year. Additionally, Corner Bakery Cafe will hold drawings to award lucky guests free grilled panini for a year or a free side of pancakes for a year, with one winner for each selected for four weeks. Corner Bakery Cafe serves made-to-order food for breakfast, lunch and dinner. The seasonal, innovative menu ranges from hot breakfast and grilled panini to handcrafted salads, signature sandwiches, mouthwatering sweets and more. Favorites include light and fluffy Buttermilk Pancakes for breakfast, the grilled-to-perfection Chicken Pomodori Panini for lunch, the crave-worthy Pesto Cavatappi for dinner, and a slice of rich Cinnamon Creme Cake for dessert. In a warm, relaxing atmosphere with artwork depicting local landmarks on the wall, guests can enjoy their meals in the company of friends and family or stay connected with free WiFi and bottomless cups of hand-roasted coffee. For social occasions and business events, Corner Bakery Cafe offers an unrivaled catering experience, delivering signature,

made-to-order breakfast, lunches and dinners. The catering menu includes scrambled-to-order eggs and Chilled Swiss Oatmeal, baskets of assorted specialty sandwiches, hot signature pasta, homemade soups and more. The new Encinitas Corner Bakery Cafe marks the fourth location in San Diego market and is owned and operated by David Beshay of FEAST California Cafe, LLC, which also owns five other Corner Bakery Cafe locations. The group plans to open additional Corner Bakery Cafe locations throughout Southern California. “Whether it’s for breakfast, lunch, dinner or catering, San Diego area guests have come to crave Corner Bakery Cafe’s fresh, flavorful food,” said Beshay. “We’re excited to share our intense passion for food with even more guests in the area at our new Encinitas cafe.” For guests dining in the cafe, the made-to-order food is delivered fresh to the table at a price point that it is comfortably affordable to all. Corner Bakery Cafe also offers online ordering. “We look forward to sharing our fresh, made-to-order food with the community in Encinitas,” said Corner Bakery Cafe CEO Frank Paci. “With our crave-worthy selections ranging from freshly scrambled eggs and grilled panini to fresh salads and mouthwatering sweets, Corner Bakery Cafe is sure to become a favorite.” Corner Bakery Cafe in Encinitas is open seven days a week from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. To learn more, visit www.cornerbakerycafe.com or call (760) 634-1639. — Submitted press release

Del Mar Racetrack concerts to include Ludacris, Steve Aoki, Eagles of Death Metal BY GEORGE VARGA The Eagles of Death Metal, Ludacris, Billy Currington and San Diego’s Slightly Stoopid are among the music acts confirmed to perform at the 2017 edition of the Del Mar Summer Concert Series. The series at the Del Mar Racetrack will open with a July 21 concert by San Diego reggae band Tribal Seeds and conclude with a Sept. 3 performance by EDM favorite Steve Aoki. Those two shows will bookend concerts by such varied acts as Violent Femmes, Lord Huron and The Revivalists, the seven-man New Orleans band that scored a breakthrough hit last year with its chart-topping song, “Wish I Knew You.” The full schedule of performers appears below. This will be the seventh year the Del Mar Summer Concert Series takes place at the standing-room-only Seaside Stage, located near the west end of the racetrack’s Grandstand. All concerts are 18-and-up and are free with the standard racetrack admission fee of $6. Concertgoers arriving after the last race of the day will be charged a $20 admission fee. Performances are scheduled to begin shortly after the last race of the day. On Saturdays and Sundays, the post time for the first race is at 2 p.m. On Fridays, the post time for the first race is at 4 p.m., with the exceptions of Aug. 25 and Sept. 1 when the first post is at 3:30 p.m. General parking during the races costs $10. The price rises to $20 for those parking after

PHOTO BY MARIO ANZUONI / REUTERS

Ludacris (left) and Vanessa Hudgens co-hosted the Billboard Music Awards on May 5 in Las Vegas. Ludacris will perform Aug. 12 as part of the 2017 Del Mar Summer Concert Series. the last race of the day. Free shuttle service is available from and to the nearby Solana Beach Amtrak and Coaster station. For more information, visit delmarracing.com/concerts or call (858) 755-1141. 2017 Del Mar Summer Concert Series lineup: Friday, July 21 – Tribal Seeds Friday, July 28 – Violent Femmes Friday, August 4 – Eagles of Death Metal Saturday, August 5 – Country Fest, starring Billy Currington Friday, August 11 – Special guest to be announced Saturday, August 12 – Ludacris Friday, August 18 – Steel Pulse Friday, August 25 – Lord Huron Saturday, August 26 – Slightly Stoopid Friday, September 1 – The Revivalists Sunday, September 3 – Steve Aoki — George Varga is a writer for The San Diego Union-Tribune

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OPINION

PAGE A14 - JUNE 9, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

ore high schools are focusing on end-of-the-year portfolios “as indicators of whether students have acquired the skills they will need to succeed after graduation,” according to a recent article in EdSource. Titled “High schools turning to student portfolios to assess academic progress,” the article defines portfolios as a compilation of work or an in-depth research project. “Portfolios are the end product of months of intense collaboration, research, critical thinking and multiple revisions that students typically present in their senior year,” states the article. “Students have to defend their portfolios before a panel of teachers, fellow students or even outside members of their community. In some high schools, a portfolio is a graduation requirement.” Educators define portfolios as performance-based rather than standardized assessments which have just one right answer. The portfolio is designed to demonstrate critical thinking, collaboration, refinement and revision, research and presentation skills. This is a good trend to see, as opposed to grading students by how well they can memorize and spit back the answers on fill-in-the-bubble tests. Making the grade While we’re on the subject of grades, high schools should consider awarding grades the same way most colleges do. An 80 percent and an 89 percent are very different measures of achievement. Yet at San Dieguito and most U.S. schools, both final scores are given a “B” grade. Clearly, one student excels over the other, yet on paper and in transcripts they are equal. Without the distinction, what incentive do the 70, 80 or 90 percent students have to raise their grades higher? At most colleges and universities, incentive is there, with grading as follows: •A+ or A is 4.0, an A- is 3.7 • B+ is 3.3, B is 3.0, B- is 2.7 •C+ is 2.3, C is 2.0, C- is 1.7 • D+ is 1.3, D is 1.0, D- is 0.7 Although it’s been years since those high school days when one of my kids received half a dozen 89.9s (which were never rounded up to an A), it still annoys me.

I didn’t object to the teachers not rounding up, as long as this rule was applied religiously and without favoritism (which frankly was not always the case). But I did object to the 89.9 being the same as an 80. The B+ is different than a B- and should have been recorded as such. A grading system that takes pluses and minuses into account would also motivate kids to put in more effort if they knew they could raise their Bto a B or a B+ for a higher grade point average. Some high schools across the nation grade the way colleges do, but very few – and not San Dieguito. This archaic grading system should be changed to provide a more accurate reflection of student achievement. UC enrollment caps A state audit of the University of California system provides evidence that it has veered away from its original mission to primarily serve California students. As a result, the UC system for the first time is adopting enrollment caps on nonresident applicants. For years many have claimed that less capable students from others states or nations, who pay much higher tuition, are taking away spots from more qualified in-state students. It’s all about the money. “The number of students studying at the University of California from other states and nations has skyrocketed in the past decade, from about 5 percent to the current 16.5 percent of all 210,170 undergraduates,” according to a May 18 EdSource story. From the story: “The Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles and Irvine campuses, where the percentage of non-Californians ranges from 24.4 percent to 18.9 percent, will not be allowed to increase beyond the levels of the 2017-18 school year. The other five campuses, where the share ranges from 14.7 percent at Davis to less than 1 percent at Merced, can grow that enrollment to 18 percent.” According to the article, the percentage of Calif. residents enrolled at the nine UC campuses in 2016 is as follows: Berkeley, 75.6; San Diego, 77.1; Los Angeles, 77.2; Irvine, 81.1; Davis, 85.3; Santa Barbara, 87.8; Santa Cruz, 92.4; Riverside, 96.9; Merced, 99.6. Identifying fake news

Here’s a sign of the times. State Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson of Santa Barbara “has introduced a bill that would encourage California’s K-12 schools to teach students to be skeptical, informed news consumers,” according to a May 24 story in EdSource. The bill recommends a committee be formed to develop guidelines to help students recognize fake news. The term “fake news,” says EdSource, “refers to Internet hoaxes or intentionally fabricated stories presented as news and intended to sway public opinion.” The intent is to teach these critical thinking lessons at all grade levels, focusing on high school government, history, English and journalism classes. According to EdSource, “Cyber bullying, privacy, copyright infringement, digital footprints, sexting and general Internet safety would also be included in the guidelines.” Jackson’s bill is now with the Senate Appropriations Committee after being approved 5-2 by the Senate Education Committee. Start times bill progresses State Sen. Anthony Portantino’s proposed bill (SB 328) to make middle and high school start times no earlier than 8:30 a.m. passed the state Senate May 30 and is on its way to the Assembly. The bill would take effect July 1, 2020. Zero periods are exempted. So are rural districts that obtain a waiver. Co-author is state Sen. Richard Pan, a pediatrician, who became well-known two years ago for sponsoring Senate bill 277 which required vaccinations for all school children. Both Portantino and Pan are Democrats. Resistance to SB 328 has come mainly from Republicans … and from the Calif. Teachers Association. Teachers unions and Republicans rarely see eye to eye, so it will be interesting to see how this bill progresses. Supporting later start times, Dr. Mary Carskadon, a professor of psychiatry and human behavior at Alpert Medical School of Brown University, is quoted in a New York Times May 22 article titled “The Science of Adolescent Sleep.” She said, “Some people don’t get it, that this is biology. Adolescent sleep delay is not just in human teenagers; it’s seen in other juvenile mammals.” As if even more incontrovertible evidence is needed to prove that later school start times can vastly improve student well-being, safety and academic achievement, Wendy Troxel, a clinical psychologist and senior behavioral and social scientist at RAND, said in the NYT article, “Sleep loss problems are linked with brain areas that control emotional processes and risk taking. Sleep problems and behavioral and mental SEE SUTTON, A15

OUR READERS WRITE

saw you through a political lens. However, through your actions, I saw you were making a difference for kids. You were stoic and took all the pain that was hurled at you until the elections. I do not have the courage that you have but I sure can acknowledge and admire your qualities. Since last January, I have attended all the San Dieguito Union High School District board meetings and can appreciate what you and your committee have done to ensure that aquatic curriculum is free for all. I am proud of you for

giving support to the parents of children with Individualized Education Programs and in Special Education. Through my experience as an educator, I have found that children are kind and impartial. They always reach out to adults who have suffered for them. Ten years from now, many of these children will come up to you and give you hugs. They will thank you for the work you did with no expectations. Sheila Mitra Sarkar Encinitas

Encinitas Advocate 380 Stevens Suite 316 Solana Beach, CA 92075 858-756-1451

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Odds and ends

M

From a mom to a mom Thank you Lucile Lynch. Mother’s Day may have come and gone but we can still celebrate motherhood. I have got to know you this academic year. You are a great mom and a passionate supporter of equity in education. Although I am known to all as a liberal, I never

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Topical letters to the editor are encouraged. Submissions should include a full name, address, e-mail address (if available) and a telephone number for verification purposes. We do not publish anonymous letters and there are length limits (about 450 words maximum). E-mailed submissions are preferred to editor@rsfreview.com. Letters may be edited. The letters/columns published are the author’s opinion only and do not reflect the opinion of this newspaper.


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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - JUNE 9, 2017 - PAGE A15

FROM DUNES, A1

JOSE ISLAS

IVIE Award winners Timothy Zhang, Katy Laliotis, Gabriel Gaurano, Navin Bose, CCA Envision Cinema Coordinator Mark Raines, Radio Host Ethan Cole, Melanie An, Christopher Razniak and Kalani Newman

State and regional honors bestowed on CCA Envision Cinema and CCA-TV BY GLORIA GOLDSTEIN Canyon Crest Academy Envision Cinema and CCA-TV students won big at the California Student Media Festival which took place recently in Los Angeles. Their entries received Best High School Journalism/News Program, Best Short Film and Best Cinematography in the state of California. The Cinematography winning entry was titled “La Fortezza” by Gabriel Gaurano, Kalani Newman, Shinwoo Kim, Julia Elihu (class of 2016), Tia Mayer (class of 2016) and the entire 2016-2017 Cinema Conservatory Class. The Best Short Film receiving California’s Gold Award was “Incognito” directed by Navin Bose, Gabriel Gaurano and Jayden Gillespie. Cinema students also won multiple honors at the San Diego Innovative Video in Education (IVIE) Awards held in Coronado. The Best Cross Curricular winner was “La Fortezza” produced by Gabriel Gaurano, Kalani Newman, Shinwoo Kim, Julia Elihu (class of 2016), Tia Mayer (class of 2016) and the entire

FROM SUTTON, A14 health problems are linked.” Del Mar teacher raises In last week’s newspaper, it was reported that the Del Mar Union School District’s Board of Education recently granted teachers “a retroactive 1 percent increase to the 2016-17 salary schedule and a 1.5 percent increase to the 2017-18 salary schedule. … Last year, the teachers received a retroactive 3 percent increase and a 2 percent increase for the 2016-17 school year.” In two years then, DMUSD teachers will have received a combined 7.5 percent salary increase. Correction The SD County Office of Education just informed me that the headers on the latest SDCOE teacher salary charts that were used to provide data in last week’s column were an error on their part and should have read 2016-2017 rather than 2015-2016. Opinion columnist and Sr. Education Writer Marsha Sutton can be reached at suttonmarsha@gmail.com.

2016-2017 Cinema Conservatory Class. The Best Global Village award went to “La Langue de la Vie” produced by Carson Fildey, Ryan Curcio, Tyler Chae-Banks, Noah Hecht and Daria Miller. CCA Envision Cinema Coordinator Mark Raines is at the helm of the program and shares some of the magic behind the recent awards. “I think the students at CCA are just so creative and the cinema conservatory program gives them that opportunity to really stretch those creative energies and skills that they have,” Raines said. “We try to run things as close to a real-life experience as possible in the conservatory and in the advanced video film classes. It’s not just a class it’s almost like a work experience.” The group is also the first in the country to screen two IMAX documentaries created by conservatory students this school year. “Change Is in the Water” and “Bee Conscious” were shown at the Edwards IMAX & RPX Theaters in Mira Mesa.

be constructed west of the coastal highway, starting just south of the Chart House Restaurant and continuing half-mile down the beach to the entrance of Seaside Reef State Beach. Those new hills of sand will act as a line of defense, absorbing the full force of winter storm-tossed waves and helping to keep the highway safe, said the city’s shoreline program manager Kathy Weldon. Waves have repeatedly washed over the highway and even undermined the roadbed in the past, she said. The sand dune proposal has attracted state interest because it's an environmentally friendly way of coping with beach erosion issues. Instead of constructing impervious concrete walls to hold back the sea, the sand dunes will be erodible and they'll support life because they'll be home to native plants. The list of organizations and agencies involved with the proposal include the state parks system, which owns the land, and the San Elijo Lagoon Conservancy, which will be offering planting assistance for the

In Loving Memory Create a lasting record of your loved one’s life, and inform the community of your loss. Your notice also will appear on the national obituary website – legacy.com.

Life Tributes

Everlasting memories of loved ones

Marjorie May ‘Marje’ Halterman March 1, 1923 - April 1, 2017

SOLANA BEACH — “It’s not what kind of life one has, it’s how it’s lived.” Marjorie was born in Quincy, IL, on March 1, 1923, daughter to James Franklin “Frank” and Nellie Gray Anderson. The third of seven children growing up in the depression, Marjorie learned early the rhythm of life, constantly gaining experience that was interwoven throughout with joys, sorrows, adaptations, giving, and taking. Marjorie developed a love of art very early. As a second grader, a chalk snow scene of hers was displayed in the city library in Quincy. In high school, the Quincy art school awarded her an art scholarship. Marjorie left Illinois in 1946 for Long Beach,

CA. Here she found employment at the Long Beach Naval Station in bookkeeping and in film retouching. Her classes in early childhood education led to a job as a Head Start teacher. It was in Long Beach that she met and married Jacob Henry Halterman and started a family. Marje spent many summers in the Sierras

with her family, inspiring her love for nature and the outdoors. Marje valued her time as a member of the San Diego Sierra Club. She loved hiking in the mountains and working in the kitchen at the Nature Knowledge Workshop at Foster Point. Marjorie loved gardening and was quite active at Quail Botanical Gardens, now the San Diego Botanic Garden. She took great pride in her own gardens, was an excellent seamstress, and enjoyed corresponding with her family and friends. She lived independently into her 90s. Her many passions played an important role in her volunteer work with the North Coast Repertory Theatre in Solana Beach. It was here that she did most of the painting, producing scores of sceneries in

a relationship with the theatre that lasted nearly 35 years. Marjorie is survived by a brother, Carl Anderson; three children, Leslie Klusmire, James Halterman, Lisa Halterman Blackburn; three stepdaughters; and three grandchildren. For those who knew Marjorie, join us for a celebration of her life at the North Coast Repertory Theatre in Solana Beach in the Cafe, Saturday June 10, 2017, at 10:30 am. Memorial donations in honor of her passion for the theatre may be made online at northcoastrep. org or Mail: North Coast Repertory Theatre c/o Marjorie Halterman Memorial Fund, 987 Lomas Santa Fe, Suite D, Solana Beach, CA 92075. Please sign the guest book online at legacy.com/ obituaries/delmartimes.

sand dunes. Scripps Institution of Oceanography and Surfrider Foundation also are offering advice, Weldon said. A long-awaited, massive dredging project in the lagoon early next year will "turbo-charge" the beachfront, providing sand for the future dunes as well as greatly increasing the surrounding beach area, Leslie said. Planning Commission Chairman Glenn O'Grady asked for confirmation that the future sand dunes wouldn't prevent drivers along Coast Highway from seeing the ocean. There's going to be a height limit on the dunes to make certain that doesn't happen, Leslie said. At the northern end of the project, the height limit will be 3 feet, while at the southern end it's 2 feet, 4 inches. That will allow anyone driving by, even people in cars that are low

to the ground, to be able to see the ocean, he said. Weldon said maintenance details are still being worked out, but the city is expecting to be able to care for a proposed decomposed granite trail along the roadway behind the dunes and its accompanying fencing. The dunes are expected to last about 50 years and could be resupplied from other dredging projects in the future, a city staff report states. Commissioner Bruce Ehlers asked if any parking spaces along Coast Highway 101 would be eliminated. Associate Planner Todd Mierau said parking will be more orderly, with marked spaces replacing the double-parking and driving on the sand that now occurs. Barbara Henry is a freelance writer in Encinitas for The San Diego Union-Tribune.

Life Tributes

Everlasting memories of loved ones

Patricia Ann Pompo October 31, 1929 - May 29, 2017

Leucadia — Patricia ann Pompo, a longtime resident of Leucadia and Burbank, ca peacefully passed away on Monday, May 29, 2017 in her daughter’s home in Menifee, ca. Born in anderson, iN on Halloween in 1929, Pat moved to Long Beach, ca at an early age and then to Glendale, ca where she attended Glendale High School. Pat married husband Vincent N. Pompo on February 01, 1947. Pat was a devoted wife, mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother. Pat enjoyed time with her family and friends and was an avid reader. For a time, she bowled with her girlfriends and was in a bowling league for many years. She is survived by her husband Vincent N. Pompo; daughters, Linda K. Perrenoud and Lesah

ann Mutscheller; and son, donato Pompo; brother, Rex Bronnenberg; eight grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren. Her beloved great-grandson, angel, is now holding her hand in Heaven. a memorial will be held on Saturday, June 10, 2017, at 11:00 am, at the Miller-Jones Mortuary in Sun city, ca. Please sign the guest book online at legacy.com/ obituaries/encinitasadvo cate.

Call Monica at 858-218-7228 or, email her at mwilliams@mainstreetsd.com

Encinitas Advocate


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PAGE A16 - JUNE 9, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

Encinitas Rotary Wine & Food Festival

T

he 14th Annual Encinitas Rotary Wine & Food Festival took place June 3 at the Encinitas Ranch Golf Course. The net proceeds from the event will be divided between several 501c(3) charities. The event featured beverages from 25 wineries, breweries and other vendors, a taste sampling of over 24 local restaurants’ best dishes and desserts, live music, and a large silent auction and a raffle. Visit encinitaswinefestival.com Online: www.encinitasadvocate.com

Cheryl Fleming, John and Cheryl Bruun, Darlene Drury, Susan Darling, Pam Pulido

David Linde, Gayle Fulbright, Dave and Vembra Holnagel

Betsy Cleek, SandyAsquini

Doug and Karen Long

Silent auction co-chairs Laurel Glockler, Tristen Campanella

Allan and Rita McKendrick

Marie and Rob Sapp

Missy Post, Dr. Mario Yco, Sandra Orendain, Greg Post, Cindy Yco

Art Schmidt, Patricia Sinay, Encinitas council member Tasha Boerner Horvath, Ruben Flores-Saaib, Gail Flores

Greg and Missy Post of Rotary beneficiary The Amanda Post Scholarship Fund

PHOTOS BY MCKENZIE IMAGES

Kay Coleman, Janice Montle, Yamila Ayad, Mary Mancera

San Diego County Supervisor Kristin Gaspar, San Diego Land Use Advisor Jason Paquio


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ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - JUNE 9, 2017 - PAGE A17

EVENT BRIEFS Ballet: Sleeping Beauty Encinitas Ballet presents this show accompanied by live music by the Chinese Youth Symphony Orchestra on June 10 at 5 p.m. at the Proscenium Theatre, 5951 Village Center Loop Road in Carlsbad. "So You Think You Can Dance" finalist Deise Mendonca and her partner Mauricio Vera will dance alongside other professional dancers. Tickets are $20 to $25. For more information, call 760-632-4947.

Coast Hwy 101 Banner Exhibit Travel along Coast Highway 101 and see vinyl banners high up on the light posts through July 4. The art pieces promote the San Diego County Fair theme, "Where the West is Fun."

Pacific View School community celebration The Encinitas Historical Society (EHS), along with the Encinitas Arts, Culture and Ecology Alliance (EACEA), is planning the first-ever gathering of all those who attended, taught or worked at the former Pacific View School located in Historic Encinitas. The free community event will be held from 1 to 4 p.m. on Sunday, June 11 at 390 West F Street and on the grounds of the former elementary school. A special recognition will be given to all who have passed through the former elementary school corridors. For more information about the community celebration, call (760) 753-4834.

Thursday Family Fun Night Every Thursday through Aug. 31, from 4:30 to 8 p.m., families can enjoy outdoor fun in Hamilton Children's Garden at the San Diego Botanic Garden, 230 Quail Gardens Drive. Kid-friendly live entertainment will be provided from 6 to 7 p.m. The event is free with paid admission or membership. For more information, visit http://bit.ly/2rtHTYp.

Play: Picnic This dramatic play focuses on the people in a small Kansas town as they get ready for the area's Labor Day picnic. It will be performed June 9 and 10, at 7 p.m. each night, at the Liggett Theater, 800 Santa Fe Drive. Tickets range from $8 to $15. For more information, visit http://bit.ly/2rXbcUJ.

The Great Outdoors Shabbat Guests are invited to bring a picnic dinner, a beverage, blankets and chairs to bring in Shabbot at Coastal Roots Farm, 441 Saxony Road, on June 9 from 4:30 to 7 p.m. For more information about this free event, visit http://bit.ly/2s9Hhby.

Botanic Garden Fairy Festival Children and parents are invited to celebrate summer at the annual Fairy Festival at San Diego Botanic Garden, 230 Quail Gardens Drive, on June 17 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Fairy Festival features fairy-themed activities, where children may wear their favorite fairy costume, visit our official Fairy Princesses Violette, Juniper and Blue Bell in an enchanted garden for a photo op, leave their wishes at a magic wishing bush, shop in the Fairy Land Market, and enjoy fairy themed crafts. Children can assemble their own flower fairy doll and fairy baby, and can build a house from natural material and an enchanted swing for their fairy doll, or decorate a coconut shell cradle for the baby. Furthermore, children may paint a wooden treasure chest or ceramic castle, build their own magic wand and assemble a fairy dust necklace. Adults are asked not to dress up for the festival. For more information, visit http://bit.ly/2s1hPW6

Student mural unveiling at Heritage Museum On Saturday, June 10, at 1 p.m. the San Dieguito Heritage Museum will hold an unveiling and celebration of a mural depicting flowers and plants once grown in the San Dieguito area. Fourteen students from Torrey Pines High School, under the direction of Encinitas artist Jennifer Richards, painted the mural, which will become a permanent part of the museum’s tribute to the San Dieguito region’s flower growing heritage. Share a memory! Explore the museum. Light refreshments. 450 Quail Gardens Dr., Encinitas. For information about Saturday’s ceremony, contact Evelyn Weidner, 760-753-6086 or 760-809-0789.

Fresh Start: How to Use Soul Collage to Discover Your Hidden Creativity Soul Collage is a fun and easy way to use pleasing pictures to create collaged cards, tapping into the creative mind. Anyone can do it! Discover how the poetry of images can uncover hidden resources and activate key brain areas to find creative solutions you didn’t know that you knew. This class will take place June 10 from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., led by Mary M. Mulvihill, at 230 Quail Gardens Drive. It costs $75 for members and $90 for non-members. For more information, visit http://bit.ly/1ZMx2S9.

Watercolor Pencil Botanical Journaling (ages 18+) Pressing down pure color on paper leads to endless good vibes. Participants will combine watercolor pencils and water-soluble pens while learning clever user-friendly ways to draw. Watercolor pencils are great for journals and for traveling. Colors become vibrant when water is applied to the paper surface. The effects range from smooth to textural with effortless brush strokes. This class will take place June 11 from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., led by Helen Shafer Garcia, at 230 Quail Gardens Drive. It costs $75 for members and $89 for non-members. For more information, visit http://bit.ly/1ZMx2S9.

Skate Rising Girls 4 to 18 are invited to participate in a free skate clinic June 10 from 9 to 11 a.m. at the Encinitas Community Park Skate Plaza, 425 Santa Fe Drive. For more information, visit http://bit.ly/2swymhB.

Music and Movement for Kindergardeners and Parents This month-long series, which takes place every Saturday in June from 9 to 9:50 a.m., will offer instruction in music and movement for children, ages 4-6 years old. Parent participation is required. The class will utilize successful elements of Orff and the Kodály method of music education. The classes, which cost $95 for the series, will take place at the Encinitas Community Center, 1140 Oakcrest Park Drive, room 120A. For more information, call 760-978-0643.

Families Make History: Art Rocks! The San Dieguito Heritage museum every Saturday and Sunday from noon to 4 p.m. in the month of June will present a free class where participants can paint and decorate small rocks, gathered from local beaches. The classes will take place at 450 Quail Gardens Drive. For more information, visit http://bit.ly/2qkP06q.

SEE EVENTS, A18


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PAGE A18 - JUNE 9, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

New Habit Burger Grill opening in Encinitas

BRITTANY WOOLSEY

Lucy Dolan, of San Diego, who is completely blind, catches a wave with the assistance of volunteers from Swami’s at a Blind Surf event on June 4 at South Ponto Beach in Carlsbad. FROM SURFERS, A1 similar experience as the blind. "It's just someone experiencing something that I've never experienced on a wave," he said. "Paddling out, closing my eyes, taking a wave and closing my eyes is a completely different feeling than having sight. Just to be able to pass that feeling off onto someone else, so someone else feels good about what they're doing and get confidence for other things in their life, is great." Matt Allen, owner of Maui Surf Academy in Encinitas, said working with the blind is a reminder of something regular surfers take advantage of. "I've definitely done it so much where surfing is comparable to a drug," he said. "It's like you always need more, get a little jaded and forget that it's so amazing that we get to do this. For them to step in and be out of their comfort zone, you get to feel that right alongside them and it kind of brings you back to the beginning of why you started surfing in the first place." For many of the blind surfers, like Bissett, riding waves is not an everyday task. But Scott Leason has continued regularly surfing even after losing his sight more than two decades ago. Leason, 61, of City Heights, lost both of his eyes nearly 24 years ago when he was shot in

the head by armed robbers while working at a convenience store. After recovering, he was determined to surf again, even through the new obstacles. Since then, he has won two world championships, one U.S. championship and has inspired the creation of sight-impaired surfing divisions. He will compete in his third International Surfing Association World Adaptive Surfing Championship this summer. Leason has worked with Surf Coach Pat Weber of the San Diego Surfing Academy for 16 years and considers Weber his "eyes" when he's out in the water. "I totally have to listen to everything that he's saying and execute his verbal commands," he said. "My success to me is that he gets me in a wave, I pop up, I drop in and I'm standing." Lucy Dolan, who surfed for the second time at the event, said she believes blind people can do anything they set their minds to. Even as she fell off her board, with the volunteers around to catch her, she continued smiling. "It was kind of hard today because I have a bad left leg, but I said I was going to get on there one way or another," she said. "I was scared but all of the help around me made sure I stayed on that board and stayed safe."

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Burger lovers in Encinitas will have a new reason to celebrate when The Habit Burger Grill opens a new restaurant on Wednesday, June 14 at 10:30 a.m. This Encinitas location marks the 12th Habit Burger Grill to serve the greater San Diego area. The new Habit Burger Grill, home of the popular, award-winning Charburgers that are always grilled over an open flame and made-to-order, is located at 1446 Encinitas Boulevard in Encinitas. A handful of pre-opening events will take place, beginning with the first on Saturday, June 10, where the first 200 guests will be awarded with a free Charburger, fries and a drink during Free Burger Day at 11:30 a.m. and again at 5 p.m. The next event, Free Habit Day, will take place on Sunday, June 11, where the

first 200 guests who arrive will be offered a free chargrilled meal from pre-selected menus at 11:30 a.m. Again on Tuesday, June 13, starting at 11:30 a.m., the first 200 people who visit The Habit will enjoy a free chargrilled meal from pre-selected menus. As part of The Habit Burger Grill’s commitment to the community, all are welcome to join in a fundraising event on Sunday, June 11, from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m., supporting the Magdalena Ecke Family YMCA with 100 percent of the proceeds going back to the organization. The more than 2,400-square-foot Habit restaurant seats 52 people with additional patio seating for 32. The restaurant will be open Sunday – Saturday 10:30 a.m. – 10 p.m. Visit www.habitburger.com.

EVENT BRIEFS (CONTINUED) Lung Hsiang Exhibit and Sale The 10th Annual Lung Hsiang Exhibit and Sale features original Chinese Brush Paintings created by members of the Lung Hsiang chapter of the American Artists of Chinese Brush Painting – a group that has been painting together for 25 years. The exhibit and sale is open daily through July 11 from 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. in the Ecke Building at San Diego Botanic Garden, 230 Quail Gardens Drive. For more information, visit http://www.sdbgarden.org/events.htm

Botanic Garden offers military free admission The San Diego Botanic Garden will offer free admission to all active duty, National Guard and Reserve members of the U.S. military and their families May 1 through Labor Day on Sept. 4. Military members who show their active duty I.D. cards are invited to bring up to five immediate family members. Attendees will be able to enjoy the 37-acre Botanic Garden, featuring 29 uniquely themed gardens and 4,000 different plant species. There are also children’s gardens and special events held throughout the summer, including Thursday Family Fun Nights each Thursday from June 1 through Aug. 31; Fairy Festival on June 17; and Insect Fest on July 22 and 23. For more information, visit sdbgarden.org/events.htm

Off Track Gallery to host artists reception The public is invited to an artists' reception honoring two talented San Dieguito Art Guild members, Karen Fidel (pottery) and Dolores Renner (jewelry), on June 10 from 4 to 7 p.m. at Off Track Gallery, 937 South Coast Highway 101, suite C-103. Refreshments will be served at the reception. All artwork in the gallery will be 10 percent off the entire day from 10 a.m.

to closing. This event is free and open to the public. For more information, visit www.offtrackgallery.com.

Farm tour Coastal Roots Farm, 441 Saxony Road, presents an in-depth tour on June 11 from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. For more information, visit http://bit.ly/2pnvioI.

PACT Performance: Beyond Bullying Positive Action Community Theatre's (PACT) traveling theatre troupe will present this powerful and entertaining theatre event consisting of sketches, video clips, and improvisational activities that draw on audience participation to inspire young teens to 'go beyond bullying' and respect their peers. The free performance will take place June 11 from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at 535 Encinitas Boulevard, Ste. 101. For more information, visit http://bit.ly/2sJSQ5E.

La Paloma Theatre Now showing: The Lost City of Z, The Zookeeper's Wife, Rocky Horror Picture Show. Tickets: $10 (cash only). 471 Coast Hwy. 101. For show times, please call 760-436-7469.

‘An Evening with Groucho’ at NC Rep Award-winning actor/director Frank Ferrante celebrates comedian Groucho Marx in a one-man show with music, 7:30 p.m., June 12-13 at North Coast Repertory Theatre, 987 Lomas Santa Fe Drive, Solana Beach. Ferrante sings, dances, tells stories, performs classic Groucho routines and one-liners. Tickets: $35 with discounts. (858) 481-1055. northcoastrep.org/variety_night


www.encinitasadvocate.com FROM BRO-AM, A9 with physical challenges to compete; and the always hilarious Surf Joust Expression Session, complete with battle armor and nerf weapons upon soft surfboards. Members of Switchfoot will even be surfing in the team contest with Rob Machado. For full details and rules surrounding the competitions and more information on the 2017 Bro-Am, visit www.broam.org. In support of this massive celebration, the Arts Program at San Diego International Airport has partnered with Switchfoot to create an exhibition highlighting Bro-Am, the band and the impact that such community partnerships have on the San Diego region. The exhibition is located at the airport in Terminal 2 near Gate 36 and will be on display through September for travelers past security checkpoints. Special collaborative music and dance concerts will also be presented at the airport by Bro-Am partner youth organizations on June 15 and

FROM COSTUME, A9 write a short bio to read to the class. During the year, Hellinger missed a few classes due to illness. She still dressed up though, and texted photos of herself to a classmate representing different characters, including, somewhat appropriately, Typhoid Mary. Hellinger has always had an interest in fashion. She regularly serves as costuming director for school plays and was able to use costumes from past productions. She also worked with a former drama teacher to borrow clothes. The project became a learning experience in itself and opened Hellinger’s eyes to fashion in a historical context. “Just over the span of 20 years, women’s fashion from the late 1800s, to the early 1900s changed drastically,” said Hellinger.

ENCINITAS ADVOCATE - JUNE 9, 2017 - PAGE A19

19, including performances from Escondido-based A Step Beyond (6/15), VH1 Save The Music Foundation/San Diego Youth Symphony & Conservatory students from Chula Vista (6/19), and a special pop-up performance from Switchfoot (6/19). For more information on the SAN Arts Program, please visit arts.san.org. In addition to the free Bro-Am Beach Fest, Switchfoot will be hosting its annual ticketed Bro-Am Benefit Party on June 22 in North County San Diego. This event will include VIP Meet & Greet opportunities, silent and live auctions and a live performance by Grammy Award-winning band Switchfoot and other special guests. Tickets for the benefit party are available here. Proceeds from the 2017 Bro-Am events support local youth initiatives with selected 501(c)(3) organizations, including A Step Beyond, Challenged Athletes Foundation, Feeding San Diego, Rob Machado Foundation, StandUp For Kids and VH1 Save The Music Foundation. — Submitted press release The only time Hellinger thought she might not finish the project was in February when she was producing a fashion show to fund a girls school in India. She and other members of a student-led service learning group at Pacific Ridge raised more than $10,000 to send 36 girls to school for several years. Even with other school activities and a rigorous course schedule, Hellinger persisted with her costume project and made it through the entire school year. Consuegra said in all his years of teaching, he’s never seen the kind of persistence shown by Hellinger. “I’ve never seen a student commit so wholeheartedly to a project,” he said. “I’ll never forget it.” As for Hellinger, she may write about her experience in her college applications, but plans to take a break from historical dress for the time being. — Submitted press release

ENCINITAS HOMES SOLD May 15 - June 2 Address / Bed / Bath/ Selling price 1525 Avenida de las Adelsas / 5 / 2/ $965,000 3658 Lorimer Ln. / 4 / 3 / $935,000 1444 Wildmeadow Pl. / 4 / 2 / $925,000 1629 Hawk View Dr. / 4 / 2 / $900,000 1765 Avenida de la Posta / 3 / 2 / $870,000 1602 Valleda Ln. / 4 / 2 / $840,000 940 Gardena Rd. / 3 / 3 / $800,000 578 Melba Rd. / 3 / 2 / $745,000 1472 Orpheus Ave. / 3 / 2 / $740,000 3047 Via de Caballo / 2 / 2 / $650,000 794 Clark Ave. / 3 / 1 / $605,000 255 Mangano Cir. / 2 / 2 / $445,000 808 Regal Rd. 6J / 2 / 1 / $400,000

Source: RealQuest

OPEN HOUSES CARLSBAD

$489,000 2BD / 2.5BA

2510 Navarra Drive, Villa 526 Mindy Pometto, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices

Fri 12 p.m.-3 p.m. 858-736-7880

$739,000 3BD / 2.5BA $1,495,000 4BD / 3.5BA $1,529,000 5BD / 4.5BA $1,579,000 5BD / 4.5BA $3,199,000 5BD / 5.5BA

12627 El Camino Real, Unit B Kerry Shine, Berkshire Hathaway 13773 Rosecroft Way Charles & Farryl Moore, Coldwell Banker 13130 Sunset Point Way Charles & Farryl Moore, Coldwell Banker 5280 White Emerald Drive Charles & Farryl Moore, Coldwell Banker 13257 Lansdale Court Charles & Farryl Moore, Coldwell Banker

Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-382-5496 Sat 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-395-7525 Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-395-7525 Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-395-7525 Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. 858-395-7525

$1,125,000 2BD / 2BA $1,295,000 3BD / 2.5BA $1,369,876 5BD / 4.5BA $11,725,000 5BD / 3.5BA

2042 Carmel Valley Road Sat 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Ellen Bryson, Coldwell Banker/Hosts: E. Bryson & W. Choisser 858-945-2522 1210 Ladera Linda Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Geof Belden, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices 858-752-1000 3437 Caminito Santa Fe Downs Sat 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Greg Phillips, Berkshire Hathaway Home Services 858-999-6000 2508 Ocean Front Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Csilla Crouch, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices 858-245-6793

$1,849,000 4BD / 4.5BA

748 Rancho Santa Fe Rd – Olivenhain Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Christie Horn, Berkshire Hathaway CA Prop/Host: N. Wilkinson 858-775-9817

$6,500 3BD / 2.5BA $880,000 3BD / 3BA $1,225,000 3BD / 3BA $1,549,000 4BD / 3BA $1,595,000 5BD / 5.5BA $1,599,000 4BD / 5BA $1,700,000-$1,795,000 4BD / 4.5BA $1,898,000 5BD / 5.5BA $2,695,000-$2,850,000 4BD / 4.5BA $2,999,000-$3,295,000 4BD / 3.5BA $3,085,000 5BD / 5.5BA $3,199,000 5BD / 7BA $3,798,000 7BD / 6BA $4,349,000 5BD / 6BA $4,995,000-$5,495,000 6BD / 6.5BA $5,400,000 4BD / 6BA $7,300,000 5BD / 6.5BA

6160 Paseo Delicias Sun 1 p.m.-3 p.m. Melissa Russell, Willis Allen Real Estate 619-850-4061 213 Via Osuna Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-5 p.m. Shannon Biszantz, Pacific Sothebys International Realty 619-417-4655 8154 Santaluz Village Green North – Santaluz Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Eileen Anderson, Willis Allen Real Estate 858-245-9851 3934 Via Valle Verde Sat & Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Dan Conway, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 858-243-5278 14321 Salida Del Sol – Santaluz Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Shaun Worthen, Berkshire Hathaway 619-518-9701 7911 High Time Ridge – The Crosby Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Lon Noel, Willis Allen Real Estate 858-583-6398 17473 Luna De Miel Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Peter Lewi, Coldwell Banker/Host: Dee Dee English 858-525-3256 7951 Nathaniel Court – The Crosby Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Colleen Roth, Coldwell Banker 858-357-6567 7560 Montien Rd – Santaluz Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Danielle Short, Coldwell Banker 619-708-1500 6525 Paseo Delicias Sat 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Amelia Smith, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 760 505-1553 6909 Rancho La Cima Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. K. Ann Brizolis, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 858-756-4382 5262 El Mirlo Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Brian Connelly, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 619-813-3229 15916 Las Planideras Sun 1 p.m.-5 p.m. Jennifer J. Janzen-Botts, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 760-845-3303 7832 Santaluz Inlet – Santaluz Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Eileen Anderson, Willis Allen Real Estate 858-245-9851 5305 La Crescenta Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Caren Kelley, Equestrian Real Estate 858-350-1018 14630 Calle Diegueno Sun 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Becky Campbell, Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty 858-449-2027 17501 Via de Fortuna Fri 12 p.m.-3 p.m., Sat & Sun 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Tom DiNoto, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 858-888-3579

CARMEL VALLEY

DEL MAR

ENCINITAS

RANCHO SANTA FE

For the most up-to-date list of open houses, mapped locations, and premium listings with photos, visit rsfreview.com/open-houses-list/

Contact April Gingras | april@rsfreview.com | 858-876-8863


www.encinitasadvocate.com

PAGE A20 - JUNE 9, 2017 - ENCINITAS ADVOCATE

ENCINITAS

CARDIFF

ENCINITAS

Approx 4000 sq. ft. 5br blocks to beach/downtown Encinitas with white water views!

Highest quality custom home overlooking the ocean. Indoor/ outdoor living at its best.

Coastal custom beach home redesigned and remodeled. Richly updated with cherry cabinetry.

Kelly Howard (760) 419-1240

McGrath & Howard (760) 420-1769

Ruth Broom (760) 815-1870

CARLSBAD

ENCINITAS

VISTA

Beautiful Mediterranean style in gated La Costa Ridge. Private with expansive views!

Designer perfect 5br in cul-de-sac location. Entertainers paradise. No HOA or Mello Roos!

Ranch home on about 2.8 acre lot. Built w/ redwood. 2 car detached garage. Great location.

Candis Kolb (760) 271-9887

Linda Moore (760) 310-0234

Azam Emamjomeh (760) 809-0095

OCEANSIDE

LA COSTA

5 BEDROOMS, 4.1 BATHS, $3,550,000

5 BEDROOMS, 5 BATHS, $1,445,000

5 BEDROOMS, 3 BATHS, $749,000

4 BEDROOMS, 4 BATHS, $2,785,000

5 BEDROOMS, 3 BATHS, $1,185,000

4 BEDROOMS, 3.1 BATHS, $1,655,000

3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, $1,050,000

OCEANSIDE

Spacious & inviting cul-de-sac location next to Arrowood Golf Course. Chef’s kitchen.

3 BEDROOMS, 2.1 BATHS, $590,000

Recently remodeled, richly appointed end unit Townhome. Lagoon and some ocean views.

2 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, $339,000

Mark Caspersen (858) 215-4001

Ruth Broom (760) 815-1870

Connie Coe (760) 420-9497

©2017

Best value in the Oceana 55+ development. Lovely single level home. Community pool.


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