Sourcebook 2015

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Volume FOURTEEN

|

2015 Edition

Entertainment

Pala Casino - Bands, Belly Laughs and a Below Ground Wine Experience

Home & Garden Hank’s Hardware Taps Dutch Roots pg 81 Homes for Wounded Warriors pg 96

pg 18

Business

Trupiano - Entrepreneur Extraordinaire pg 76

Features Local Woman Fights Disease with Raw Food Diet

Pala Mesa Resort Anil Yadav’s Crown Jewel pg 142

pg 42

Discover Camp Pendleton Museums pg 124

Bonsall High School Launches Innovative Program pg 136

Local Guides:

Calendar of Events Area Restaurants Area Churches Non-Profit Clubs & Organizations Chamber Directories Trails, Parks & Preserves

GALAXY OF GLASS And More Inspirational Art Shows


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Dr. Skeoch is a diplomat of the American Board of Urgent Care Medicine. He graduated from Loma Linda University School of Medicine and received his residency training at Riverside General Hospital. He practiced at Fallbrook hospital Emergency Department from 1995 until it closed in late 2014. He was the Fallbrook Hospital Emergency Department Medical Director from 2004-2014. During his 20 years at Fallbrook Hospital he served on multiple medical staff committees, was Chief of the Medical Staff for 2 years and a member of the Fallbrook Hospital Board for 4 years. Dr. Skeoch is a Christian and native of San Diego. He is a patient advocate and is excited about the opportunity to bring extended hours healthcare back to the community of Fallbrook.

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Volume 14 • 2015

Published by Village News, Inc. Publisher Julie Reeder Creative Director Samantha Gorman Editor Robin Thayer

Publisher’s Note

Sleeping Indian Hill on the horizon. Shane Gibson photo

For the 14th year the Greater Fallbrook Area Sourcebook is bursting with interesting features about local residents, restaurants, history, and new ownership Julie Reeder at local businesses and resorts. Valuable guides inside focus on hiking, nonprofit organizations, chamber business directories, and our annual calendar of events. There is an amazing number of events going on throughout the year. This is the year to make a commitment to visit a few more events to become better connected with your community and enjoy everything it has to offer. Don’t miss the story about Leslie Kirchmeier who fought cancer 15 years ago by eating raw foods and turned her experience into an opportunity to teach people how to eat healthy and fight disease. Read about Anil Yadav, who owns 314 restaurants, and is working on transforming Pala Mesa Resort. Learn how Hank’s Hardware store was born and the story of how Hank’s parents immigrated to the United States after World War II. Discover nearby museums on Camp Pendleton, and learn what’s available to create in the Fallbrook School of the Arts. There is a fun story about the history of the Fallbrook Vintage Car Club, which is celebrating 50 years with the upcoming record-breaking Fallbrook Vintage Car Show at Pala Mesa Resort. There are over 400 beautiful cars expected to be registered for the show. There’s a story about the important work being done at the Fallbrook Pregnancy Resource Center and stories about business accomplishments at Tutto Dolce and Faro Trupiano’s latest creation - 127 West Social House, his development of the Espresso Lounge, and soon-to-open juice/smoothie bar in the heart of downtown. Be sure to read about the innovative educational program at the new Bonsall High School and the exciting arrival in March of Principal Lee Fleming. There is so much to do in our wonderful community and so many great people to get to know. Why not spend 2015 embracing and learning more about the beautiful Fallbrook, Bonsall, Rainbow and DeLuz area? We are truly blessed to live in such a great community. We are planning next year’s Sourcebook already, so if you have any feature ideas or photos you’d like to submit, email them to frontdesk@thevillagenews.com. Remember to like us on Facebook and stay updated on what’s happening in our community. Breaking news 24/7 is also found at www.villagenews.com. Check out what’s new at the Village News on page 140.

Julie Reeder Publisher

1588 S. Mission Road, Suite 200, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 723-7319 my-sourcebook.com | villagenews.com | myvalleynews.com | anzavalleyoutlook.com editor@thevillagenews.com | sales@thevillagenews.com

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Cover photo by Shane Gibson: Double neck bottle by Buzz Blodgett, Blodgett Glass, Encinitas. Blodgett has participated in the annual Galaxy of Glass show since its inception. He is a master glassblower, working since 1969. Please note: Village News, Inc. has made every attempt to verify and document all of the information contained in the Greater Fallbrook Area Sourcebook. If you have information or comments that would help us improve our 2016 Sourcebook, which is now in its planning stages, we ask that you contact our office at (760) 723-7319. We welcome your comments and suggestions. The Greater Fallbrook Area Sourcebook and all content is copyright 2015 by Village News, Inc.

Editorial Shelli DeRobertis Kim Harris Donald R. Lewis, MD, FACS Joe Naiman Tim O’Leary Karen Ossenfort Julie Reeder Sandra Shrader Laura Taylor Nathalie Taylor Chuck Tillotson Graphics & Production Mylena Matheny Staff Photographer Shane Gibson Contributing Photographers Shelli DeRobertis Kodi Rogers Ken Seals Laura Taylor Nathalie Taylor Sourcebook Photo Contest Winners Sharon Arnstein Gage Auge Shirley Binn Cheryl Bonham Lori Bryant Dolly Harty Barbro Hutchison Connor Kuhn Matthew Kuhn Neil Lakata Lucy Larson Mike McCoy Ron Montoya Jennifer Moosa Cheryl Nurse Angie Peters Thomas Rondeau Ryan Sodomire Janet M. Swenson Dirk Thayer Donna J. Weaver Advertising Sales Paul Bandong Laurianna Briana Tim Deegan Michele Howard Josephine Mackenzie Support Vania Fune Lisa Hasler Lucette Moramarco Anna Mullen Lili Nava Chuck Reeder Jenna Reeder

www.my-sourcebook.com


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Table

of Contents

Business Spotlights

Features

11 Diane Hartcorn 15 Autoheim 41 Richard Goble, DDS 49 Foundation for Senior Care 53 Fallbrook Healthcare Partners 123 Richard A. Nervig, P.C. 128 Robert W. Jackson, Attorney 129 Brett Parkinson, Attorney 140 Village News, Inc. 145 Susie Emory, Realtor 149 Jameson Investments, LLC

6 Galaxy of Glass and More

Guides

34 56 58 67

Hiking Guide Church Guide Non-Profit Guide Dining Guide

Events & Info 26 Calendar of Events 134 Fallbrook/Bonsall Photo Page 154 Advertiser Index 156 Sourcebook Photo Contest Winners

12 18 36 42 50

54 64 73

81 86 88

96 100 104 117 136 138 142 147 150

Vista Valley Country Club, North County’s Hidden Gem pg 22

Inspirational Art Shows The Fallbrook Vintage Car Club Bands, Belly Laughs and a Below Ground Wine Experience Fallbrook Pregnancy Resource Center Faro Trupiano - Entrepreneur Local Woman Fights Disease Extraordinaire with Raw Food Diet pg 76 Studies Revealing About Head Injuries in Children Dr. Cooke Creates Winning Smiles for Happy Patients A Rock Solid Setting the Stage Shop - El Parque Foundation Tutto Dolce is Fallbrook’s pg 92 “Sweet Taste of Italy” Family Taps Dutch Roots While Building Vast Fallbrook, Temecula Business Base Fallbrook Ag-Lab Art to Heart Welding Expert Fabricates pg 120 Throughout Community Homes for Our Troops Street Names and Their Origins Taste, Health and Fun Historic Fallbrook Cemeteries Innovative Program Launches Camp Pendleton Project-Based Learning Environment Invites and for Bonsall High School Students Welcomes You Feeling Secure is of Utmost pg 124 Importance at Pinktower Montessori Pala Mesa Resort - The Crown Jewel of Anil Yadav’s Portfolio I-15/SR76 Projects Mostly in Formative Stages The Brown Family of Rainbow Ride for History

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Galaxy of And More Inspirational Art Shows

Glass

by Julie Reeder

There are many wonderful shows to be enjoyed this year at the Fallbrook Art Center. Sep 13 - Oct 25: 18th Annual Galaxy of Glass One of the favorites every year is the Galaxy of Glass, which runs September 13 - October 25 and shows juried works by artists in our region. It is presented in the Janice Griffiths Gallery, and includes pieces from master flame workers utilizing the traditions of the Venetians and contemporary freeform blown glass and assemblages. Merill Everett is the founder of the popular show, which has been in existence for 17 years and last year featured over 200 pieces. Everett, a 27-year 6

Shane Gibson photos

Paul Counts vases, Mingo & Asho Glasscapes flower.

Merrill Everett totems.

resident, is also owner of Fallbrook Propane and North County Welding. Everett’s pieces included totems that he and his son, Chris, created from a series of blown pieces that ranged in height from two- to six-feet. The eight totems in the last show were created from 160 individual pieces. There were beautiful pieces that looked like colorful flowers or daisies fused into the glass created by Paul Counts as featured at the top of page. He also was the creator of some unique and colorful teapots. Paul Counts is well known for using Millefiori glass in his pieces. Fallbrook Art Center’s Executive Director Mary Perhacs’ assistant and part-time glass blower, Kimber Petralito, describes Millefiori as “the taking of hand-created shapes, pulled like taffy into cane, off the end of a blow pipe (punty). The layers of www.my-sourcebook.com


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Lynn Leahy reverse painted vase.

glass form a pattern inside the cane that are cut into slices and the designs within the slices create patterns such as flowers or hearts, etc. Then the glass blower will pick up the slices and melt them into the glass piece being created, such as a vase, plate or bowl, so that the glass patterns are included in the piece. The better the glass blower, the more intricate and colorful the patterns will be.” Executive Director Mary Perhacs said, “Our exhibition and sale showcased the work of 18 West Coast scene glass artists working in a broad spectrum of processes including blown, torched,

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slumped, fused and cast to create sculptures, vessels, functional ware, and jewelry.” There was jewelry from various artists and stemmed glassware of all colors by Michael Hermann and Gina Lunn. A mosaic created from broken blown glass was displayed by Cynthia Ann Swan and portrayed a dragonfly in the center. There were amazing wall hangings by Dick Ditore that appeared to be made from fabric, but were actually woven threads of glass, making them more like sculptures. Artist Lynn Leahy had pieces that were “reverse painted,” as shown at the top of page. The show centers on American Studio Glass, a glass art movement launched in the mid-60s by Harvey Littleton of Ohio, whose father was employed at Corning Glassworks in the 1930s. “Littleton’s ideas spread among the colleges and then a lot of us went to grad school and some to Europe, to study,” said Everett. Everett was one of those grad student artists who embraced the new fine art form. Everett then earned a master’s degree from Claremont Graduate School and after initially focusing on fine art ceramics, realized he had found his passion in glass. Everett then became instrumental in the American Glass movement when he taught workshops at Scripps, Cal State Fullerton, Orange Coast College and Palomar College. This show is a way he can share that passion with the community. Buzz Blodgett.

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Michael Hermann & Gina Lunn background pieces, Paul Counts foreground piece.

Galaxy of Glass Show Hours: Mon-Sat 10 am-4 pm | Sun 12-3pm - Show Free to FAI Members, Show Sponsors, Guild Members, Active Military & Under 18 | Others $6

interesting show with a lot of variety. Show Hours: Mon-Sun 10 am-4 pm - Free Admission to Show & Reception courtesy of Fallbrook Art Association

Apr 3 - 26: Fallbrook Art Association’s Spring Juried Show This is a great show every year presenting works in all media and disciplines by artists of our region. The local Art Association presents sculptures, oils, photography, pastels, watercolors, acrylics, pencil drawings, computer-generated art, etc. It’s an

May 2 & 3: 22nd Annual Reflections of Nature, Wildlife & Landscape Show & Sale The Reflections of Nature art show is another stand-out show featuring over 20 nationally recognized artists from across the U.S. and abroad. According to Mary Perhacs, they bring their art

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and stories of their global travel in pursuit of the wildlife they portray in their work.

Founded by award-winning Fallbrook artist and nature conservationist Gamini Ratnavira (native of Sri Lanka), the Reflections of Nature art event showcases the wonderful world of the wild and reminds us of the importance of preserving its beauty. Nature’s diversity is evident in the art presented by artists working in a broad range of mediums and disciplines including plein air to portray the world’s wildlife and the landscapes that sustain them. While many of the artists have been with the show since its inception, the 2014 show welcomed nine first-time artists to the show, including Clare Shaughnessy who lives in the U.K. Show Continues One Weekend Only Sat 10 am-6 pm | Sun 11 am-4 pm Show Free to FAI Members, Show Sponsors, Active Military & Under 18 | Others $6 May 17 - Jun 14: 4th Annual Fallbrook Art Center Artist’s Guild Show This is a show presenting juried works of Guild

members in all media and disciplines. “This show has a broader reach and is being built into a national show that includes fine art jewelry, sculptures, wood, ceramics, glass, paintings of all mediums and more,” said Mary Perhacs. Show Hours: Mon-Sat 10 am-4 pm | Sun 12-3 pm - Show Free to FAI Members, Show Sponsors, Guild Members, Active Military & Under 18 | Others $6 Jun 28 - Aug 23: Saluting our Wounded Warriors & Veterans According to Mary Perhacs, “The Wounded Warriors & Veterans show is a special show (not annual) that is multifaceted, including works created by Wounded Warriors and veterans and works by other artists that pay tribute to veterans’ service. This year we are excited to be working with Mary Fae Pendleton and the base to include a separate section of art created by children of active duty servicemen and women. There will be a lot of sculpture in this show as the Art Center is working in conjunction with the California Sculpture Academy and program.” The Sculpture Academy provides classes that are ongoing and free to Veterans, Active Duty and spouses.

Merrill & Chris Everett Totem.

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Garry Cohen top vase. Kathleen Mitchell bottom vases.

Show Hours: Mon-Sat 10 am-4 pm | Sun 12-3 pm - Show Free to FAI Members, Show Sponsors, Guild Members, Active & Retired Military & Under 18 | Others $6 Nov 27 - Dec 24: Art of the Holiday Features fabulous offerings of hand-crafted artful gifts perfect for holiday giving. “People come in saying that they now count on this show every year to find unique, one-of-akind high-quality gifts that are reasonably priced, and they love the décor and easy shopping experience. The Art Center has become a great cornerstone for downtown shoppers who count on this and then enjoy meandering and exploring the rest of the shops.” Show Hours: Mon-Sat 10 am-4 pm | Sun 12-3 pm - Free admission. Special Holiday Events & Late Shopping Hours will be on website: fallbrookartcenter. org.

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n the 1960’s Diane Hartcorn was a 15-year-old in Fallbrook, but she was already attending a hair design university in La Mesa, and has been cutting and coloring tresses ever since. Diane studied at the Vidal Sassoon Academy in New York in 1974, and her educational travels in hair design also combed through Mexico and the Bahamas. Locally, she owned a hair studio in Fallbrook for more than 30 years, and today she serves clients at Salon de l’art Nouveau, next to the post office in Bonsall. “I’ve been doing this a long time,” she said. “It serves me well and I enjoy every bit of it.” She has one client who has been coming to her for 50 years, she said. Diane also worked behind the scenes for Redken and Matrix, prepping live models for “before and after” appearances at hairshows. Her passion for creating fabulous cuts and helping people look their best comes with her intensive studies on the latest trends. “There’s a lot to learn – it’s ever changing,” she said. Diane recently completed a Schwarzkopf educational color seminar where she learned the latest in two-step blonding. She offers free hair consultations, and says she is honest and wants to make people happy. “I want them to get a color that’s complimentary to their skin and lifestyle,” she said. She makes sure the color they want is adaptable to their hairstyle and their hobbies. Ultimately, she said she wants the hair design to make a statement, which requires a good color and a good cut. Diane Hartcorn

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Paul Counts teapot.

SOURCEBOOK 2015

(760) 414-1008 11


The Fallbrook Vintage Car Club Part of the very fabric of Fallbrook

Kathleen Stiles looks fondly at their 1923 Model T touring car which she and her husband Paul donated to the Historical Society. The vintage car is housed in the Historical Society’s ‘Ford Room’ in Fallbrook.

by Chuck Tillotson

K

nown the world over for its luscious avocados, Fallbrook is also the home of the Fallbrook Vintage Car Club, which boasts of being an active car club for close to 60 years as well as having the longest continuous running Vintage Car Show on the West Coast for 50 years.

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1939 Ford Convertible Founded in the late 50s by a group of seven men, the original vintage car club started out as a Model “A” club and met occasionally in the home of Paul and Kathleen Stiles. At the time, it was a closed club (men only) and it was sponsored by the Model “A” club of Escondido. The group’s only activity was participating in the annual Avocado Festival Parade. In an interview recently with 96-year-old Kathleen Stiles, wife of the car club founder Paul Stiles, she reflected on the changes and growth of the club that have occurred over the years. Kathleen noted that in 1961, the group decided to form their own club spearheaded by local resident Bob White and her husband Paul. They named themselves the Fallbrook Car Club. Women, who in past years had provided fundraising articles for sale including quilts, cookies and cakes during the Avocado Day Parade show, were then invited to join the club. In 1961 too, Paul Stiles was the first elected president of the club and the meeting place was moved from his home to his Fallbrook Tractor offices on East Mission Rd. The women club members continued to meet at the Stiles’ residence to keep track of those groups in need of financial aid and to create quilts as well as other articles that could be raffled off during the car show. In 1965, the first formal, publicly advertised Fallbrook Vintage Car Show was conducted. The show was open to all qualified vintage cars paying an entry fee and open to the public for viewing with no admittance charge. The show drew 50 to 60 cars that year with all proceeds being given back to the community in the form of donations to the various local nonprofit and needy groups in Fallbrook. Hence the Car Club’s tradition of ‘giving back’ began in earnest. Today, the proceeds from their car show, its primary fundraiser, along with a number of events the club holds or participates in throughout the year provide the funds for the club’s donations www.my-sourcebook.com


In celebration of the car club’s 50th Annual Vintage Car Show, club member Courtesy photos Mrs Carol Kratzer is shown making a quilt to commemorate the show’s 50th anniversary. The quilt will be raffled off during the car show in the grand tradition established by the women members of the car club in the early days.

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to over 29 or more Fallbrook nonprofit organizations. The club donates to youth groups, schools, sports clubs, military and senior organizations. In 1985, the club began issuing an annual Car Show Poster prepared by an artist, which depicted a number of vintage cars gathered around a Fallbrook historical building and site. Because there was a limited quantity of posters printed each year and every poster signed and numbered by the artist, the posters soon became collectable works of art. Today, many homes and businesses throughout Fallbrook are decorated with these mementos. Kathleen Stiles recalled an occasion in 1995 when her daughter Kerith, now Mrs. Charles Graebar, was called upon to be a ‘standin’ for the artist creating the ’95 Car Show poster because the reigning Miss Fallbrook had made a commitment to be at another location that day. The amazing thing about this request was that it was some 30 years earlier that Kerith had been the first Miss Fallbrook ever to be involved in the Annual Vintage Car Show. Over the years, the club’s car shows have become larger and the venue more inclusive of other attractions besides vintage vehicles. Because the show has risen in popularity and size, the site of the show has also continued to change to accommodate the ever increasing number of show car entries as well as the many other attractions the show offers. The club’s membership has grown as well with the current number of men and women hovering around 250 members. The primary goal of the club continues to be to raise funds for the needy while having fun at the same time. In addition to the car show, the club holds special events, tours and rallies, as well as ‘members only’ annual events, including a kick-off breakfast at the beginning of each year, a summer barbeque, a fall family picnic and even a Christmas Party. This year, in celebrating the anniversary of the club’s 50th Kerith Stiles posing as Miss Fallbrook.

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[Far left] Car Club Board members convene at the Pala Mesa Resort, site of Fallbrook’s 50th Annual Vintage Car Show, to review staging and logistic details for the upcoming event on May 24th. From (l to r), Wayne King, Secretary, John Waugh, Member at Large, Lee Johnson, Treasurer, Roy Moosa, President and Mike McGuire, Vice President. [Left] The 2015 car show poster wherein the artist, Jim Krogle, captures the essence of the 1965 era by illustrating the clubhouse at Pala Mesa Resort (now 50 years old) along with five current car club members with their vintage vehicles from that time period.

Annual Fallbrook Vintage Car Show, the club will hold their Car Show ‘on the grass’ at the Pala Mesa Resort located at 2001 Old Highway 395 in Fallbrook. The Car Club is planning a true extravaganza for the Vintage Car Show to be held on Sunday, May 24th, Memorial Day weekend. The show will be open from 9:30 am to 3:00 pm with over 400 show cars on display, more than 50 swap meet booths,

food vendors and the Resort’s restaurant available, car show posters and memorabilia, a beer and wine garden sponsored by Pala Mesa Resort, raffles of many spectacular prizes, a full-time disc jockey playing the songs of the 50s, 60s, 70s as well as local school marching bands. Included in the celebration, the Fallbrook Vintage Car Club will host an on-site ‘Sgt. Peppers Beatles Tribute Band’ concert from 1:00 to 3:00 pm. Parking and admission to the car show are free to the public. For more information on the club or the show please visit www.fallbrookvintagecarclub.org.

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1963 Corvette Split Window www.my-sourcebook.com


Autoheim “Where Relationships & Repairs Go Hand in Hand”

European Service and Repair

A

utoheim has been a family owned and operated business since 1982. They are ASE certified and offer up-to-date services and repairs on all European vehicles, while only using OEM parts or their equivalents. Having worked in the automotive industry for a combined total of more than 50 years, father and son team Danny and Mike Covo work hard to provide their customers with the highest quality of service and dedication. Using the latest technology and diagnostic tests to inspect a customer’s vehicle, both Danny and Mike are educated in the latest updates on automative repair. They can explain what a vehicle’s status is, the measures needed to fix the problem, and provide the customer with pointers to keep their vehicle running in top condition. Because they strive to provide their community with the best possible

automotive repair service for European and import vehicles, they make sure customers get the chance to meet with the actual technicians who’ll be working on their vehicles. Most importantly, Autoheim offers coding and programing for most European vehicles including Mercedes Benz, BMW, Mini Coopers, and more. Diagnostics of a vehicle’s electronic equipment, which previously could only be done by the car factory or dealership, is now available at Autoheim for BMW, Mercedes Benz, and Mini Cooper vehicles for models up to 2015. In addition to their long list of labors already offered, Autoheim now

Danny and Mike Covo of Autoheim

provides a complete maintenance for Land Rover/Range Rover vehicles. A unique service, which sets them apart from other competitors. For the customer’s convenience, they provide a complimentary shuttle service, or, if desired, a rental car from Enterprise Rent-A-Car at a discounted rate while your car is being serviced. Autoheim accepts most extended warranties, while also offering factory scheduled maintenance, warranty book validations, and factory recommended services. At Autoheim, they believe every car is a challenge and experience – a challenge and experience they enjoy taking with every car they work on. It is their passion for their work that allows Autoheim to provide the best service possible.

“Autoheim is ASE-certified and offers up-to-date services and repairs on all European vehicles while only using OEM parts or their equivalents.”

Autoheim 1236 South Main Street Fallbrook, CA 92028 (760) 728-2338 SOURCEBOOK 2015

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Pala Casino Entertainment Bands, Belly Laughs and a Below Ground Wine Bar Experience by Sandra Shrader For lovers of fine wine, live music and comedy, there is a winning bonanza of entertainment on tap at Pala Casino Spa & Resort beginning in Spring, 2015. The biggest star of the spring/summer season, however, will be the resort itself after a $5 million construction renovation project is completed by Memorial Day. Among the changes will be the addition of new venues to the property, the introduction of an underground wine cave, and the building of a new permanent outdoor stage to the Starlight Theater. “The stage at the Starlight has always been a temporary one so we are very pleased to be finally installing a permanent stage there for our headliners and other acts,” said Jack Taylor, public relations manager for the Pala resort and casino, adding that the improvements will also include a roof and new high definition video and LED lighting systems. Even more exciting, said Taylor, will be the opening of CAVE, a 6,000-square-foot eatery, bar, and lounge as well as subterranean one-of-a-kind wine cave located beneath the new permanent stage at the Starlight Theater. CAVE will replace Chubby Checker Mama’s Cucina Italiana restaurant, but the dining establishment’s popular chef and staff will remain to provide an Italian-infused Mediterrean cuisine, and will also offer an extensive wine list and craft cocktails. Enhancing the enjoyment experience at Pala Casino Spa & Resort, and as part of the renovation project, will be Luis Rey’s, a new outdoor entertainment venue with a patio lounge and bar that takes advantage of nearby mountain views and features a menu of popular American and Mexican appetizers and local craft beers. Live bands will perform on the Luis Rey’s stage on weekend evenings and holidays. 18

For concert goers at the Starlight Theater, headliners scheduled for spring and summer will include legendary chart toppers of American pop rock, classic rock, bayou boogie, musical metal and golden oldies. Kicking off the season will be tribute bands Queen Nation and Zeppelin USA, scheduled for the Starlight’s opening night on May 23. Scheduled next in the lineup of entertainment at the Starlight is Creedence Clearwater Revisited on May 29. Creedence Clearwater Revisited was formed in 1995 by two former band members of Creedence Clearwater Revival, an American band whose short-lived and rough-hewn swamp rock music produced several hits including “Born on the Bayou,” “Bad Moon Rising,” “Green River” and “Lookin’ Out My Back Door” in 1969-1971. Music critics have hailed Creedence Clearwater Revisited as keeping the original band’s songs both timeless and relevant. Appearing June 6 will be Whitesnake, an English rock band, founded in 1977 by lead singer David Coverdale, and scored a number of top 10 hits in the Courtesy photos United States and the United Kingdom in the 1980s. The band’s commercial heavy metal sounds have had dance floors packed for years with songs like “Here I Go Again,” “Fool for Your Loving” and “This is Love.” Whitesnake has been named the 85th greatest hard rock band of all time by VH1. After forty years of use, Coverdale’s voice may be a bit more gravelly than in earlier years, but the band is still rocking the big hair look and drawing huge crowds. This year Whitesnake will be releasing its upcoming Purple Album, which Coverdale calls a tribute to legendary metal pioneers Deep Purple, with whom he got his start in rock in 1975. www.my-sourcebook.com


Whitesnake lead by David Coverdale.

Alice in Chains.

If you want do the Twist again, then make sure to hear the original twister of them all, Chubby Checker, scheduled to appear June 27. Only 18 years old in 1960 when Checker introduced his cover version of “The Twist” (first sung by Hank Ballard and the Midnighters in 1959), a worldwide craze was born when the song got adults out and onto the floor for the very first time to dance to a song popular with teenagers. The song became the only single to top the Billboard Hot 100 twice in two separate chart runs, and in 2008 it was named the biggest chart hit of all time by Billboard Magazine. Checker also popularized the Limbo Rock song, and its

trademark limbo dance. The Seattle-based band Alice in Chains will be rocking the stage on July 17. Formed in 1987, the band, whose members had previous musical forays in glam metal and funk, has been widely associated with grunge music (a genre influenced by hardcore punk and heavy metal, which is usually characterized by heavily distorted electric guitars and “growling” vocals.) But according to founding member and vocalist/lead guitarist Jerry Cantrell, Alice in Chains is a blend of “definitely metal, blues, rock and roll, maybe a touch of punk.” Known for its distinctive vocal harmonies, heavy metal and acoustic elements, pummeling guitar riffs, and what critics and fans call “darkly

®

SOURCEBOOK 2015

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Colin & Brad from “Whose Line Is It Anyway?”

Comedien Gabriel Iglesias.

gorgeous” music, the band has sold more than 14 million albums in the U.S and 35 million worldwide. Included in its 21 top single hits are crowd pleasers “Man in the Box,” “Would” and “Down in the Hole.” The musical scene at the Starlight will shift into straight-ahead rock ’n’ roll when Huey Lewis and the News perform on July 30. Known for their successful mix of pop rock, blues-rock, soul, and doo-wop-influenced harmonies, the band from the San Francisco Bay area wracked up a string of hits in the 1980s and 1990s, and five albums from those years have been certified either Gold, Platinum, or Multi-Platinum. Led by frontman singer/harmonica player Huey Lewis’ iconic

The Mar Dels will perform at the 60 Plus Club.

voice, good looks and personable charm, the band is known for writing simple, light-hearted songs from a working-class perspective, and has sold an estimated 30 million albums with hits like “The Power of Love,” “The Heart of Rock & Roll” and “Hip to Be Square” which have won the hearts of critics and fans everywhere. And that included Lewis’ own “hippiebeatnik” mother who said during the band’s early success that she “preferred the Grateful Dead’s music to our pop-rock music,” recalled Lewis in an early interview. “She said our music was too commercial for her.” If laughs are what you are seeking, then the “Gabriel Iglesias Presents Stand Up Revolution” event, scheduled at the Pala

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casino and resort for May 1, is the right place to be. Known for his shows I’m Not Fat . . . I’m Fluffy and Hot & Fluffy, the Hawaiianshirt-clad Iglesias uses a repertoire of storytelling, affected voices and sound effects in his act, including poking fun at his own overly full-bodied physique. The native-born San Diegan comedian, actor, writer, producer and voice actor developed his funnyman skills during his childhood as the youngest of six children raised by a single mother. His strong sense of humor led him to risk leaving a financially secure job eighteen years ago to perform standup anywhere Iglesias could find an audience, even in biker bars and hole-in-the-wall joints. Fresh from a surprisingly popular and agile dance turn on “Dancing with the Stars” last year, Tommy Chong joins his longtime buddy Cheech Marin in their cannabis-inspired counterculture comedy show Cheech & Chong and War with Special Guest: Shelby Chong, scheduled at the Starlight Theater for July 11. The Grammy Award-winning duo got their start in stand-up shows in the hippie bohemia of the late 1960s, recorded many successful comedy records, and produced several Cheech & Chong movies, beginning with their first cult classic Up in Smoke in 1978. A key part of the show is Tommy’s wife Shelby Chong who blends her blonde bombshell persona with stand up comedy in her opening act for Cheech & Chong. On August 8, the laughter keeps rolling along with Russell Peters, a stand-up comedian and actor who uses humor to highlight racial, ethnic, class and cultural stereotypes. The son of an Indian father who was born in Bombay (now Mumbai), Peters has appeared in numerous films and television shows including Last Comic Standing in 2014. He often refers to his own experiences growing up in an Indian family, and impersonated the accents of various ethnic groups to poke fun at them. As part of Russell’s Almost Famous World Tour show, the funnyman also engages with his audience in rapid-fire improvisation. More laughs are in the queue for Oct. 10 at Pala with Colin & Brad, a two-man group whose live act interacts with its audience to create a completely improvised tour de force. Described as riotously funny, the Canadian duo consists of Brad Sherman (who self-describes himself as onetime hobo/Venice street performer/kidnappee of gypsy troupes/British improv television show comedian) and Colin Mochrie who originally hails from Scotland and counts his comic training at Second City in Toronto and the “Whose Line is It Anyway” television show in London as his addle-brained formative years. Elsewhere in the Pala Casino Spa & Resort, free live entertainment shows by tribute bands are held at The Infinity SOURCEBOOK 2015

venue, said Taylor. Scheduled for evening shows on April 4 is Damage Inc — Tribute to Metallica, for April 11 is the Kenny Hale Band — Tribute to Great Classic RnR, and for April 18 Bostyx — A Tribute to Boston and Styx. Tribute bands also perform with no cover charge on Tuesdays at 1 p.m. for the 60 Plus Tuesday Club in The Infinity. The club’s members also receive a 30% discount every Tuesday at the Choices buffet restaurant. Scheduled for the Tuesday afternoon shows in April are The Smokin’ Cobras (surf and rockabilly) on April 7, The Del Mars (music from the 1940s-1970s), The Alley Cats (doo-wop) on April 21, and The Bluzmen — A Tribute to the Blues Brothers on April 28. So go ahead and head out to Pala Casino Spa & Resort this spring and summer to enjoy their great lineup of entertainment. You will leave feeling like a sure winner! Pala Casino Spa & Resort is located at 11154 Highway 76, Pala, CA 92059. For information about tickets, shows, the 60 Plus Tuesday Club, call 1-877-WIN PALA (1-877-946-7252) or visit www.startickets.com.

Gabriel Iglesias, Saturday, May 1, 2015, 8 p.m., Events Center, Tickets: $65, $55, $45 Queen Nation — A Tribute to Queen/Zeppelin USA, A Tribute to Led Zeppelin, Saturday, May 23, 7:30 p.m., Starlight Theater, Tickets: $12 Advance/ $14 Show Creedence Clearwater Revisited, Friday, May 29, 8 p.m., Starlight Theater, Tickets: $55,/$45 Whitesnake, Saturday, June 6, 2015, 7 p.m., Starlight Theater, Tickets: $70, $60, $45 Chubby Checker, Saturday, June 27, 7:30 p.m, Starlight Theater, Tickets: $45 Cheech & Chong and War with Special Guest: Shelby Chong, Saturday, July 11, 7:30 p.m., Starlight Theater, Tickets: $72, $62, $52 Alice in Chains, Saturday, July 17, 8 p.m., Starlight Theater, Tickets: $80, $70, $60 Huey Lewis and the News, Thursday, July 30, 8 p.m., Starlight Theater, Tickets: $72, $62, $47 Russell Peters, Saturday, August 8, 7:30 p.m., Starlight Theater, Tickets: $70, $60, $50 Colin & Brad, October 10, 7:30 p.m., Pala Events Center, Tickets; $49.50, $39.50 21


VCountry ista Valley Club,

North County’s Hidden Gem by Kim Harris

J

ust a short drive through rolling hills and majestic live oaks lies one of North County’s hidden gems, Vista Valley Country Club. Upon first arrival to the popular destination off Gopher Canyon Road, visitors are struck by the natural beauty surrounding the newly renovated clubhouse and 18-hole regulation Ted Robinson, Sr. designed championship golf course. Once visitors enter the clubhouse, they are surrounded by elegance and beauty, something Vista Valley pulls off without a feeling of pretentiousness. Decorated with treasures that owners Terri and John Havens find on their annual pilgrimages to France, the luxurious clubhouse offers spectacular views of the course and surrounding countryside, creating an old-world charm feel. The clubhouse has been newly renovated. Perfect for everyone from retirees to families with small children, Vista Valley offers everything from a fitness center complete with personal trainers, instructor-led classes and state-of-the-art equipment, to mouthwatering menu items and social events in the dining room. Executive Chef Marissa Gerlach said she believes in using real ingredients in her signature dishes and letting them shine.

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Her farm-to-table philosophy clearly shows in the way she approaches all of her dishes and personal attention to the needs of diners. “It’s so different to walk into the dining room and know the faces of the people – you become a family,” said Gerlach who worked her way through celebrated Sonoma and Napa kitchens, learning alongside some of the most talented and recognized chefs in the business. “It becomes personal and food is very personal.” Gerlach says she is trying to change the way most chefs serve food, using local produce, herbs and even meats. Along with the staff at Vista Valley Country Club, she keeps all food offerings local. “Here, it is more personal, more fresh and healthy driven, but we offer all of those comfort food favorites that our patrons Courtesy photos love,” said Gerlach, adding that she works with members to meet all of their dietary needs. “I’m not a no chef. I’m a yes chef. We always accommodate dietary restrictions.” Phillip Rodriguez, the club’s director of Food and Beverage said that the focus of the restaurant is to create a memorable experience for club members.

www.my-sourcebook.com


The luxurious clubhouse offers spectacular views of the course and surrounding countryside.

“We are focusing on theme nights, creating social activities and offer everything from casual dining to more formal experiences,” he said. And what goes better with a wonderful meal than a nice glass of wine? Offering a huge selection and private wine lockers for members, Vista Valley has that covered too. Also available is a private tasting

SOURCEBOOK 2015

The patio offers an elegant and relaxed atmosphere.

room, a fireplace and an outdoor fire pit overlooking the golf course. Vista Valley Country Club believes in living a healthy lifestyle and total wellness just like its sister property, Cal-a-Vie Health Spa Luxury Resort and Retreat in Vista. The club promotes that belief through a state-of-the-art gym available for use by all members ages 14 and older.

Executive Chef Marissa Gerlach said she believes in using real ingredients in her signature dishes and letting them shine. Her farm-to-table philosophy clearly shows in the way she approaches all of her dishes.

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Located on the second floor of the club and offering magnificent views of the surrounding hills and golf course, the Fitness Center boasts a choice of high-end Precor cardio equipment including treadmills, elliptical machines, stair steppers, rowers, upright stationary bikes, and recumbent bikes. Nautilus and many other weight machines are available to provide weight and resistance training as well as physio balls, TheraBand exercise bands, mats for stretching, and free weights for use to customize or add to members’ workout. For those who prefer sports or classes for their workouts, the club offers an indoor, halfcourt basketball court and two immaculately maintained Har-Tru tennis courts, along with fitness classes and personal training packages. “The great thing with Cal-aVie being our sister property is that all of our classes are taught by Cal-a-Vie fitness instructors,” Vice President of Operations Gary McGiboney said. An elegantly decorated, onsite spa offers the perfect opportunity to wind down after a workout or round of golf on the award winning course at Vista Valley. Facials, manicures, pedicures and massages are all services offered at the spa. A whirlpool spa is also available for members who prefer to simply relax following an enthralling day of golf. “Most people pay $9,000 a week to go to Cal-a-Vie, but if you are a member here you get the same treatments, the same caliber treatments from the number two

Vista Valley Country Club offers a beautiful location for your wedding and reception, rehearsal dinner, bridesmaid luncheon or other special event.

spa in the world,” McGiboney said. Speaking of golf, Vista Valley offers breathtaking views for those who choose to tee up on the 18hole, Ted Robinson, Sr. designed championship course. Surrounded by stunning mountains and gorgeous views, no two shots are ever alike on this course that is miles away from the noise of the city. Members are welcomed by skilled and friendly golf staff who is dedicated to making the members’ golf experience hassle-free. The Golf Shop boasts an exceptional selection of golf merchandise including the latest in apparel, accessories, and equipment from the top manufacturers and staff is always happy to arrange an informal round of golf to help introduce new members to those whose interest might be similar to their own. On Tuesdays and Thursdays, women have priority tee times, and men have priority tee times on Wednesdays and Fridays. The golf calendar is filled with different events for individuals, partners and families of all ages and skill levels. Vista Valley offers a plethora of programs for children who want to learn the game. Youth programs promote interaction among junior golfers and their families through participation in clinics, camps, intra and inter club tournaments and competition. “We have championship tees all the way to family tees to encourage everyone to have a good experience on the golf course,” McGiboney said. In addition to the fundamentals of the game, those involved in

18-hole regulation Ted Robinson, Sr designed championship golf course.

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www.my-sourcebook.com


BelAire Studio Photo

Executive Chef Marissa Gerlach believes in a farm-to-table philosophy.

the Junior Golf Program are taught patience, etiquette and the importance of good sportsmanship. Juniors learn to abide by the rules of the Club, and to respect the privileges afforded to them by their participation in the program. As if the championship course, relaxing spa and delectable delicacies offered weren’t enough, Vista Valley prides itself on its special events including family dinners, themed happy hours, Ballroom Dance Series, summer concerts and many golf tournaments. “We are trying to create more value to their memberships besides just being a place where they can come and dine or play golf,” Rodriguez said. “We are building relationships and friendships between members and creating opportunities for our members.” McGiboney said he agreed with Rodriquez’s assessment. “We are not your typical golf course,” he said. “There is a lot to Vista Valley Country Club.” Memberships to Vista Valley Country Club are available in all price ranges and include Family, Individual, Junior and Non-Resident memberships. Sports Memberships and Social Memberships are also available. For more information on Vista Valley Country Club or to learn more about membership opportunities please call (760) 758-2800 or visit www.vistavalley.com. Vista Valley Country Club is located just off Interstate 15 and Gopher Canyon Road at 29354 Vista Valley Drive in Vista, California.

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Owners Terri and John Havens decorate with treasures found on their annual trips to France.

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760.451.0639 584 Industrial Way, Fallbrook Mon - Fri 8:30am - 5pm Sat 8:30am - 12:00pm 25


Calendar of

Mike McCoy photo

EVENTS Every Friday, 11am-3pm Vince Ross Village Square Farmers Market Corner of Main Street & Alvarado in Fallbrook. Vendors vary weekly. Come find that something special you just have to have, from fresh organic produce to handmade crafts and gift items. Every Sunday, 10am-3pm Sunday Farmers Market at the Valley Fort Located at 3757 S. Mission Road in Fallbrook. Vendors vary weekly. Lots of local produce, plants and florals, handmade quilts, gift items and much more! Sunday April 19, 9am-5pm 29th Annual Avocado Festival This yearly festival hits Main Street in Fallbrook and celebrates its agricultural heritage. Come enjoy delicious food, live music, arts & crafts, farmers markets and much, much more! Shuttles available, no pets allowed. For more information, call the Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce at (760) 728-5845.

Saturday April 25, 9am-3pm Annual Fallbrook Garden Club Tour & Market Place Tour Outstanding residential gardens ($20/in advance; $25/at gate), vendors, plants, raffle, and more. Begins at Fallbrook Historical Society, 260 Rockycrest (corner of S. Hill Street). Opens 8:30 am; tour and raffle ticket sales closes at 1 pm. Learn more at www. fallbrookgardenclub.org. Saturday April 25, 6-11pm The Roaring 20s Dinner and Auction Gala Benefit for Boys & Girls Clubs of North County. Including silent auction, dinner, dancing and entertainment. Pala Casino Spa and Resort. Tickets on sale at www.bgcnorthcounty.org. For more information, call (760) 728-5871. 11154 Highway 76, Pala. 21+ event. Saturday April 25, 6-9pm Bonsallpalooza Benefit concert to help keep music and performing arts in the Bonsall Unified School District. Including silent auction, dinner and live music. Infinity Showroom at Pala Casino Spa and Resort. Tickets on sale at www.startickets.com. 11154 Highway 76, Pala. 21+ event.

Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce Upcoming Events April 24 Noon - 1:30 pm Lunch Mob Las Islas Marias 1019 S. Main Avenue, Fallbrook

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May 1 Noon - 2:00 pm

Awards & Installation Luncheon Grand Tradition Estate & Gardens 220 Grand Tradition Way, Fallbrook

May 14 7:30 - 9:00 am

SunUpper Hosted by Fallbrook Skilled Nursing Facility 325 Potter Street, Fallbrook

May 20 5:30 - 7:00 pm

SunDowner Hosted by Vista Valley Country Club 29354 Vista Valley Drive, Vista

May 29 Noon - 1:30 pm

Lunch Mob 127 West Social House 127 W. Elder Street, Fallbrook

June 11 7:30 - 9:00 am

SunUpper Hosted by PDS Financial Enterprises, Inc. @ Chamber office, 111 S. Main Avenue, Fallbrook

June 12 8:00 am - 3:00 pm Chamber Day at the San Diego County Fair Del Mar Fairgrounds Infield Pavilion

www.my-sourcebook.com


Sunday April 26, 11am-4pm Arts in the Park A lovely day to take a stroll through the paths surrounded by Live Oak trees and smiling faces enjoying art-related activities such as hands-on crafts and music, including puppets and magic shows! Admission is free and food is available for purchase. Parking $3. Live Oak Park, 2746 Reche Road, Fallbrook. Sunday May 3, 2pm-4pm Annual Spring Tea Located at Silvergate Retirement Residence, East Building Dining Room, 420 Elbrook Drive, Fallbrook. Hat contests, drawings, lots of goodies, tea, and some magic! Advanced ticket sales $25, at the door $30. Tickets available at Fallbrook Animal Sanctuary, 230 W. Aviation, Fallbrook and Major Market, 845 S. Main Avenue, Fallbrook.

Avocado Festival.

Cheryl Nurse photo

Saturday May 9, 10am-4 pm AAUW Country Garden Tour of Fallbrook This tour offers six beautiful, drought-tolerant local gardens. Begins at Palomares House, 1815 S. Stage Coach Lane, Fallbrook. Complimentary refreshments, vendors. Tickets available at Major Market, Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce, AAUW booth at Avocado Festival or call (760) 728-4459; $20 presale or $25 at the gate. Saturday & Sunday, May 9 & 10, 10am-5pm Mother’s Day Weekend Craft Fair Thousands of handmade crafts, live demonstrations, hands-on workshops, food tastings, and entertainments. Free admission and parking. Myrtle Creek Botanical Gardens & Nursery, 2940 Reche Road, Fallbrook. Saturday, May 10 Letter Carriers’ Food Drive Leave your cans of food outside by your mailbox in a bag or box for donation and the USPS will donate it! Saturday May 16, Serving times 4,5,6 pm Spaghetti Fundraiser for Reche Schoolhouse Benefit dinner to raise funds for maintaining the Reche Schoolhouse. Dinner will be served at the Reche Community Club, 1319 S. Live Oak Park Road, Fallbrook. Adults $8, children under 12 $5. For more information call (760) 723-6601.

Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce cont. June 17 5:30 - 7:00 pm

SunDowner Hosted by Second Chances Barn & Bucket of Nails 3137 S. Mission Road, Fallbrook

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June 26 Noon - 1:30 pm Lunch Mob Hosted by Golden Kitchen in Jackson Square Shops 119 N Main Ave, Fallbrook

July 9 7:30 - 9:00 am

SunUpper Hosted by SunPro Solar @ Chamber office 111 S. Main Avenue, Fallbrook

Saturday May 16, 5:30-10pm Wine, Brews & Blues Festival Live blues, silent auction, art sales, hot rods, dancing, dessert court, wine & handcrafted beer tasting with food from local restaurants. Proceeds benefit local and international charities. Presented by the Rotary Club of Bonsall. Located at the California Center for the Arts Escondido, 340 N. Escondido Blvd, Escondido. Visit www.bonsallrotary.com for tickets. 21+ Event. Saturday May 23, 7:15 am-noon Avocado Half Marathon & 5K Race starts and ends in the beautiful setting of Live Oak Park among 100-year-old Live Oak trees. This event helps raise money for the nonprofit Homes For Our Troops. For more information visit www.avocadohalfand5k.com. Saturday May 23, 10am Memorial Day Observance A Civil War-themed historical remembrance will be offered at Odd Fellows Cemetery at the corner of West Clemmens Lane and Alturas Road in Fallbrook. Memorial Day was formerly known as Decoration Day, as it originated after the Civil War to commemorate Union and Confederate soldiers who perished in that conflict. This event, presented by the Sgt. William Pittenger Camp 21 of The Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War, is educational in nature and open to the public. Due to the uneven ground surface, guests are encouraged to wear flat-soled shoes.

The Fallbrook

Chorale

Makers of Music for Fallbrook and Surrounding Communities Do you like to sing? Come join us on Tuesday evenings from 7-9pm. We are always looking for additional voices. Call for complete information!

S

ince 1989 the Fallbrook Chorale has continued their “dream” to be a “music maker” for our community. We are a non-profit community chorale group, organized for the purpose of providing vocal music to Fallbrook and the surrounding communities. We participate in various community sponsored events as Memorial Day, 9/11 Tribute, Veterans Day, and annual concerts in June and December. We provide a wide diversity of musical selections both sacred and secular, including classical, pop, show tunes, spiritual and jazz. We believe our music has significant educational value. We provide free attendance at our concerts for active military and for children when accompanied by a paying adult.

Call 760-390-9726

fallbrookchorale.org • Fallbrook, CA 92088 27


Friday July 10, 5-8pm Fallbrook Summer Nights Centered on Main Avenue at Alvarado Street, this summer celebration continues!

Concert at Grand Tradition Estate & Gardens.

Dolly Harty photo

Sunday May 24, 9:30am-4pm Fallbrook Vintage Car Club 50th Annual Car Show Come participate in this historic event! Includes swap meet, food, beer & wine garden and live DJ. Beatles tribute band plays from 1-3pm. Free parking and admission, Located at Pala Mesa Resort, 2001 Old Highway 395, Fallbrook. For more info and car registration visit www.fallbrookvintagecarclub.org. Monday May 25, 11am Memorial Day Program A traditional Memorial Day observance and program, sponsored by Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 1924, will be held at the Masonic Cemetery, located at 1177 Santa Margarita Drive, Fallbrook. Friday June 12, 5-8pm Fallbrook Summer Nights Centered on Main Avenue at Alvarado Street, there will be music, food, cars, presentations of Fallbrook’s youth and family programs, and good old-fashioned American small town fun. Friday June 19, 5-7:30pm Wine & A Bite Art Walk Stroll Historic Downtown Fallbrook, stopping at several venues where you’ll enjoy wine, a bite of gourmet food and a unique art experience at each stop. To purchase tickets and get information visit: www.fallbrookchamberofcommerce.org.

Friday July 17, 5-7:30pm Wine & A Bite Art Walk Stroll Historic Downtown Fallbrook, stopping at several venues where you’ll enjoy wine, a bite of gourmet food and a unique art experience at each stop. To purchase tickets and get information visit: www.fallbrookchamberofcommerce.org. Friday July 24, 5-8pm Fallbrook Summer Nights Centered on Main Avenue at Alvarado Street, celebrate summer. Friday August 7, 5-8pm Fallbrook Summer Nights Centered on Main Avenue at Alvarado Street, this summer celebration continues! Friday August 14, 5-7:30pm Wine & A Bite Art Walk Stroll Historic Downtown Fallbrook, stopping at several venues where you’ll enjoy wine, a bite of gourmet food and a unique art experience at each stop. To purchase tickets and get information visit: www.fallbrookchamberofcommerce.org. Friday September 11, 7-10am 9/11 Memorial Climb at Monserate Mountain Come out to commemorate those fallen on 9/11 by hiking Monserate Mountain (off Stewart Canyon/ Old Highway 395). Registration starts at 7 am, ceremony at 8 and hit the trail by 8:30! There will be many vendors lining the perimeter, a chance for kids to see what it’s like to have on turnout gear plus talk to some civil servants, and enjoy delicious food.

Friday June 26, 5-8pm Fallbrook Summer Nights Centered on Main Avenue at Alvarado Street, celebrate summer.

Friday September 18, 5-10pm Lobster on the Green Rotary fundraiser including live music, silent auction, and great food! Located at Grand Tradition Estate & Gardens, 220 Grand Tradition Way, Fallbrook. To purchase tickets and get information visit: www.fallbrookchamberofcommerce.org.

Saturday July 4, 2-9:30pm 4th of July Celebration and Fireworks Located at Grand Tradition Estate & Gardens, 220 Grand Tradition Way, Fallbrook. To purchase tickets and get information visit: www.fallbrookchamberofcommerce.org.

October 1-31 Fallbrook Scarecrow Days See all the original Scarecrows that the local businesses put outside for the festivities. Then you can vote on your favorite ones at the Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce, 111 S. Main Avenue, Fallbrook.

Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce Upcoming Events Cont. July 15 5:30 - 7:00 pm

SunDowner Hosted by Grand Tradition Estate & Gardens 220 Grand Tradition Way, Fallbrook

28

July 31 Noon - 1:30 pm Lunch Mob Nessy Burgers 3235 Old Hwy 395, Fallbrook

August 13 7:30 - 9:00 am SunUpper Location TBD

August 19 5:30 - 7:00 pm

SunDowner Hosted by Plaza 395 1185 E. Mission Road, Fallbrook

August 28 Noon - 1:30 pm

Lunch Mob Trupiano’s Italian Bistro 945 S. Main Avenue, Fallbrook

September 10 7:30 - 9:00 am

SunUpper Hosted by Foundation for Senior Care 135 S. Mission Road, Fallbrook

September 16 5:30 - 7:30 pm

State of the Chamber Dinner Zion Lutheran School 1405 E. Fallbrook Street, Fallbrook

www.my-sourcebook.com


Welcome to the Welk Theatre 2015 Season ROGERS AND HAMMERSTEIN’S

JAN 7 - APR 5, 2015

MAY 1 - JUL 26, 2015

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AUG 28 - NOV 15, 2015

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JAN 14 - DEC 30, 2015

Season Tickets on Sale Now! The all-new Welk Theatre 2015 Season Brochure is here. Providing 50 years of entertainment. Get your copy today!

1.888.802.SHOW | welkresorts.com

JUL 30 - AUG 2, 2015


Sunday October 4, 1-4:30pm Stagecoach Sunday Fallbrook Land Conservancy’s annual fundraiser. Includes authentic stagecoach rides, live music, barbeque dinner, silent auction and raffle, wildlife exhibits, kids’ games and more. Located on the grounds of the historic Palomares House, 1815 S. Stage Coach Lane, Fallbrook. Call (760) 738-0889 or visit www. fallbrooklandconservancy.org. Saturday October 10, 10am-2pm Fire Prevention Week at Station 1 Come with the whole family to climb inside fire trucks and meet real Firefighters! Located at Station 1, 315 E. Ivy Street, Fallbrook. Sunday October 11, 10am-4pm 18th Annual Fall Festival of Gems Event includes vendors selling minerals, fossils, jewelry and other earth science related items, a special raffle, mineral panning, wheel of fortune and geode cracking and silent auctions. Located in front of the Fallbrook Gem & Mineral Museum, 123 W. Alvarado Street in Fallbrook. Sunday October 18, 11am-3pm Fallbrook Alumni Association Annual “Picnic in the Park” Celebration for all FHS Classes! BBQ lunch available (prepared by FHS Ag Students) and opportunity drawing. Located at Live Oak Park, 2746 Reche Road, Fallbrook. Sunday October 18, 10am-4pm Fallbrook Harvest Faire An Autumn-themed faire of handmade crafts, local foods & treats, petting zoo, pony and hay rides, scarecrows on display and pumpkin contest. Located in Historic Downtown Fallbrook.

Bonsall Festival.

Cheryl Nurse photo

Friday December 4, 4:30-7pm Fallbrook Community Tree Lighting The night will include caroling, hot cider, and holiday performances featuring the FHS Marching Band and the Fallbrook Music Society. Located at Fallbrook Community Center, 341 Heald Lane, Fallbrook. Saturday December 5, 5pm Fallbrook Christmas Parade Come join the fun and watch this impressive parade down Main Street in Fallbrook. Friday December 11, 5-8pm Holiday Wine & A Bite Art Walk Stroll Historic Downtown Fallbrook, stopping at several venues where you’ll enjoy wine, a bite of gourmet food and a unique art experience at each stop. To purchase tickets and get information visit: www.fallbrookchamberofcommerce.org. Bonsall Chamber of Commerce Sundowners All events start at 5:30 p.m. Call the Bonsall Chamber office at 760-630-1933 for more details.

Wednesday November 11, 10:30am Veterans Day Parade Parade proceeds down Main Avenue from Fallbrook Street to Alvarado followed by a ceremony at Vince Ross Village Square. Hosted by VFW Post 1924.

April 9:..............“Playland” at the Paintball Park at Camp Pendleton May 14:.............The Art of Paradise at Starlight Ranch June 11:............California Sculpture Academy July 9:...............Salon de L’Art Nouveau August 13:........Wealthbridge Advisors September:.......Location TBA October 8:.........Vista Valley Country Club November 18:...Palomar College - a joint partnership with Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce December 10:...Christmas at Lilac Hills Ranch/Zosa Estate

Saturday November 14, 8:30am Thanksgiving 5k Walk/Run to Feed the Hungry Starting and finishing at the Fallbrook Food Pantry, 1042 S. Mission Road. For more information, visit www.fallbrookfoodpantry. org or call (760) 728-7608.

Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce Upcoming Events Cont. September 25

Annual Charity Golf Tournament Pala Mesa Resort 2001 Old Hwy 395, Fallbrook

30

October 8 7:30 - 9:00 am SunUpper Location TBD

October 21 5:30 - 7:00 pm

SunDowner Hosted by Citrus Plaza Self Storage 202 W. College Street, Fallbrook

October 30 Noon - 1:30 pm

Halloween Lunch Mob El Jardin Mexican Restaurant 1581 S. Mission Road, Fallbrook

November 12 7:30 - 9:00 am SunUpper Location TBD

November 18 5:30 - 7:00 pm

SunDowner / Joint with Bonsall Chamber of Commerce Hosted by Palomar College 1140 W. Mission Road, San Marcos

www.my-sourcebook.com


DELUXE PARTY PACKAGE

ADD UNLIMITED WATERSLID ES FOR $3 99 MORE PER PE

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• Invitations pLuS tAx • Party Supplies 1 • 1 /2 Hours in Party Area • A Host to Serve & Assist • 2 Slices Pepperoni or Cheese Pizza • Unlimited Soft Drinks

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• 20 Arcade Tokens each Birthday Child Receives a Free Gift!

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TO OUR ANY PACKAGE $ 40 MORE, FOR ONLY OM IVATE GLOW RO

INCLUDES PR PPLIES, GLOW PARTY SU UET, BALLOON BOUQ CE & GLOW NECKLA FOR EACH CHILD

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319

* • Invitations $ • Party Supplies pLuS tAx • 1 1/2 Hours in Party Area • A Host to Serve & Assist • 2 Slices Pepperoni or Cheese Pizza • Unlimited Soft Drinks During 1 1/2 eating time

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AY BIRTHD L: A I SPEC $ RCADE 50 A FOR TOKENS e) (A $ 75 Valu purchase th the Available wi hday Package. of any Birt

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*Price for up to 10 Guests. $10.99 for each additional participant.

Deposit Required. No personal checks accepted. Height, age, weight and footwear restrictions may apply. Water Slides only available during select water slide operating dates. these packages are not valid with any other offer. times and dates are limited. please call location for details. Reservations must be made at least 72 hours in advance. All parties must begin at the scheduled time. No outside food or drinks allowed, excluding birthday cakes and ice cream.

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Reservations required. Discount available on any of our birthday packages with minimum of 10 guests. Discount given at time of party. Not valid with other offers or discounts. No cash value. Mention “Sourcebook” when making reservations. Expires 4/1/16.


Reche Rd

Mission Rd exit

Old Hwy 395

FREE Admission & Parking

OPEN 9-5 DAILY

S

1-15 HWY

Hwy 76

N

Myrtle Berry Pie

2940 Reche Rd, Fallbrook CA 92028

760-728-5340

www.DiscoverMyrtleCreek.com

Country Kitchen

Wild Bird Sanctuary

Organic CafĂŠ


Gifts

Plants

Picnic Baskets Butterfly Gardens

Workshops

Café

Mother’s Day Craft Fair May 9th & 10th

Farmhouse

Artisan Fair June 13th & 14th

Annual Trunk & Crate Sale September 4th-6th

Fall Festival October 24th & 25th

Old Fashioned Christmas Tree Farm December 1st-31st


let’s go Preschool playground and Jr. playground

DeLuz Ecology Center

11 mi. north of Fallbrook on DeLuz Murrieta Rd.

easy

5 miles of hiking trails and intermittent stream; 1926 one-room school house

Don Dussault .75 acre

804 Alturas Rd.

easy

Trees, play equipment

F.U.E.S.D. Park 1 acre

321 N. Iowa Street

easy

Nice shade trees and grass

Fallbrook Youth Baseball Ingold Fields 15 acres

2551 Olive Hill Road

easy

5 baseball fields, snack bar

Ingold Community Sports Park 17 acres

2551 Olive Hill Raod

Jackie Heyneman Park

         

easy

2 baseball fields, 2 soccer fields, snack bar, indoor soccer arena;  No dogs allowed

Corner of Beech St. and Mission Ave.

easy

Nice grass play area and walking loop

Live Oak Park

Corner of Live Oak Park Rd. and Gird Rd.

easy

Oaks/Year-round streams/ Gazebo/ Pavillion/Horseshoe pits/         Exercise Course

Palomares House

S. Stagecoach Lane near Brook Street

easy

Hiking Distance

Difficulty

Trailhead

Attributes

River Loop Trail

5.8 miles, roundtrip

easy

Sandia Creek Drive just south of Santa Margarita River

Shade of oaks, sycamores, year-round river

 

Hill Trail

1380 acres

1.29 miles, one way

moderate

Rock Mountain Drive, 0.5 mile north of Santa Margarita River

Mostly horses, must cross river

Santa Margarita County Preserve

2.5 miles, one way

moderate

De Luz Road, south of Santa Margarita River

Scenic views of river, equestrian staging area

1380 acres

173 acre 34

River/Stream

Trail & Size

Views

santa margarita river trails

 

Plateau/Summit/Vistas

Walkways, Arboretum, Wildlife Sculptures

Bike

1.5 acres

Horse

26 acres

Foot

.5 acre

Dogs Allowed*

128 acres

Tennis Courts

easy

Volleyball

Corner of Fallbrook St and Heald Lane

7 acres

Wheelchair Access

Community Center Park

Picnic Tables

Amenities

Barbecue(s)

Difficulty

Basketball Court

Location / Address

Ball Fields

Park & Size

Play Equipment

Parks

Cheryl Bonham photo

Bathrooms

Barbro Hutchinson photo

   

    

www.my-sourcebook.com


hiking! Dogs Allowed*

Plateau/Summit/Vistas

River/Stream

Views

Preserve & Size

Bike

PRESERVES

Neil Lakata photo

Horse

Ron Montoya photo

Foot

Dirk Thayer photo

Hiking Distance

Difficulty

Location / Address

Attributes

Appleton

No walking trails

easy

West side of La Canada Road

Riparian area only

Bonsall Preserve

No walking trails

n/a

S. Mission Rd & Hwy 76 (NW corner)

Riparian area only

Dinwiddie

No walking trails

easy

Brook Road

Riparian habitat

.25 mile

easy

Sumac Road, 1/2 mile off Pala Mesa Dr

Views, plants, flowers, rock outcroppings

48.55 acres

2.1 miles, mostly a loop

moderate

Southwest side of Heller’s Bend Road

Views and riparian forest

   

Los Jilgueros

1.5 mile loop

easy

Mission Rd

Ponds and bird watching

22.98 acres 27.36 acres 14.5 acres

Engel Family 10.37 acres

Heller’s Bend

43.5 acres

Monserate Mountain 340 acres

Rock Mountain

3.9 miles moderate / roundtrip, difficult mostly a loop

Pankey Road at Stewart Canyon Road

Mountain and ocean views 

1.5 miles

moderate

Sandia Creek Drive

Views, creek, rock outcroppings, wildlife

Santa Margarita Ecological Reserve

Must have written permission

moderate

Contact Tom@Tchester.org for tours

Local flora, fauna and historical points

Santa Rosa Plateau Ecological Reserve & trails 6925 acres

.6 - 2.2 miles, mulitple trailheads

easy/ moderate

Visitor’s Center, 39400 Clinton Keith, Murrieta

Vernal pools, oak woodlands, wildlife

2-3 trails, 78 acres

4300 acres

 

 

 

     

A colorful Pocket Field Guide is available for purchase through the Fallbrook Land Conservancy. The guide contains information on native plants and animals plus a map of the Santa Margarita River Hiking & Horse Trail System. The pocket field guide is available for sale at the Chamber of Commerce, Fallbrook Fertilizer, Grangetto’s or by sending a check payable to Fallbrook Trails Council for $11 to Joe Comella, 974 Via Hillview, Fallbrook, CA 92028. SOURCEBOOK 2015

35


Fallbrook Pregnancy

Resource by Shelli DeRobertis

M

ore than 1,200 people sought services from the Fallbrook Pregnancy Resource Center (FPRC) in 2014, and many first-time visitors were apprehensive about what to expect. But the faith-based atmosphere at 113 E. Hawthorne St. is filled with caring and knowledgeable staff and volunteers. Melanie Bonenfant, receptionist, has witnessed reactions from people who seemed nervous while waiting in the lobby, only to see them leave feeling relieved after they learned what FPRC could do for them. “It’s like a 180 – they come out relaxed,” Bonenfant said. She said the majority of the people say they’re very glad they came in.

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Center

Forty-percent of the center’s clients are teenage girls, and the rest consist of first-time parents, single women, or couples looking for financial help or assistance figuring out what to do next after learning about an unexpected pregnancy. Fallbrook’s only pregnancy resource center offers free pregnancy testing and a limited ultrasound scan, and provides ongoing parenting education classes for those who have babies up to twoyears old. The classes come with a bonus: free baby stuff. “One of the benefits we have here is the ‘Earn While You Learn’ program,” said Carolyn Koole, MPA, executive director. “By taking classes here they (clients) earn what we call mommy bucks.” Nearly 100 classes are offered from topics that range from “Bonding with your Baby,” “Discipline with Love,” “Apartment Renting 101,” to “Time Management.” The center currently has two small client rooms, and aims to schedule no more than two to three clients an hour to maintain an intimate setting. “Each class is a half-hour to an hour. They watch a video, complete video work and take a lesson plan home,” said Claire Cheely, program services director. As an example, she said part of the “Labor and Delivery” series includes putting together a birth plan. The homework for those sessions are to ask the doctor questions and write his responses, which can help women prepare for the birthing process. Other classes offer helpful tips and information on topics such as “Crying, Colic and Sleep,” “A Look at Adoption,” and “Toilet Training.” An average of four to five classroom visits earns a couple about $20 in credits, which is enough to purchase a brand new crib with a mattress, Cheely said. The mommy bucks can also be exchanged for baby clothes, maternity clothes, diapers, wipes, formula, toys, strollers, and other baby necessities that are displayed in the center’s boutique room. The boutique room is the result of six years of volunteer work by Frances and Tom Pyle, who organize donations and personally deliver and set up the new cribs. “We try to give hope to the women, so they know if they have the baby they have the resources to take care of the baby,” Frances Pyle said. But the baby goods are just one aspect of what expecting mothers can find at FPRC. “The thing we offer is support through the whole pregnancy – if www.my-sourcebook.com


The thing we offer is support through the whole pregnancy - if they choose to parent... We don’t want them to feel like they’re ever by themselves.

– Carolyn Koole, MPA, executive director.

they choose to parent,” Koole said. “We don’t want them to feel like they’re ever by themselves.” One of the things they do is help make sure every pregnant mother has a doctor. The site offers abortion education, abstinence encouragement and referrals to agencies that support pregnancy and early childhood care. But Koole said that the center’s goal is not to tell the girls what to do but to be there to listen. They do this by catering to clients’ emotional and spiritual needs. “The girls can come if they need to just sit and talk for an hour, and unload on what’s happening in their lives,” she said. “It’s all about having relationships that are lost in society,” she said. Trained volunteers become advocates, or personal role models, for pregnant women or new moms.

Walt Combs, MD Single Oak Office

Cristina Bailey, MD Single Oak Office

R. Eric Madrid, MD Menifee Office

Tae-Woong Im, MD Single Oak Office

Shelli DeRobertis photos

The staff at FPRC, (left to right), Claire Cheely, Program Services Director, Carolyn Koole, Executive Director (holding Chelsea Yingst), Lyn Rudd R.N., Nurse Manager, Melanie Bonenfant, Receptionist, Terri Corbett, Operations Assistant, Jennifer Kumagai, Client Advocate.

“If you have a mom who found out she is pregnant with a specialneeds child, we have an advocate for them,” Koole said. Another example, she said, is that there have been mothers who were clients of the center who have gone through stillborn births, and later became trained volunteers to help other moms who have faced the same tragedy. Koole, who works on the administrative details that run FPRC, said that because the center is a nonprofit organization, faithbased, and non-medical, it does not qualify for government funding.

Charles Fraley, DO Murrieta Office

Daniel Camarillo, MD Menifee Office

Brandon Miller, DO Fallbrook Office

Georgianna Miller, DO

Carla Soler, MD

Fallbrook Office

Temecula Pkwy Office

Charles Taft, MD

Claudia Hsieh, DO

Lyn Drake, NP

Lauren Joos, PA-C

Katie Hanson, NP

Brenda Robinson, PA-C

RANCHO FAMILY

M e d i c a l Daniel Nunez, PA-C

Temecula Pkwy Office

G r o u p

Call 951-676-4193

Anna Julien, DO Fallbrook Office

Temecula Pkwy Office

Murrieta Office

www.RanchoFamilyMed.com • 5 Locations to Serve You FALLBROOK

521 E. Elder St, Ste 103 Michelle Uttaburanont, MD Hospitalist

Robin Robbins, NP

Temecula Pkwy Office

SOURCEBOOK 2015

Deborah Layton, NP Single Oak Office

Lane Oslund, MD

Temecula Pkwy Office

TEMECULA

TEMECULA

28780 Single Oak 31720 Temecula Dr, Ste 160 Pkwy, Ste 100

MENIFEE

30420 Haun Road

MURRIETA

24400 Jackson Ave., Ste B

Urgent Care Available 7 Days a Week in the Temecula Parkway Office Location Rancho Family Medical Group is affiliated with Regal Medical Group for all major Commercial and Senior/Medicare HMO Health Plans

Genaro Martinez, MD Hospitalist

Raechel Carr, PA-C Single Oak Office

Michelle Cross, NP Menifee Office

Amber Holden, PA-C Single Oak Office

Briana Jimenez, PA-C Murrieta Office

Menifee Office

Single Oak Office

Single Oak Office

Fallbrook Office

37


The classroom at FPRC where expecting or new parents watch instructional videos to earn spending dollars for items at the center.

Carolyn Koole shows a catalog of items that parents or parents-to-be can purchase with their “Earn While You Learn” bucks from FPRC.

Since they are a non-medical clinic, they also do not refer clients for abortions or birth control. Koole said the center describes itself as the arm of a local church, yet it doesn’t matter what denomination its clients may belong to. The important thing is connecting them to a circle of care, she said. Since FPRC’s inception in 2001, in a tiny exam room of a local doctor’s office, it has changed names twice and moved locations; yet again it is evolving with the need for a larger office. FPRC’s demand for services has outgrown its 1,650-square-foot

Successful Aging

office, and the center has immediate plans to move to a larger space. Part of those plans include at least a 5,000-square-foot place, and furthering the organization to become a free, licensed medical clinic. Currently, four registered nurses are training in the center’s exam room to provide full-service free ultrasounds for when the center is licensed. Their ultimate goals are to also offer S.T.D. testing, well-mother checkups, G.E.D. and E.S.L. classes. FPRC relies heavily on donations from annual fundraising events to keep the center operating, Koole said. The six annual events it hosts have helped make them known in the community. “It really forces us to be friends with individuals and churches and companies in the Fallbrook community, and the Fallbrook community is just remarkable,” she said. For more information about pregnancy services, volunteer opportunities or internships, call (760) 728-4105 or visit www.pregnancyfallbrook.com

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Call today for affordable, reliable home health care. Affordable & Quality Home Care Services Carlos Perez

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760.468.3075 760.622.8042 Patient Care Coordinator


Dr. Richard Goble Exceptional Smiles through Exceptional Dentistry

“T

he only way to do great work is to love what you do,” said Steve Jobs. Richard Goble, DDS, loves what he does and it shows in the expert work that he performs on each one of his dental practice patients. He feels that cosmetic dentistry can improve one’s image and in turn, boost confidence. “We have a wonderful team and we are here to help our patients,” he remarked. Dr. Goble’s dental practice is not just about teeth – it’s about people. He enjoys getting to know his patients. The minute that anyone steps in the door to the warm, inviting waiting room, they feel at home. His office is equipped with advanced technology, including digital x-rays and a 3D pan, which pans through the mouth to give a three dimensional view of the entire mouth. One of the benefits of the 3D pan is that it allows Dr. Goble and his staff to differentiate between the various diseases of the mouth. “It is the best way to get a complete diagnosis,” Dr. Goble noted, “It also allows us to put implants in and virtually see where they will go.”

“Cosmetic dentistry can improve one’s image, and in turn, boost confidence.” It pleases Dr. Goble to see the satisfaction that patients feel after coming in. “Many are, at first, very apprehensive, but we have the ability to make top quality crowns that last a long time – in one appointment.” These crowns are bonded and beautiful. There are advantages to making same-day crowns. Patients skip the series of appointments needed for traditional crowns; and they also avoid the uncomfortable feeling of wearing an ill-fitting temporary cap. Dr. Goble has been making a difference in the lives of his patients through dentistry for 37 years. It was a life-long dream of his because his father was a dentist, and he could see that he enjoyed his work. Dr. Goble earned his DDS degree in 1976 from the University of the Pacific Dental School, and then continued his education at the post-graduate dental

Dr. Richard Goble

school – Las Vegas Institute of Cosmetic Dentistry (LVI). As a result of his training, Dr. Goble is adept at advanced techniques in cosmetic and neuromuscular dentistry. After Dr. Goble completed his dentistry degree he joined his father Dr. Gaylord G. Goble in his Beverly Hills practice. But, in 1991, searching for a more peaceful, rural atmosphere, Dr. Goble and his family moved to Fallbrook, where he established his practice. Getting that perfect smile has never been easier. Just pick up the phone and call 760-728-2661. Also, find out how Dr. Goble’s patients rave about their treatment at the website: www.fallbrookcadentist.com.

Dr. Richard Goble 1108 S. Main Avenue Fallbrook, CA 92028 (760) 728-2261 www.fallbrookcadentist.com

SOURCEBOOK 2015

41


Local Woman Fights Disease with

Raw Food Diet by Shelli DeRobertis

Leslie Kirchmeier’s spices are all organic and many are from her own garden.

Shelli DeRobertis photos

Nearly 15 years ago, cancerstricken Leslie Kirchmeier, of Fallbrook, was frail, too thin, and could barely walk, until a raw foods diet turned her life around. In the Summer of 2000, she was diagnosed with Stage 2 cervical cancer and underwent surgery to remove lymph nodes after a tumor was found to be too large to operate on.

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She was in her mid-thirties, had a wonderful, supportive husband, and a teenage daughter at home. “I had a great attitude and wanted to see my daughter grow up and get married,” she said. Kirchmeier followed the doctors’ advice to have surgery, chemotherapy and radiation treatments.

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“This is what I thought I had to do,” she said. But it didn’t work. “The whole time I heard, I’m sorry, your tumor is not shrinking,” Kirchmeier said. By Fall of that same year, her doctor’s advice had turned toward nutrition, and he told her to eat steak and drink Ensure, she said. “He told me to ‘make my food count,’ ” she said. “Instinctively, I went home and ate more nutrient-dense food.” About that same time she said she was also involved in a women’s Bible study group, which is the first time anyone ever mentioned natural foods as a solution. “One girl at the table said she had a video of a doctor who ate a lot of carrots and got well,” she said. That video was “Cancer Doesn’t Scare Me Anymore ” by Lorraine Day, M.D. At that time, DVDs were barely becoming the norm, and a raw food diet was almost unheard of, Kirchmeier said. “It was very different, very on the edge of being bizarre for most

The Kirchmeiers grow many of their own vegetables and herbs to aid them in their 85-percent consumption of raw foods lifestyle.

people,” she said. She said she was accustomed to eating dessert each night, and referred to herself as a “sugar addict.” “I did not grow up eating healthy. I ate the standard American diet. I loved Coca Cola and Mountain Dew – all of that stuff,” she said. But that had to change. It was October 2000, and Kirchmeier remembers the day she and

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her husband Steve discovered a Jimbo’s Natural Foods Grocer, because it was Steve’s birthday. “We found a Jimbo’s, bought a juicer and vegetables and came home and started juicing like crazy,” she said. In her quest for natural healing, Kirchmeier had learned so far that juicing was like an intravenous vitamin that goes straight to the cells within 20 minutes and could nourish and help build an immune system. “It’s a natural form and your body knows how to recognize it and digest it,” she said. After about two weeks of Steve juicing carrots, celery, apples, leafy greens, cucumbers, beets, and whatever was left to the Kirchmeier’s imagination, Leslie began to feel better and regain her energy. She continued drinking fresh juice, Leslie Kirchmeier shows the board she uses to educate others on how to eat healthy to fight diseases.

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and had also discovered the Hallelujah Diet, which is an 85-percent raw and unprocessed plant-based food diet, with the rest consisting of cooked plant-based food. That diet is part of Hallelujah Acres, which was founded in 1992 by a preacher who had a large cancerous tumor in 1977 that he claims he beat by eating natural foods, according to the Hallelujah Diet website. Kirchmeier followed the diet and ate mainly raw foods, and began educating herself on the healing powers of natural foods. By December 2000, her tumor was completely gone. “I thought, ‘oh, that was easy,’ ” she said. “I then thought I was good-to-go and went on vacation.” She didn’t bring her juicer on vacation, though, and strayed from the raw foods diet. She said she thought she only had to change her diet temporarily. But in February 2001, a doctor visit revealed cancer cells were present where the tumor once was, and Kirchmeier was told she could not receive any more chemotherapy. “They said their toolbox was empty and there was nothing more they could do,” she said. Kirchmeier said she knew very little about the healing power of foods back then, but that she had done research and came to the

All-Star

appointment geared with three questions: 1) Is it true that if I have an alkaline pH level that cancer cannot survive in my body? 2) Is it true that if I have a lot of oxygen in my body, that cancer cannot survive? 3) Is it true that cancer feeds on sugar? Her oncologist answered “yes” to all three questions, she said. Kirchmeier realized she would have to make a permanent lifestyle change in her diet. She said she knew that there were three things she needed to do to keep cancer from being able to survive, and they included eating more alkaline foods such as fruits and vegetables, exercising to get more oxygen and avoiding sugar and processed foods. “If its life or death, I can give up sugar,” she said. Today, regular blood work continues to show Kirchmeier is free of cancer. In 2006, she, Steve and their daughter all became Health Ministers for Hallelujah Acres and began teaching raw food prep specialty classes in their home. They also hosted guests overnight or for a long-term stay at their “Lifestyle Retreat,” which was operated at their spacious home with many spare bedrooms. The Kirchmeiers educated about 600 people in the years they operated the center.

Physical Therapy

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All-star physical therapy is owned and operated by physical and occupational therapists who have served the Fallbrook, Murrieta, and Temecula areas for over 30 years. We specialize in orthopedic and sports injuries, post operative conditions, total joint replacements, balance and fall prevention. We also offer speech and occupational therapy in selected clinics. We have other locations in Lake Elsinore, Menifee, Wildomar, Miramar, Hemet, and Apple Valley. allStarPhysicalTherapy.net Fallbrook: 577 Elder Street, Suite I

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SOURCEBOOK 2015

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She knew that there were three things she needed to do to keep cancer from being able to survive, and they included eating more alkaline foods such as fruits and vegetables, exercising to get more oxygen and avoiding sugar and processed foods.

Kirchmeier said many people with prostrate cancer followed the diet and became cancerfree, and that some also became free of breast cancer and a variety of other diseases after following the diet. A balance of health is important, she said, which includes sunshine, fresh air, plenty of rest, good nutrition, exercise, water and a positive attitude. Kirchmeier plans to begin offering monthly classes again, she said. Currently, she offers consultations for anyone seeking nutritional education. She shares with others what has worked to keep her own body cancer-free. Sugar tops the list of the five “killer foods,” Kirchmeier said. “During a test for a CT scan they inject you with glucose water because it goes right to the cancer tumor,” she said.

Kirchmeier began to substitute dates for her evening dessert after she learned that, she said. White bleached flour is the second killer food, she said, because the bran and good oils are processed out, and then it’s bleached from brown to white. Next is caffeine, which Kirchmeier describes as an “exciter toxin that revs your body up and creates adrenaline, except there’s no expenditure of that adrenaline and it just wreaks havoc on your thyroid and your adrenal (glands).” Animal products – milk and cheeses – are also on the list of “killer foods” because they are hard to digest and very acidic, and acid leads to inflammation, and inflammation can lead to cancer, Kirchmeier said. She described how cheese is made from bacteria that is added to milk. “What happens is that the bacteria in the milk eats up anything that is possibly good in the

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milk and eliminates it out – it literally has a digestive system,” she said, and added that good bacteria does not have an odor. Cheese has an odor. “The smellier the cheese, the more we pay for it,” Kirchmeier said. Milk also contains only bad bacteria, she explained, because it is pasteurized, which kills off the good bacteria. Finally, table salt is considered a deadly food because it is processed, heated and also bleached before being packaged and sold on supermarket shelves. Kirchmeier began to use sundried salt as a healthy alternative to table salt, and planted a vegetable garden in her backyard. She began testing the pH levels in her own body (test strips are sold in specialty pharmacies). “Think of your body as an aquarium or swimming pool. When the watery parts of our body get out of pH balance, we have this perfect environment for disease to grow,” she said. Eating vegetables and avoiding acidic foods helps our blood stay alkalized, Kirchmeier said. For years now she has been eating “clean,” and her own backyard garden helps provide protective vegetables and herbs that she eats

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The Kirchmeier’s home once served guests who stayed with them as part of their Lifestyle Center they operated through Hallelujah Acres.

to aid in her goal of homeostasis. Fifteen years ago, Kirchmeier was told by doctors that she only had one year left to live. Today, she is still a loving wife to Steve and a proud mother, but she is now also a proud mother-in-law and grandmother, she said. To see some of Leslie Kirchmeier’s raw food recipes, go to fasteasyraw.blogspot.com To schedule a consultation, call (760) 672-0501.

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Foundation for Senior Care Local non-profit sees senior citizens as a priority

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t takes a friendly village to nurture our elderly population, and the non-profit Foundation for Senior Care does just that with its wonderful programs, quality seminars, events and community outreaches that raise its awareness level in Fallbrook, with hopes that private and corporate donations will follow. The Care Van provides door-to-door transportation, and has exceeded 8,000 rides for the nearly 1,800 seniors it serves, which provides them independence. Through generous donations from San Diego County Supervisor Bill Horn, Angel Society, Baccash Family Foundation and other private parties, the Foundation for Senior Care was able to secure a wheelchair van in 2013. Because that service has exploded with needs, $30,000 has been raised toward the purchase of an additional wheelchair equipped van that costs $45,000. The Expanded Rides program allows volunteers to use their own vehicles to transport eligible seniors and disabled people to medical appointments within a 50-mile radius of Fallbrook. Expanded Rides Coordinator, Dee Tucker, said, “The lifeblood of this program is volunteers. Without volunteers, many seniors would not be able to leave town for much-needed medical assistance.” Please contact Dee if you want to volunteer or need assistance with rides.

Staff from left: Care Advocate Darlene Weber, Care Advocate Susan Baglien and Receptionist Alyce Guerrero.

SOURCEBOOK 2015

Foundation for Senior Care staff from left: Office Manager Karen Geuy, Executive Director Dotty Metcalf and Expanded Ride Coordinator Dee Tucker.

Teddie Borges, Administrator of “The Club” at the Fallbrook Adult Day Care Center, was recently awarded the 2015 Fallbrook Healthcare Hero Award. They are proud to have such a dedicated team of staff. Many clients happily come to The Club to share cooking, reading, activities and exercises. For a very low fee, clients have an opportunity to be social, and the cost is less expensive than in-home care. The Senior Care Advocacy program provides services and resources to seniors, disabled individuals and their families, and managed more than 500 cases last year. In one case, an elderly woman was helped with clearing out her home, which had became a hoarding situation. Also, an elderly gentleman was removed from a potentially-dangerous living situation, and reunited with his son who wasn’t aware of the awful conditions that his dad was living in. Each story has its own uniqueness, and many challenge the Care Advocates to find the resources and assistance needed. The Senior Care Advocacy Program works Fallbrook Adult Day Care staff from left: Activities Coordinator Shelia Lay, Administrator Teddie Borges and Activities Assistant Chris Young.

with local churches and thrift stores, and with Y.A.N.A. (the volunteer sheriffs) to help insure our seniors get what they need. They also have a connection with the district attorney’s office for elder abuse situations and adult protective services. The computer learning center flourishes with classes for computers, tablets, smart phones, digital photography, tech talks and more, which help the elderly become tech savvy. Quarterly classes fill up quickly. Metcalf says, “The instructors are your peers, not your grandkids, and take the time to help the senior understand their computers.” Upcoming fundraising events this year include: Annual spring Poker Tournament and Casino Night at the Regency Fallbrook. Silvergate will host a Texas BBQ and Hoedown on July 24. Dinner with the Docs on November 7 will celebrate its 10th Anniversary with a grand Masquerade Gala at Pala Mesa Resort. Silent auction items and sponsorships are welcome.

Foundation for Senior Care 135 South Mission Road Fallbrook, CA 92028 (760) 723-7570 www.foundationforseniorcare.org

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Studies Revealing About Head Injuries in Children by Donald J. Lewis, MD, FACS

S

ports, motor vehicle accidents, falls and assaults are the leading causes of traumatic brain injuries in children. Looking at the frequency of concussions in professional football players has caused a greater degree of concern regarding these head injuries in children. All contact sports are now being examined, not just football. An analysis of children with head injuries of all severities, ranging from deep coma to a normal neurologic status and then characterizing these as mild, moderate, or severe often utilizes the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS). This is the same scale physicians commonly utilize to assess the mental status of trauma victims. A recent study done by the physicians at the Washington University of School of Medicine, St. Louis and the University of California-Davis School of Medicine, published in the November 13, 2014 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, examined nearly 44,000 patients. In this study, 98% were determined to have just mild head trauma. During the subsequent diagnosis and treatment phase, however, head CT scans were performed on 37% of those. After the fact, many were arguably not really needed and were done more for medicolegal protection. These CTs did reveal that traumatic brain injuries were identified in only 7% of the children. This suggests that the CT scans were indeed overused. This is important because CT scans use x-rays and, in doing so, can subject these young and still growing persons to doses of radiation, which can presumably stunt bone growth and perhaps increase the risk of cancer later in life. It is important to note that 3% of these 44,000 kids had skull fractures without any brain injuries. The study was originally designed to try to figure out which children were at a low risk for brain injury and therefore did not require any CT scans. In children under age 12, falls were the most common cause of 50

these injuries, while in children under 2, falls accounted for over 77% of those injuries. We all know how frequently 2-year-olds take a spill. In the age group greater than 2 but less than 12, 38% of the head injuries were caused by falls. Entry into the study was not limited to sports, however, and in the over-12 group, most (24%) were caused by assaults. Sports were second at 19%, but motor vehicle accidents accounted for nearly the same number at 18%. Looking at those children who suffered brain damage as a result of motor vehicle accidents, fewer than half of these were wearing seatbelts! This should send a strong signal to parents regarding insistence on seatbelt usage. As well, the kids with head injuries caused by bicycle crashes wore helmets fewer than 20% of the time – another preventable group of injuries. It is important to know that other research done long ago – and still supported by the more recent studies – have shown that in children older than 1 year, traumatic brain injuries are one of the leading causes of death and medical complications. It is just that this study gives us details about the injuries allowing us to divide causation by age and mechanism of injury. It also gives us an idea what studies to do and what studies not to do. Although the studies were done by the physicians at UC Davis and Washington University St. Louis, the data comes from 2004 to 2006 from the emergency departments of 25 U.S. hospitals including some big children’s hospitals. This is reliable data and was done under the umbrella of the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network, which is a federally funded research network focusing on the prevention and management of acute illnesses and injuries. This is our tax money well spent. I just thought you ought to know. Buckle your seatbelt, and if you are going for a bike ride, wear a helmet even if you don’t like the way it looks. www.my-sourcebook.com


Local Doctors. World Class Care. aT Graybill Medical GrouP we’re about making sure our patients receive the highest quality medical care available. from wellness classes to providing access to the finest inpatient care available in the region, your health and well-being are our first and foremost priority.

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An Independent Member of the Sharp Community Medical Group

Graybill Medical Group Celebrates 16 Years of Service and Commitment to Fallbrook The office’s six board cerTified physicians, family nurse practitioner, physician assistant and 27-member support staff provide a broad array of experience, skills and education to assure their patients receive a quality healthcare experience. fallbrook’s largest and longest-standing medical group offers family Medicine and sports Medicine as well as onsite diabetes management education, diagnostic x-ray, ultrasound, digital mammography and bone density scans. as part of the region’s largest independent multi-specialty group, the office also has direct access to a full spectrum of specialty care, the latest medical technology, and high quality inpatient care. “our company motto, ‘Personalized healthcare for all Generations,’ aptly reflects our care philosophy of providing highly focused care for each member of the family, from infancy through adulthood,” said Graybill physician frank Winton, Md. “as family Medicine specialists, we provide primary care and coordinate any specialist care. if inpatient care is required, we have physicians on staff at the region’s finest hospitals.”

board certified in family Medicine and sports Medicine, Winton sees a lot of senior patients for sports-related injuries. “of course we want to see our older patients improve their health through physical activity and other lifestyle changes, but in the event of illness or injury, we have the expertise to provide first-rate comprehensive care.” The Graybill Medical team consists of Mds david bridgeman, Peter Jenson, Jeff Petersen (also a licensed chiropractor), and Victor huang; annie dai, do, a board certified family physician who also focuses on integrative and holistic medicine; Gabriella carenza, fNP; and fernando Quezada, Pa-c, MPas. rounding out the team are office Manager Julie robinson and her staff, who work tirelessly to assure timely appointments and top notch customer service. “We are committed to fallbrook and look forward to continuing to serve our patient’s needs,” said Winton. “Many of us live and are raising our families here, so we have a personal stake in the health and well-being of this great community we call home.”


Convenient patient-centered care From Fallbrook Healthcare Partners Regular Check-ups • Specialty Services Complex Disease Management •Adult and Senior Care Fallbrook Healthcare Partners provides a range of healthcare services for adults and seniors, including: • Primary Care

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Fallbrook Healthcare Partners We are Here for YOU!

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hether it’s for a regular checkup or something more serious, you can count on Fallbrook Healthcare Partners’ physicians to provide personalized care for you and your family. The physicians are here to get to know you and understand your healthcare needs in a relaxed, unhurried setting. You can have ongoing, personal care with a doctor who knows you as a person. You can also see a variety of specialists, including cardiologists, nephrologists and pain management, right here in Fallbrook. For even greater convenience, sameday appointments are often available. Medicare, Medi-Cal and most insurance plans are welcome. Be sure to ask us about preventive care services your health insurance may cover at no cost to you. Richard Reynolds III, M.D., Internal Medicine Dr. Reynolds is an Internal Medicine physician trained to diagnose and treat many chronic medical conditions such as diabetes, high blood pressure and pulmonary and heart diseases. He is boardcertified and a Diplomat of the American Board of Internal Medicine and American Board of Internal Medicine, Pulmonary Diseases. He has been a resident of Fallbrook since 1994 and member of the medical community for more than 10

Richard Reynolds III, M.D., Internal Medicine

Alexander Delgadillo, M.D., Internal Medicine

years before joining Fallbrook Healthcare Partners. “I believe better patient outcomes are achieved by spending time with my patients and gaining an understanding of them and their needs. I have a sincere interest in my patients and meeting their healthcare needs.” In his personal time, Dr. Reynolds and his family breed Arabian show horses. He is particularly proud of Narcissus, his Russian Arabian broodmare.

spent over 25 years in private practice near Chicago before joining Fallbrook Healthcare Partners and moving to Fallbrook with his family. Dr. Delgadillo is fluent in Spanish. “I believe that all patients should be treated with compassion and professionalism. They should feel comfortable and confident that all is being done that can be done, and know their concerns are being heard and their questions answered.” Dr. Delgadillo enjoys photography and bird watching, and has an interest in fossils and minerals.

Alexander Delgadillo, M.D., Internal Medicine Dr. Delgadillo is also an Internal Medicine physician trained to diagnose and treat many chronic medical conditions such as diabetes, high blood pressure and pulmonary and heart diseases. He is board-certified in Internal Medicine. He

Fallbrook Healthcare Partners is located at 591 E. Elder Street, Suite C., Fallbrook. To learn more, check us out at www. FallbrookHealthcarePartners.com or give us a call at 760-731-8989.

Fallbrook Healthcare Parners 591 E. Elder Street, Suite C Fallbrook, CA 92028 (760) 731-8989 www.fallbrookhealthcarepartners.com Se Habla Español

SOURCEBOOK 2015

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Dr. Cooke Creates

Winning Smiles

for Happy Patients by Karen Ossenfort and Laura Taylor From left, Clayton Cooke, DDS; and staff members Noreen Busby, Trish Villegas, Rhonda McGowan, and Diane Furtak. Shane Gibson photo

Longtime Fallbrook and Rancho Santa Fe dentist Dr. Clayton Cooke creates beautiful smiles for patients who come to him with all kinds of challenges. Cooke launched his practice in Fallbrook in 1976 after graduating from University of the Pacific Dental School in 1974. He has maintained his passion for dentistry ever since. He said what attracted him to Fallbrook was the close-knit community and the strong family values. Since then he has added a second location for his

A

practice in Rancho Santa Fe. Cooke is well-known for serving all ages of patients, offering a broad spectrum of services ranging from basic dental maintenance to a variety of advanced dental procedures. He has an excellent reputation for his sincere consideration regarding his patients and their individual needs. His repeat clientele demonstrates their happiness with his skilled services, as well as his dental office staff. Cooke’s staff is long-standing, exemplifying a positive

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Before

DistriCt ProGraMs & events

After

Dr. Cooke recently performed reconstructive surgery on this patient.

Courtesy photos

It’s like a masterpiece. When you see me, I’ll be smiling at you.

work environment. Office manager Diane Furtak has worked with Cooke for 27 years. Rhonda McGowan, who has a bachelor of science in dental hygiene, has been part of the team for 22 years. Registered dental assistant Noreen Busby has worked with Cooke for 12 years, and registered dental assistant Trish Villegas holds 32 years of experience, and has helped the office for 10 years. “These special individuals who make up our team have exceptional talent when it comes to patients’ comfort,” said Cooke. Cooke’s comprehensive dental exam includes assessing a patient’s existing dental work, bite, muscles, joints, and gums. An interactive oral monitor lets the patient and Cooke view what dental condition they have, and how to go about solving problems or just addressing maintenance. One of Cooke’s patients, who chose to be anonymous, said, “My mouth was a major problem for him to work on.” She recently needed reconstructive surgery, which Cooke performed over one month’s time. “I am so happy. It’s like a masterpiece. When you see me, I’ll be smiling at you,” she said, adding she was too self-conscious to smile prior to the work of Cooke. She said that despite being in his chair from 8 a.m. to 12 noon, she never felt any discomfort and even returned to work the days she had Dr. Cooke appointments. “I am absolutely thrilled,” she exclaimed. Among restorative and reconstructive work, which includes bridges, crowns, dentures, implants and cosmetic fillings, Cooke also offers cosmetic and smile enhancement care (whitening, veneers and bonding), comprehensive and complete care, including pain-free root canal treatment, and preventative care for adults and children. “Preventative care is the only way to ensure that advanced periodontal disease is detected; it provides a way to identify beginning changes in the periodontal status that will benefit patients by initiating early and simple treatment,” Cooke stated. Dr. Cooke has offices in Fallbrook, 425-A East Alvarado St., (760) 728-5011 and Rancho Santa Fe, 6024 Paseo Delicias, (858) 756-5888.

SOURCEBOOK 2015

annual Health & Fitness Fair Community Collaborative Committee Community resource Directory Grant Program: 21 grants to non-profit health & wellness serving agencies Health Care Hero Program Psa screening Board of Directors report to the Community annual Community Collaborative Breakfast events supported/Promoted Rx Take Back Day ~ Safe Halloween Oral Cancer Screening ~ Healthy Woman Mini Health Fairs

Fallbrook Healthcare District is committed to: Mission stateMent Promoting the health of the people of the District and enhancing access to sustainable, quality healthcare services. vision Collaboratively identifying and supporting a broad range of healthcare needs within the District in pursuit of positive measureable outcomes in community health. values • Dedication • Efficiency • Integrity • Objectivity • Prudence • Respect • Transparency BoarD oF DireCtors

stephen abbott President

Gordon tinker

Vice President

Howard salmon Treasurer

Barbara Mroz Secretary

Frank Winton, MD Director

Fallbrook Healthcare District 577 east elder, suite u, Fallbrook

(760) 731-9187 or toll Free (877) 932-7913 Vi Dupre, Administrator fallbrookhealthcaredistrict.net fallbrookhealthcare@earthlink.net

A Tax Supported Public Agency Serving Fallbrook, Bonsall, Rainbow and De Luz.

55


Church Guide

Lori Bryant photo

Complete listing of places of worship in the Fallbrook & Bonsall area Apostolic Assembly – The Faith 135 E. Ivy St. Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-1717

Baha’I Faith – Fallbrook

PO Box 36, Fallbrook, CA 92088 760-723-1005 800-22-UNITE

Bonsall Community Church

31542 Old River Rd., Bonsall, CA 92003 PO Box 21, Fallbrook, CA 92088 760-945-1276

56

Calvary Chapel of Fallbrook 488 Industrial Way. A-1, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-9138 www.ccfallbrook.com

Christ Church Fallbrook

2000 Reche Rd., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-2007 www.christchurchfallbrook.org

Christ the King Lutheran Church

1620 E. Fallbrook St. Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-3256 www.ctklc-fallbrook.org

Church of Christ

1588 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA 92028 PO Box 1821 Fallbrook, CA 92088 760-728-3900 www.fallbrookchurchofchrist.org church@fallbrookcurchofchrist.org

www.my-sourcebook.com


Church Guide Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints

621 S. Stage Coach Ln., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-4244 www.lds.org

Community Baptist Church

731 S. Stage Coach Ln., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-2966 www.cbcfallbrook.org fallbrookcommunitybaptist@yahoo.com

Cornerstone Baptist Church

131 E. Fig St. Ste #3 PO Box 2991 Fallbrook, CA 92088 www.cornerstonefallbrook.org info@cornerstonefallbrook.org

Emmanuel Baptist Church

911 E. Elder St., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-2667 www.emmanuelbaptistfallbrook.com pastorsw@sbcglobal.net

Fallbrook Foursquare Church

405 W. Fig St., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-723-8086 www.foursquare.org/churches/30617

Fallbrook United Methodist Church

1844 Winterhaven Rd., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-1472 www.fallbrookumc.org

First Christian Church

318 W. Fig St., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-7649 www.fcc-fallbrook.org

First Church of Christ Scientist

1109 E. Fallbrook St., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-0242

Grace Presbyterian Church Fallbrook (PCA) 1978 Reche Rd., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-689-2213 www.gracefallbrook.org questions@gracefallbrook.org

Hilltop Center

331 E. Elder St., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-723-8291 www.thehilltopcenter.org hilltopcenter@sbcglobal.net

SOURCEBOOK 2015

Iglesia Cristiana Mas Que Vencedores Located at Zion Lutheran Church 1405 E Fallbrook St., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-518-2203

Jehovah’s Witnesses Kingson Hall

512 S Stage Coach Ln., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-2274 www.watchtower.org

Life Pointe Church

221 N. Pico Avenue, Fallbrook, CA 92028 PO Box 2648, Fallbrook, CA, 92088 760-728-7771 www.lifepointefallbrook.com fallbrookfirstbaptist@gmail.com

Lighthouse Christian Fellowship 405 W. Fig St., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-723-8086

Living Waters Christian Fellowship 2000 Reche Rd., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-1685 www.lwcfchurch.com

Mission San Antonio de Pala

3015 Pala Mission Rd., Pala, CA 92059 PO Box 70, Pala, CA 92059 760-742-3317 www.missionantonio.org

New Song Inland Hills Church

341 Heald Lane, Fallbrook, CA 92028 5519 S. Mission Rd., Ste E, Bonsall, CA 92003 760-560-5000 www.newsongchurch.com

North Coast Church

2400 S. Stage Coach Ln., Fallbrook, CA 92028 Office: 550 Industrial Way, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-2888 www.N.coastchurch.com

Pauma Valley Community Church 32077 Community Church Drive, Pauma Valley, CA 92061 PO Box 345, Pauma Valley, CA 92061 760-742-3551 www.paumavalleychurch.com ministry@paumavallerychurch.com

Pentecostals of Fallbrook

805 “C” E. Mission Rd. Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-451-0567

Rainbow Community Church

2560 Rainbow Valley Blvd, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-2051 www.rainbowcommunitycurch.com rainbowcommunitychurch@gmail.com

Riverview Church

4980 Sweetgrass Ln., Bonsall, CA 92003 760-941-1430 www.riverviewlife.org riverview@refc.org

Seventh Day Adventist English Church

1200 Rainbow Valley Blvd., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-723-7733 www.fallbrookadventist.org fbrooksda@gmail.com

Seventh Day Adventist Spanish Church

439 Iowa St., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-908-6805 www.fallbrookspanish22.adventistchurchconnect.org fallbrookspanishsda@gmail.com

SonRise Christian Fellowship

463 S. Stage Coach Ln., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-5804 www.sonrisefallbrook.com

St. John’s Episcopal Church

434 N. Iowa St., Fallbrook, CA 92028 PO Box 1576, Fallbrook, CA 92088 760-728-2908 www.stjohnsfallbrook.com

St. Peter’s Catholic Community Church 450 S. Stage Coach Ln., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-689-6200 www.stpeter-fallbrook.org

St. Stephen Lutheran Church

1636 E. Mission Rd. Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-6814 www.ststephenfallbrook.com

The Waters Church

PO Box 2665 Fallbrook, CA 92088 760-703-0590 www.thewaterschurch.com

Zion Lutheran Church

1405 E. Fallbrook St., Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-723-3500 www.zlcs.org zionchurch@zlcs.org

57


Non-Profit

ORGANIZATIONS & SERVICE CLUBS

Barbro Hutchinson photos

Arts

Educational

CAST and Mission Theater 200 North Main St. Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-731-CAST www.castacademy.org

Bonsall Education Foundation PO Box 1217, Bonsall, CA 92003 760-631-5205 ext. 1103 www.bonsallschool.org

Fallbrook Art Center 103 South Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-1414 www.fallbrookartcenter.org

California Retired Teachers Association, Avocado Division 81 760-728-1092

Fallbrook Chorale 731 South Stage Coach Lane, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-390-9726 www.fallbrookchorale.org Fallbrook Music Society PO Box 340, Fallbrook, CA 92088 111 South Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-451-8644 www.fallbrookmusicsociety.org Fallbrook School of the Arts 310 East Alvarado St, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-6383 www.fallbrookschoolofthearts.org info@fallbrookschoolofthearts.org

Businesses

Bonsall Chamber of Commerce 5256 South Mission Road #311, Bonsall, CA 92003 760-630-1933 www.bonsallchamber.org Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce 111 South Main Ave, Fallbrook CA 92028 760-728-5845 www.fallbrookchamberofcommerce.org

Fallbrook Headstart MAAC Project (Full Day) 901 Alturas Road, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-731-2062 www.maacproject.org Fallbrook Headstart Project (Half Day) 405 W. Falbrook St, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-723-4189 www.maacproject.org

Environment

Fallbrook Beautification Alliance PO Box 434, Fallbrook, CA 92088 www.fallbrookbeautification.org Fallbrook Land Conservancy PO Box 2701, Fallbrook, CA 92088 760-728-0889 www.fallbrooklandconservancy.org landcons@sbcglobal.net Live Oak Park Coalition 2746 Reche Road Fallbrok, CA 92028 PO Box 2974 Fallbrook, CA 92088 Fallbrook Trails Council PO Box 2974 Fallbrook, Ca 92088 760-731-9441 www.fallbrooktrailscouncil.com fallbrooktrailscouncil@gmail.com

Health

The “Club” Adult Day Care 320 West Alvarado Steet, Fallbrook, Ca 92028 760-723-0890 www.foundationforseniorcare.org dmetcalf@foundationforseniorcare.org Fallbrook Diabetes Support Group 624 East Elder St, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-731-8246 Fallbrook Healthcare District 577 E Elder St, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-731-9187; 877-932-7913 www.falllbrookhealthcaredistrict.net fallbrookhealthcare@earthlink.net Fallbrook Pregnancy Resource Center 113 East Hawthorne Street Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-4105 www.pregnancyfallbrook.com Foundation for Senior Care 135 S. Mission Rd, Fallbrook, CA 92028 PO Box 2155 Fallbrook CA 92088 760-723-7570 www.foundationforseniorcare.org fsc@foundationforseniorcare.org North County Lifeline 200 Michigan Avenue, Vista, CA 92084 760-726-4900 www.nclifeline.org REINS 4461 S. Mission Road Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-731-9168 www.reinsprogram.org

North County Networking 760-477-7542 www.ncnetworking.net 58

www.my-sourcebook.com


Non-Profit

Matthew Kuhn photo

Hobbies

Fallbrook Adult Softball League www.ingoldsportspark.com Fallbrook Amateur Radio www.fallbrookarc.org Fallbrook Camera Club 760-728-1228 lincraft@tfb.com Fallbrook Garden Club P.O. Box 1702, Fallbrook, CA 92088 www.fallbrookgardenclub.org Fallbrook Gem and Mineral Society 123 West Alvarado Street Suite B, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-1130 www.fgms.org Fallbrook Quilt Guild www.fallbrookquiltguild.com

Lori Bryant photo

Ryan Sodomire photo

Hobbies

Fallbrook Vintage Car Club PO Box 714, Fallbrook, CA 92088 www.fallbrookvintagecarclub.org president@fallbrookvintagecarclub.org

Local/GOVT/Political

Bonsall Community Center Assoc. 31505 Old River Rd., Bonsall, CA 92003 760-631-5200 Bonsall Community Sponsor Group www.bcsg.org Fallbrook Community Planning Group 760-728-8081 Fallbrook Democratic Club PO Box 293, Fallbrook, CA 92088 www.fallbrookdemocraticclub.com

ORGANIZATIONS & SERVICE CLUBS

Barbro Hutchison photo

Ron Montoya photo

Local/GOVT/Political

Fallbrook Republican Women Federated PO Box 1328, Fallbrook, CA 92088 www.fallbrookrwf.org fallbrookrwf@gmail.com Fallbrook Village Association PO Box 2438, Fallbrook, CA 92088 760-723-8384 www.fallbrookvillage.com FPUD 990 E Mission Rd, Fallbrook CA 92028 760-728-1125 www.fpud.com

Morro Hills Community Services District PO Box 161, Fallbrook, CA 92088-0161 760-723-3642 www.morrohillscsd.com

Angel Society of Fallbrook Celebrating 37 Years of Giving The Angel Society of Fallbrook is a non-profit philanthropy that raises funds for our community through the operation of the Angel Shop. Founded in 1978, the Angel Society has donated more than $3.1 million in support of local charities and other worthy programs. Open Monday–Saturday 10 am - 3 pm 760-728-6513 www.theangelsociety.org

The Angel Shop 1002 S. Main Ave., Fallbrook SOURCEBOOK 2015

The Angel Shop is run entirely by volunteers. Donations of household goods, clothing, linens, small appliances, jewelry, artifacts and other items are welcome during store hours. 59


Non-Profit

Janet M. Swenson photo

Barbro Hutchison photo

Local/GOVT/Political

Rainbow Municipal Water District 3707 Old Highway 395, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-1178 www.rainbowmwd.com

Rainbow Property Owners Association PO Box 1606, Fallbrook, CA 92088 760-728-2088 www.rainbowca.com United Neighbors of Bonsall 760-724-6869 ed@nobleleadership.com

Military

Military Support Group 760-731-3037

ORGANIZATIONS & SERVICE CLUBS

Dolly Harty photo

Seniors

Fallbrook Senior Citizens Center 399 Heald Lane, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-4498 fallbrooksc@att.net Fallbrook Senior Citizens Club 760-728-4498 Fallbrook Senior Softball 760-751-8389 760-828-8316 www.fallbrookseniorsoftball.org Foundation for Senior Care 135 S Mission Rd, Fallbrook, CA 92028 PO Box 2155, Fallbrook, CA 92088 760-723-7570 www.foundationforseniorcare.org fsc@foundationforseniorcare.org

Service

Donna J. Weaver photo

Service

Fallbrook Community Center Friends 341 Heald Lane, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-1671 www.fallbrookcommunitycenterfriends.org ashley.westbrook@sdcounty.ca.gov Fallbrook Food Pantry 1042 S. Mission Rd, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-7608 www.fallbrookfoodpantry.org Fallbrook Masonic Lodge No. 317 203 Rocky Crest, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-723-7830 www.fallbrooklodge.org Fallbrook Village Rotary PO Box 2186, Fallbrook, CA 92088 760-723-0150 www.fallbrookvillagerotary.com fallbrookvillagerotary@yahoo.com

Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) Women’s Auxiliary 1175 Old Stage Road, Fallbrook CA 92028 PO Box 194 Fallbrook, CA 92088 760-728-8784 www.vfw1924.com vfw@vfw1924.com

Angel Shop; Angel Society of Fallbrook 1002 S. Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA 92028 PO Box 1408, Fallbrook, CA, 92088 760-728-6513

Fallbrook Woman’s Club 238 W. Mission Road, Fallbrook, CA 92028 PO Box 208, Fallbrook, CA 92088 760-728-9971

Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) Men’s Auxiliary 1175 Old Stage Road, Fallbrook CA 92028 PO Box 194, Fallbrook, CA 92088 760-728-8784 www.vfw1924.com vfw@vfw1924.com

Bonsall Rotary Club PO Box 934, Bonsall, CA 92003 760-695-4024

Hidden Treasure Thrift Store 913 S. Main Street, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-723-2800

Bonsall Women’s Club P.O. Box 545, Bonsall, CA 92003 bwc@vcweb.org

Kiwanis Club of Fallbrook PO Box 54, Fallbrook, CA 92088 760-805-1930

Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) 1175 Old Stage Road, Fallbrook CA 92028 PO Box 194, Fallbrook, CA 92088 760-728-8784 www.vfw1924.com vfw@vfw1924.com

Seniors

The “Club” Adult Day Care 320 West Alvarado Steet Fallbrook, Ca 92028 760-723-0890 www.foundationforseniorcare.org dmetcalf@foundationforseniorcare.org

60

Bottom Shelf/Friends of the Fallbrook Library 124 S. Mission Road, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-451-9606 Care Advocates Helping seniors live independently 760-723-7570 Care Van Free transportation for seniors and the disabled 760-723-7570 Fallbrook Animal Sanctuary 232 W. Aviation, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-685-3533 www.fallbrookanimalsanctuary.org Fallbrook Community Center 341 Heald Lane, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-1671

Legacy, The Community Foundation 111 W. Alvarado St, Fallbrook CA 92028 760-728-3304 www.legacyendowment.org Milena’s Thrift Boutique 129 E. Hawthorne St, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-723-2175 Soroptimist Club of Fallbrook PO Box 1258, Fallbrook, CA 92088 760-468-3162 St. John’s Thrift Shop 1075 S Mission Rd, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-723-9520 St. Vincent de Paul 520 S Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-7012

www.my-sourcebook.com


Great Futures Start Here OUR MISSION: The Mission of the Boys & Girls Clubs of North County is to inspire & enable all young people, especially those who need us most, to realize their full potential as productive, responsible and caring citizens.

Daily Programs Offered: n Character and Leadership Development n Education and Career Development (Homework Help) n Health and Life Skills (Triple Play) n Sports, Fitness & Recreation (Sports Leagues, Special Events) n The Arts (Music, Visual Arts)

Ingold Unit

445 E. Ivy St. Fallbrook CA 92028 760-728-5871 School Year: 2:00pm-6:00pm Summer: 7:00am-6:00pm

Youth Development Strategy:

Our Boys & Girls Clubs programs promote the development of young people by instilling a sense of competence, a sense of belonging and a sense of power & influence. With this strategy, self-esteem is enhanced and an environment is created to provide an opportunity for our youth to be the best that they can be!

ASES Program Sites: • Fallbrook Street School • William H. Frazier School • Vallecitos Elementary School • Live Oak Elementary School • Potter Jr. High School Hours of Operation: School Year from school dismissal until 6:00pm Closed all school holidays and summer

Building Great Futures: • Academic Success • Good Character & Citizenship • Healthy Lifestyles

www.BGCNorthCounty.org | 760.728.5871


Non-Profit

Janet M. Swenson photo

Barbro Hutchison photo

Special Interest

American Association of University Women PO Box 1061, Fallbrook, CA 92088 www.aauwfallbrookca.org aauwfallbrookca@gmail.com Cairin Terrier Club of Southern California 760-728-7133 California Macadamia Society PO Box 1298, Fallbrook, CA 92088 calmasociety@aol.com Community Learning Center Computer Classes and Open Lab 760-723-7570 Daughters of the American Revolution 1694 Santa Margarita Drive, Fallbrook, CA 92028 www.dar.org Daughters of the British Empire www.dbesocal.org Daughters of Norway Hulda Garborg Lodge #49 760-468-7406 www.daughtersofnorway.org Fallbrook Alumni Association www.fallbrookalumniassociation.org Fallbrook Historical Society 260 Rocky Crest Ln, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-723-4125 www.fallbrookhistoricalsociety.com Fallbrook Newcomers Club P. O. Box 1392, Fallbrook, CA 92088 www.fallbrooknewcomers.com fallbrooknewcomers@hotmail.com Fallbrook Riders Club 1627 S. Stagecoach Ln, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-6906 www.fallbrookriders.com Fallbrook Running and Walking Club 760-689-8800 Hammerin77@yahoo.com Friends of the Fallbrook Library 124 S. Mission Road, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-731-4650 www.fallbrooklibraryfriends.org

62

ORGANIZATIONS & SERVICE CLUBS

Dolly Harty photo

Special Interest

Donna J. Weaver photo

Youth

North County Wool Gatherers 760-758-0083 ext. 119 val@rawhideranch.com

Awana Youth Group 221 North Pico, Fallbrook, CA, 92028 760-728-7771

Palm Society of Southern California PO Box 1307, Valley Center, CA 92082 www.palmssc.org

Boys and Girls Club of North County 445 East Ivy Street, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-728-5871 www.bgcnorthcounty.org

Rainbow Valley Grange 760-468-7406 Rally for Children PO Box 2575, Fallbrook, CA 92088 www.rallyforchildren.org Reche Community Club 1319 South Live Oak Park Road, Fallbrook, CA 92028 PO Box 341, Fallbrook, CA 92088 760-728-0301

Support Services

Al-Anon Family Groups, Al-ATeen 800-690-2666 Domestic Violence Hotline 888-385-4657 Fibromyalgia Support Group 760-731-3037

Grief Support Group 521 E. Elder St, Ste 208, Fallbrook, CA 92028 (Silvergate- where meetings are) 760-731-7741 www.fallbrookhomecareca.com Heart Awareness Support Group 760-731-3037 Mothers of Preschoolers 760-941-1430 Palomar Family Counseling 120 Hawthorne St, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-731-3235 Phyllis Sweeney’s Encouragement Factor 120 S. Main Avenue, Fallbrook, CA 92028 760-731-3037 www.phyllisencouragementfactor.com Women’s Support Group ‘LADY’ (Love, Accept, Discover You) 760-731-3037

Fallbrook Pop Warner PO Box 1866, Fallbrook, CA 92088 www.fallbrookpopwarner.org info@fallbrookpopwarner.org Fallbrook Youth Baseball PO Box 816, Fallbrook, CA 92088 www.fallbrookyouthbaseball.com Fallbrook Youth Soccer PO Box 271, Fallbrook, CA 92088 760-529-0909 www.fbysl.webs.com Girl Scouts of San Diego Imperial Council 800-643-4798 760-739-0860 www.sdgirlscouts.org


TogeTher We Can

Feed our Community! Think You Are Pregnant? Free and Confidential Services We Care, Let us Help!

760.728.4105

24 HR Hotline 1-800-712-4357 WHO WE ARE:

We are a non-profit PREGNANCY HELP CENTER AND FREE MEDICAL CLINIC serving the needs of teens, women and families who may find themselves in an unplanned pregnancy. We offer a confidential, caring environment, education, free services and referrals that focus on our clients and their needs that will help empower them to make an informed decision.

SERVICES WE OFFER:

• Free Pregnancy Tests • Pregnancy Support • Free Ultrasound Referrals • Parenting Classes

• Adoption Referrals • Housing Referrals • After Abortion Help and Support • STD & Abstinence Education

www.fallbrookprc.com/www.fprcforlife.com 113 E. Hawthorne Street, Fallbrook, CA 92028

You Can Help:

open from 9:30-12:30 Monday-Friday

1042 Mission Road, Fallbrook, CA 92028 PO Box 3008, Fallbrook, CA 92088

760.728.7608

Operations Manager Jennifer Vetch info@fallbrookfoodpantry.org

www.FallbrookFoodPantry.org

• Donate Canned Food & Fresh Garden Produce • Make a Financial Contribution • Organize a Food Drive • Support the Fallbrook Thanksgiving Hunger Walk • Volunteer On Site

Star in your own commercial! THE FACTS ABOUT VIDEO ■ 188.2 million people in the US watched 52.4 billion online content videos in December 2013 alone. comScore 2013 ■ Visitors are 64% more likely to buy a product or service after watching a video detailing its use or effectiveness. comScore 2013 ■ One major real estate group reports that real estate listings with video

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Village News www.myvillagenews.com

63

Call 760-723-7319

and ask about our New User Discount

VALLEY

NEWS

www.myvalleynews.com

www.my-sourcebook.com


Setting the

STAGE STOP – El Parque –

Shane Gibson photos

by Sandra Shrader Whether you are talking about tamales or the taming of the Wild West, you will be in good company at El Parque Stage Stop where old has become new again. A favorite hole-in-the-wall eatery for locals and nearby daytrippers for decades, the restaurant has undergone a charming bunkhouse-style sprucing up, but even more importantly the establishment is keeping its historical ties firmly tethered to Fallbrook’s early days.

“This area was where the stagecoach stopped in Fallbrook in the 1880s, and that historical vibe is built right into this spot,” said Kent Harvey, marketing director for neighboring Myrtle Creek Botanical Gardens, which has been owned since the mid-1970s by the Sherman family of Fallbrook. Last year, the Shermans acquired El Parque Restaurant, located at 2659 Reche Road across from Live Oak County Park, and linked the stagecoach cachet to its name.

T utto Dolce Italian Chocolates & Gelato

Enjoy Refreshing Gelato! 64

110 So. Main Avenue, Fallbrook | 760.731.9688 www.my-sourcebook.com


“When the restaurant came up for sale,” said Harvey, adding that El Parque is just about a “stone’s throw” from the Myrtle Creek site on Reche Road, “the Sherman family decided that acquiring it would be a great way to expand upon the historical ambience currently enjoyed by visitors to the botanical gardens because Myrtle Creek also showcases an 1890s-era barn and farmhouse in addition to a carriage house, which was built in the early 1900s.” Indeed, the Reche Road location can trace its past to the founder of Fallbrook. Vital Reche, whose various adventures included stints as a California Gold Rush hotel entrepreneur, Temecula mercantile businessman in the 1850s and a coal and railroad titan in New York in the 1860s, returned to this part of the country in 1869 after being diagnosed with terminal cancer and deciding that a milder climate might lengthen his life. Apparently, it was the right medicine, and Reche and his wife Amelia homesteaded 160 acres west of Pala in the 1870s. The property, which Reche named “Fall Brook” included a forest of oak trees and a creek (present day Live Oak County Park), and Reche built a hotel there, creating the first “downtown” for the fledgling community and its aspiring homesteaders. By the late 1880s, according to the Fallbrook Historical Society, settlers who arrived via the railroad at its stop along the Santa Margarita River would take stagecoaches to travel up the grade of what is now De Luz Road to arrive at Reche’s Retreat hotel (which also housed the Fall Brook Post Office by 1878), a church and a store. Amazingly enough, Vital Reche outlived his prognosis of terminal cancer by twentyfive years. In keeping with Fallbrook’s turn-of-the-20th-century history, the decor of El Parque Stage Stop has been transformed by a

Pepper jack cheeseburger served at El Parque in Fallbrook.

“We know how popular El Parque’s dishes such as its tamales, menudo and fish tacos have been with the community so we kept the restaurant staff on board after the sale,” he said, adding that the menu is presently overseen by the chef at the Myrtle Creek Botanical Gardens restaurant, Café Bloom. “But we have also added dishes that use organic ingredients, free-range chickens,

I Dare Ya... I Double Dare Ya!*

El Parque is just about a ‘stone’s throw’ from the Myrtle Creek site on Reche Road...a great way to expand upon the historical ambience currently enjoyed by visitors to the botanical gardens.

rustic laid-back attitude, oak barrel tables, an enormous 1880s mirror, metal lanterns, displays of barbed wire knots and other Western artifacts, and an expansion of the outside wooden patios sheltered by tranquil oaks. But modern-day accoutrements such as flat screen televisions and a new sound system also got a tip of the hat, according to Harvey, who said that plans for hosting musical performances and art events are being considered as well as coordination with athletic events such as 5K marathons promoted at Live Oak Park. El Parque Station Stop, which began as a market in 1941 and a few years later was operating as a Mexican food restaurant, is holding on to the flavors of the past in its easy-on-the-wallet menu too, said Harvey. SOURCEBOOK 2015

Next to the Pala Mesa Market on Old Hwy 395

4775 Via Belmonte, Fallbrook, CA 92028 We Now Offer Gift Certificates! Now find us on FaceBook.com

NessyBurgers.com Mon-Fri 7am-7pm Sat & Sun 9am-5pm

*Not a Contest. Just Bragging Rights! Same delicious burger since 1988! 65


and produce from local farmers, as well as hamburgers and bison chili that have a lot of fans now.” Although locals may think of El Parque Stage Stop as their secret ace in the hole, word about the restaurant is spreading, said Harvey. “People are coming here from Temecula, Orange County and Los Angeles. They visit Myrtle Creek Botanical Gardens and when they want to eat, we are happy to offer El Parque Stage Stop as a restaurant choice,” he said. “And it makes us especially proud because the restaurant’s reputation is not just a facade, it’s the real thing.” El Parque Stage Stop is located at 2659 Reche Road. (760) 731-2775. Hours: Mon-Fri 9 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sat 7 a.m. - 6 p.m., Sun 7 a.m. - 5 p.m.

Yama

Restaurant & Sushi Bar

UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP!

Come say hello to Jenny and Steve!

Now Open All Day Mon. thru Sat.

Try Our New Rolls Lunch or Dinner! You won’t be sorr y!

BSC Ro

ll

M e x ic a n

R o ll

G F or est

ump R

o ll

d Ye Sear e

ll o w t a

il R o ll

Just a few other selections of our delicious Japanese dishes!

Shrimp Tempura Appetizer

Shrimp Shumai Appetizer

Nabeyaki Udon

MILITARY DISCOUNT 10% OFF -Restrictions Apply 66

Chicken Yaki tori Appetizer

Chicken Yakisoba

760-723-9788 | 1067 S. MAIN AVE., FALLBROOK, CA 92028 www.my-sourcebook.com


Dining Guide Yama Restaurant & Sushi Bar Try Our New Rolls! Enjoy Yama’s warm welcome and dine tableside or at the sushi bar in a relaxed atmosphere. Extensive choices of the freshest, high-quality sushi, sushi rolls, and sashimi will please even the most discriminating palate. The light and crispy tempura is outstanding; try the shrimp or vegetables. Teriyaki salmon, yakisoba noodle dishes, and chicken or beef teriyaki bowls are also delicious. Try the new lunch specials. Military discount 10% off.

1067 S. Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 723-9788 Mon-Thurs 11:30am-9:00pm | Fri 11:30am-9:30pm | Sat 12:00pm-9:30pm

Choices, The Buffet Pala Casino Spa & Resort Enjoy the ultimate buffet experience! Designed to make the dining experience an interactive one, Choices features a complete exhibition kitchen. Watch as our skilled chefs prepare over 200 different hot and cold food options including dishes from Asia, Italy, Mexico and traditional American favorities, an omelet station and an array of mouth watering desserts. Reservations accepted for parties of 8 or more, restrictions apply.

11154 Highway 76, Pala, CA 92059 | (760) 510-2299 www.palacasino.com

Curbside Cafe Open for breakfast and lunch, Curbside Cafe offers choice entrees made from top quality ingredients. Popular breakfast items are New York steak & eggs, huevos rancheros, stuffed croissant, and crabcake benedict. Owner John Randall is famous for his homemade cinnamon rolls that melt in your mouth! For lunch enjoy fresh soup of the day, a selection of wraps and hearty sandwiches, chicken, hamburgers & more.

307 Main Street, Vista, CA 92084 | (760) 630-2747 www.curbsidecafevistaca.com

Organic CafĂŠ Bloom Enjoy an organic lunch overlooking the lily pond at Myrtle Creek Botanical Gardens. Farm to table menu featuring wraps, sandwiches, soups & salads. Relax in the garden with a gourmet coffee & a slice of award-winning Myrtle Berry Pie. Picnic baskets & blankets available for you to find your special place within the butterfly gardens, wild bird sanctuary or in the shade of the historic oak forests in this tranquil setting. Open daily.

2940 Reche Rd, Fallbrook, CA 92028 Located in Myrtle Creek Botanical Gardens www.discovermyrtlecreek.com | 760.728.5340

Golden Kitchen Thai Food First Thai Restaurant in Fallbrook! Authentic Thai cuisine with fresh herbs and vegetables. Enjoy your meal and taste your way through Thailand. We reflect culture, color, taste, and texture using ingredients that have medicinal benefits as well as good flavor. Lightly prepared dishes with strong aromatic components and a spicy edge. Located in Jackson Square on Main Avenue. Serving Happy Hour from 3-5pm. Call for lunch specials.

119 N. Main Ave, 2nd Floor, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 451-6464 Open Sun-Thurs 11:00am-8:30pm & Fri-Sat 10:30am-9:00pm SOURCEBOOK 2015

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Dining Guide Fallbrook Cafe Looking for that home style cooking? Fallbrook Cafe is the place. The menu is extensive, portions are generous, prices are great and the daily specials are superb. Enjoy Belgium waffles & pancakes with fresh fruit toppings, omelets, eggs benedict, burgers, sandwiches, soups, salads, fresh fish, prime rib, and more, all with quality ingredients made fresh daily. Best chicken pot pies EVER!! Open 7 days a week.

739 E. Mission Rd, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 728-1898 www.fallbrookcafe.net

Roadrunner’s Bar & Grill at Cahuilla Casino Cahuilla Casino’s full service restaurant features classic American fare and friendly service. Serving lunch and dinner daily, plus brunch on Saturday and Sunday. Menu highlights include the deliciously popular burger, in eight different varieties including the Western and Guacamole Bacon, as well as New York strip steak, classic fried chicken, BBQ pulled pork sandwich, turkey club and Cobb salad.

52702 Highway 371, Anza, CA 92539 | (951) 763-1200 www.cahuillacasino.com

El Jardín El Jardin has been a Fallbrook tradition for over 39 years, we take pride in locally sourced, fresh ingredients. Start with beer-battered avocados and a premium margarita, then enjoy one of our House Favorites such as Achiote Chicken, Grilled Mahi Tacos, or the famous Pollo Fundido. Fresh chips & salsa abound. Open for lunch & dinner Tues thru Sunday: Tues-Thurs 11:15am-8pm, Fri-Sat 11:15am-8:30pm, Sun 10:30am-8pm, Sun brunch 10:30am-2pm.

1581 S. Mission Road, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 728-4556 www.eljardinfallbrook.com

Thai Thai Restaurant Serving authentic Thai and vegetarian food. Our menu is traditional Thai with an emphasis on chili, herbs and spices with spice levels 0-10 to fit any taste. We use our family recipes to prepare and cook for you. Food portions are large! We take pride in our preparation! Dine-in, take-out. Catering available. Open Monday through Sunday 11am-9pm.

1055 South Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 728-4938 www.ThaiThaiFallbrook.com

Fallbrook FroYo Self Serve Frozen Yogurt & More Featuring self-serve smooth & creamy premium yogurt, with a huge selection of flavors and toppings. Our yogurt contains real dairy, fresh milk, real fruit purees and high counts of beneficial live yogurt cultures. We also offer soft serve Italian ice, custard and gelato. Come to us for custom made pies, cupcakes & Frookies (frozen yogurt between cookies). We have a mobile cart available for special events and fundraising.

127 East Mission Rd, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 728-7678 www.fallbrookfroyo.com 68

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Dining Guide La Caseta Fine Mexican Food After 32 years of serving Fallbrook, La Caseta has become synonymous with great Mexican food. Ingredients for the dishes served are locally sourced, and there are new specials to try every time you visit, alongside the already popular traditional menu. It can be hard to choose just one dish to enjoy at La Caseta, so you may want to bring a few friends to share several choices. Open Mon-Thurs 11am-8pm and Fri-Sat 11am-8:30pm.

111 N. Vine Street, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 728-9737 www.LaCasetaFineMexicanFood.com

127 West Social House Located in the heart of downtown Fallbrook, 127 West Social House is where ‘pub’ meets gourmet grub. From gourmet burgers & stone fried pizza to quail & braised short rib, 127 is a true palette pleaser. Come drink at the bar or catch up with friends over dinner. Enjoy the ambiance of our interior shabby chic dining room & bar or dine ‘al fresco’ in our outdoor patio or fire pit lounge. We hope to make your experience at 127 memorable.

127 West Elder Street, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 645-3803 www.127west.com

Trupiano’s Italian Bistro After 11 years in Fallbrook, Trupiano’s Italian Bistro has become a Mecca for those who want to enjoy an authentic Italian dish while relaxing in a warm, vibrant and friendly atmosphere. Whether enjoying a quick lunch with friends, dinner with someone special, or attending one of the monthly cooking classes, the experience at Trupiano’s is always sure to please. Catering services available. Daily specials created by owner Faro Trupiano.

945 S. Main Avenue, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 728-0200 www.trupianosbistro.com

Espresso Lounge Welcome to the newest venue of the Trupiano Restaurant Group in Fallbrook. Serving 100% organic and locally roasted coffee, the Espresso Lounge will surely raise the bar on your coffee house expectations. Proudly serving breakfast sandwiches, bagels, assorted pastries, smoothies, salads, soups, sandwiches, and yes, pizza. We invite you to come enjoy your cup of Joe in our spacious and relaxed seating area. Free WiFi.

139 S. Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 731-1012 Mon-Thurs 6am-6pm, Fri 6am-8pm, Sat 7am-6pm & Sun 7am-2pm

Juice Vault Coming Soon The latest venture from the Trupiano Restaurant Group will be the Juice Vault - a juice bar located adjacent to Espresso Lounge. Juice Vault will feature juice extractions, protein shakes and smoothies. Also available will be a light, healthful lunch alternative with some gluten-free options. Look for Juice Vault to open soon in 2015! Hours will be Mon-Thurs 6am-6pm, Fri 6am-8pm, Sat 7am-6pm & Sun 7am-2pm.

139 S. Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 731-1012 www.TrupianoRestaurantGroup.com SOURCEBOOK 2015

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Dining Guide Jack’s Place Looking for a place to dine, drink or relax? Jack’s Place is it! Located at the Fallbrook Golf Course, Jack’s Place offers daily food specials for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Enjoy a cocktail or a glass of wine in the lounge. Fallbrook Golf Course and Jack’s Place provide banquet services all year long for birthdays, weddings, golf tournaments, and other special events. Come see why Fallbrook Golf Course is the best choice!

2757 Gird Road, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 728-8334 www.fallbrookgolf.com

Rosa’s Mexican Restaurant Your senses will come alive with the aroma of authentic Mexican cooking as you are seated either inside or on the patio. Enjoy the carne asada, chicken, fresh fish, shrimp, carnitas, in burritos, tostadas, or tacos. Treat yourself to the best tasting chili rellenos, and seven seas soup. Salsas, red and green are so good, you’ll take some home. Serving beer, wine, wine margaritas. Large parties welcomed.

1075 S. Mission Rd, Ste A, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 728-8006 Open for breakfast, lunch & dinner, 7 days a week.

Las Brisas Mexican Restaurant Experience the taste of old Mexico with the most delicious and freshest tacos, burritos, chile rellenos, and quesadillas, all made with top quality meats and sauces to perfection. The chicken, beef, carnitas, or deep fried shrimp burritos and tacos will have you coming back for more! Enjoy tostadas piled with shredded chicken or beef, lettuce, salsa, beans, and guacamole. Great choices at the salsa bar. Sodas, Horchata, beer.

1005 S. Main St., Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 723-0115 Open 7 days a week 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

Magee’s Tavern Magee’s Tavern is Fallbrook’s perfect hotspot for dinner with the family or that special date, lunch with co-workers or drinks after work. The atmosphere here is really friendly. Ask about our daily specials. Happy Hour weekdays 2pm-6pm. Live music every Friday.

125 S. Main Avenue, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 731-7433 www.mageestavern.com

Aquaterra Restaurant Locals Serving Locals - Pala Mesa’s Aquaterra restaurant has an extensive menu offering sensational seafood and home-cooked food in addition to the fresh creative sushi bar. The restaurant and bar has the best deck in Fallbrook where special events, theme nights and live entertainment compete for your attention with the best views in town. The fun drink specials and affordable wines make Aquaterra the local’s favorite place to be.

2001 Old Hwy Rd 395, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 731-6805 www.palamesa.com 70

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Dining Guide Brother’s Bistro Ron & Dee Nusser are proud of their 4th successful restaurant, which brings “New York fare to Fallbrook.” They offer both East Coast & Mediterranean-style dishes, using only the freshest ingredients. Enjoy extraordinary appetizers, soups, salads, sandwiches, pastas, pizzas, fresh fish, cioppino, crab cakes, steaks, lamb chops, & decadent desserts. Extensive wine list. Devoted customers travel from LA, OC, & San Diego. Come see why!

835 S. Main Avenue #A, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 731-9761 www.brothersbistro.net | We love to cater: (760) 728-4555

Main Street Cafe This is a real gem in the middle of Fallbrook! Great breakfast house serving generous portions. Awesome food prepared with delicious fresh ingredients. Known for having the best skillets in town. Great service and great prices.

507 South Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 731-1405 Open 7 days a week 7:00am - 3:00pm

El Parque Restaurant El Parque at the Iconic Fallbrook Stage Stop is located directly across from Live Oak Park. Offering inside and outside dining as well as carry out. Enjoy a full menu of American and Mexican fare including Hamburgers, Tacos and Tamales along with a cold Cerveza or a glass of California wine. Hours of operation are Monday-Friday 9am to 6pm and Saturday and Sunday 7am to 6pm.

2659 Reche Road, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 731-2775 www.ElParqueFallbrook.com

Garden Center Cafe & Grill A great dining experience! For breakfast, enjoy huge omelets, stuffed French toast, huevos rancheros or other traditional breakfasts. For lunch, try the exceptional salads with homemade dressings, soups, grilled sandwiches, fresh fish and daily specials. Dinner has an exquisite menu which proudly serves Certified Angus Beef® prime rib, steaks, fresh seafood, pastas, and more, incl beer & wine. Dine inside or on the beautiful garden patio. Catering avail. Like us on Facebook!

1625 S. Mission Road, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 728-4147 Open daily 8:00am-2:30am for breakfast & lunch. Thurs-Sat 5-8pm for dinner.

Scoreboard Pizzeria Our signature pizzas are on display so you can try by the slice, or order your own choice of toppings. Enjoy antipasti, caesar, or house salads all with freshly made dressings. Also popular are the pastrami sandwiches, torpedo, turkey, bacon, avocado sandwiches, meatball subs & chicken wings. For dessert try the cinnamon & sugar knots. Widescreen TVs, games for kids. Serving premium craft beers & wine.

1125 S. Mission Rd, Fallbrook, CA 92028 | (760) 728-9997 Open Mon-Sat 11am-10pm & Sun 10am-9pm. SOURCEBOOK 2015

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Dining Guide Z Cafe Serving breakfast, lunch, dinner, San Diego’s finest craft beers & wine, and featuring Hawaiian specialties. Great food at a great price. With healthy portions of fresh, homemade quality cuisine, sushi, salads and soups, you’re sure to find something you love. Come by and enjoy our patio which offers beautiful views of the San Luis Rey wildlife preserve while you enjoy one of our signature dishes such as an Hawaiian bowl.

5256 S. Mission Road, Bonsall, CA 92003 | (760) 940-1751 www.zcafeinbonsall.com | Located in The River Village Center

Fresco Grill and Wine Bar More than an Italian restaurant, Fresco Grill also offers fresh fish daily, steak, lamb, chicken and vegetarian dishes with a great selection all year round. Every item on the menu is made with choice fresh ingredients. Owner Leone D’Arcangelo insists on using the same European-inspired flavors that are found in his homeland Italy. Come in for live music Wed & Fri or for a Sunday champagne lunch buffet from 11am-3pm. Gluten-free avail.

5256 S. Mission Road, Bonsall, CA 92003 | (760) 631-1944 www.frescorestaurants.com | Located in The River Village Center

Peking Wok Peking Wok serves a large menu with every order made fresh with quality ingredients. From the grains of rice to the tender vegetables, you’ll be able to see and taste the difference. Come enjoy our uniquely elegant, yet relaxed setting. Open for lunch and dinner Tuesdays-Sundays, closed Mondays. Live piano nightly from 5:30pm.

5256 S. Mission Road, #303, Bonsall, CA 92003 | (760) 724-8078 www.pekingwokbonsall.com | Located in The River Village Center

Tekila Cocina Mexicana A unique experience of authentic Mexican food created from cherished family recipes. We serve traditional Mexican favorites as well as exciting daily specials from different regions of Mexico. All of our dishes are made from scratch - people love our food; they can tell the difference in how fresh it is. Even the tortillas are handmade for each order. Tekila Cocina Mexicana is open Sun-Thurs 11am-9:30pm & Fri-Sat 11am-10pm. Full liquor license.

5256 S. Mission Road, Ste. 907, Bonsall, CA 92003 | (760) 643-1278 www.tekilacocinamexicana.com | Located in The River Village Center

Village Pizza of Bonsall With over 17 years in business, Village Pizza of Bonsall serves fresh, delicious pizza, sandwiches, salads, soups and more. A family-owned restaurant, we use quality ingredients in all of our dishes, including homemade dough and sauce. Brick-oven pizzas, stuffed sandwiches and satisfying pastas keep customers coming back for more. Take-out or dine-in at our newly renovated dining area. Open Sun-Thurs 11-9 & Fri-Sat 11-10.

5256 S. Mission Road, Ste. 832, Bonsall, CA 92003 | (760) 990-1598 www.villagepizzabonsall.com | Located in The River Village Center 72

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T utto Dolce

Nathalie Taylor photo

Italian Chocolates & Gelato

F allbrook’s Sweet Taste of Italy by Nathalie Taylor

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In the film “Eat, Pray, Love” Julia Roberts sat on a bench savoring every last bit of her gelato. That image inspired ice cream lovers the world over to try gelato. However – in my case, I had already enjoyed gelato by the time I watched her savoring it on the big screen. My first gelato was experienced in a Maui

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pier shop with the sound of waves swishing under my bench. It was beyond refreshing on a steamy, muggy day. Cold and creamy, it was just about perfect. I was hooked. I asked the server what made it different than ice cream and she told me that they take out most of the air bubbles. The lack of bubbles makes for a rich dessert experience. My advice – if you haven’t tried gelato – do.

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Fabio Peraro, owner of Tutto Dolce

Shane Gibson photo

In Fallbrook, California, the place to experience gelato is Tutto Dolce. Run by an Italian named Fabio Peraro and his wife, Rosa, this shop serves some luscious treats. Gelato is the lure, but chocolates and candies imported from Italy are also reasons to visit. Fabio was born in Italy, near Venice, and the people credited for the development of gelato are the Italians. It is said that a fisherman named Francesco Procopio dei Coltelli fashioned a gelato machine as early as the 1600s. Like Francesco, Fabio is a gelato ground-breaker. In the corner of his shop sits a vintage gelato machine that he took to various culinary events even before gelato became popular in America. The curious would stop by

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his booth and, with this machine, he would demonstrate what he called “the gelato technique.” Everything about Tutto Dolce’s gelato whispers elegance: the petite cups, the dainty spoons, and the extremely cold, intenseflavored Italian-style ice cream. Tutto Dolce offers a variety of flavors including Orange, which is flavored with oranges grown in the Peraro’s private grove. Of course it tastes fresh and inspiring. They also serve water-based gelato for those who are lactose intolerant. I tried every flavor and they were all heavenly. Eating gelato is a different experience than eating ice cream. Since it is so cold it rarely melts before it is in your mouth, so the taste is intense. Pistachio Coffee gelato has a creamy flavor with a hint of nuts. Tiramisu, Tutti Fruiti and Chocolate Chip are also delicious. The water-based Chocolate gelato has a surprisingly strong chocolate flavor due to the imported cocoa powder Fabio uses. This cocoa, which is an ingredient in all of the chocolate gelato blends, is imported from Europe and is unique to Fabio’s store. Even the scent is intoxicating. It has the just the right balance of cocoa and vanilla.

Breakfast & Lunch Everyday 8:00am-2:30pm Sunday 8:00am-2:00pm Dinner Thursday, Friday & Saturday 5:00pm-8:00pm

The highlights of

our menu are Certified Angus Beef ® Prime Rib and Fresh seafood. We are known for our fresh salads, homemade soups and desserts prepared daily. Signature pasta, chicken and pork dishes are favorites also. Our wine, beer and champagne list is complete and moderately priced.

760-728-4147 | 1625 S. Mission Rd. Fallbrook 74

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La Suissa and Mangini candy imported from Italy make an elegant addition Nathalie Taylor photo to any coffee table dish.

Tutto Dolce’s candy gift boxes are attractive and affordable.

Fabio mentioned that when his gelato is eaten, “you don’t feel too full but are satisfied.” He also mentioned, “It is all natural and we only have four ingredients.” In addition to the Fallbrook store, the Peraros have owned a wholesale gelato supply, candy and cocoa business since 1978. The upscale kitchen and specialty food store Williams-Sonoma has been a client, almost from the beginning. Besides gelato, Tutto Dolce offers Italian candy. La Suissa is a creamy, delicious chocolate brand. They also import the hard candy Mangini, which is made by a family-owned company in northern Italy. The size is perfect for a coffee table dish – petite. The quality is high and the prices are reasonable. Next door to the gelato and candy shop is an inviting boutiquesized shop stocked with items that Fabio and Rosa have imported

from Italy. Large and small Venetian Carnival masks are lovely. Last year the couple made a trip to Montelupo Fiorentino where they invested in several hand-fashioned vases. Montelupo Fiorentino is a village near Florence that has been a center for handmade Tuscan ceramics since the Renaissance. Colorful with dominant yellow and blue hues, the vases were purchased by the couple not only to sell, but to create a Tuscan ambiance. “We wanted to give a little more light to the store,” Fabio explained. Tutto Dolce means “Everything Sweet.” I am enamored of this sweet shop – you will be too!

cos Mahi Fish Tacos • Carne Asada Ta

Nathalie Taylor photo

Tutto Dolce is located at 110 Main Avenue in Fallbrook. (760) 731-9688 Hours: Tues.-Sat. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

•C s o t urri B &

iote Chicken • Pollo Fu h c A • s ndid Taco s a o t i n ar

arga spberry M ritas a R te & a n a egr m o P , o g 760-728-4556 an M 1581 S. Mission Rd. us Exciting & Delicio Fallbrook Open 11:15am Daily & 10:30am Sundays SOURCEBOOK 2015

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F A R O

Faro Trupiano Entrepreneur Extraordinaire By Nathalie Taylor

Faro Trupiano is Fallbrook’s “Entrepreneur Extraordinaire.” place to relax and enjoy a cup of coffee or a fresh pastry. Trupiano’s third Fallbrook venture is a newly opened restauHis business card lists a total of six restaurants in the “Trupiano Restaurant Group.” However, only four of them are in rant called 127 West Social House. Trupiano took on a monuFallbrook. The other two – which he co-owns with his father mental project when he decided to renovate the historic Elder House. It was built – are located at the in 1884 by Elmore Oceanside Harbor. Shipley at the cost Trupiano opened of three thousand his first Fallbrook dollars. The vintage restaurant, Trubuilding was a chalpiano’s Italian Bislenge to renovate tro, ten years ago. because the exterPrivileged to write a nal façade had to be review at that time, preserved. However, I found the cuisine the interior had difand ambiance de127 West Social House in Fallbrook is located in the historic Elder House and has been newly renovated. Shane Gibson photos ferent restrictions lightful. Ten years and is now sparkling and new. later it is still thriving. At 127 West beer is king, with twenty different beers on tap. Trupiano, who is full Italian, travels to Italy on occasion to visit relatives and research the country’s varied cuisines. About At the bar, guests can experience a “beer flight,” which is a twenty-five percent of the bistro’s menu items are created by wooden paddle with room for five miniature mugs. The barTrupiano, himself, and are inspired, in part, by his travels in tender will set up part of the flight with beers the guest is familiar with and then the remainder of the mugs will be filled with Italy. However, the majority of recipes are his mother’s. “My mom is the best cook in the entire world and she taught something new for the taster. “We want to introduce them to new beers and continue to me most everything I know,” he said. Last year Trupiano added the Espresso Lounge to his res- expand their palates,” Trupiano explained. The restaurant also serves gourmet food and quality local and taurant repertoire. The opening of this establishment fit right in with Trupiano’s vision to revitalize the downtown area. Lo- California wines. The De Luz winery, Casa Tiene Vista (CTV) cated on Main in Fallbrook this serene Internet café is just the provides their private label wine. 76

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FALLBROOK

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(760) 645-3992

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3137 South Mission Road • Fallbrook, CA 92028 77


Bar and dining area inside Trupiano’s in Fallbrook.

127 West Social House pizza maker Carlos Manuel slides a pizza pie into the oven.

“I count on people,” he said, “those people that can actually The restaurant offers alfresco dining on a flagstone patio. A stream meanders near the patio edge and strings of white lights translate to paper what is in my head – people who can take the are looped from tree to tree. The charming atmosphere reminds bits and pieces of ideas and then knit them together.” What drives Trupiano to develop these establishments? me of a bistro in Brussels. Trupiano said that one of the com“The people of Fallbrook,” he said. “It seems like the more ments he has received is that the patio area “transports people to other places.” For me it is Belgium. For others it is Seattle they give me the more I want to give them. They are so supor San Francisco. Maybe it just transports diners to the places portive. I think Fallbrook is great, but I feel that there are some things that are missing. I want to do where they have felt particularly what I can to fill in those gaps. I feel inspired or relaxed. that with the people of Fallbrook “I wanted to incorporate qualbehind me there is nothing that I ity elements and tie it all in with cannot do.” the historic building that was a When Trupiano visits his variFallbrook icon,” he explained. “I ous establishments various diverse thought Fallbrook would respond thoughts and emotions well up inwell to it – and they have.” side him. All three of his Fallbrook Venture number four is coming establishments are “different comsoon. It will be a juice bar housed ponents of the same dream,” he in the former bank building adjanoted. cent to Espresso Lounge. Trupiano When he is in Trupiano’s Italian named it the “Juice Vault” to give Bistro there is “the history of where a nod to the former occupant. Juice Espresso Lounge offers a full coffee bar as well as smoothies, sandwiches it all began.” Then, in Espresso extractions, protein shakes and and more in a relaxing atmosphere. Lounge “everything is just so pleassmoothies will head the menu. Also available will be a light, healthful lunch alternative with some ant,” and at 127 West it is “new and exciting.” “I love watching people’s faces as they walk around and see gluten-free options. Inspiration for Trupiano’s ventures come at various times. He what I have done to the place [127 West],” he said. “It was a may see something on the Internet, or he may get an idea while long and hard journey to get here and the positive comments and reactions make me think it was all worthwhile. I cannot driving his car. emphasize enough the gratitude I feel. I could not have done “I do a lot of thinking when I drive,” he commented. He might see something that inspires him, then ideas begin this without the people of Fallbrook.” Trupiano’s slogan is: “Keep it local, keep it social.” That pretto form and it all gels. Trupiano is the visionary, but he is wise enough to know that he cannot possibly make it happen alone. ty much says it all. He is a master at surrounding himself with people who know Find out more about Trupiano’s restaurants online at: www.127west.com. how to develop his ideas.

“ Keep it local, keep it social.” – Faro Trupiano

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Family Taps Dutch Roots

While Building Vast Fallbrook, Temecula Business Base by Tim O’Leary Like countless other post-World War II emigrants, Bert and Gerda Hornsveld arrived in Los Angeles with little more than their Dutch work ethic, their faith and their resolve to succeed in their new land. Bert worked with his hands fixing boats at Newport Beach. Gerda raised their expanding family. They scrambled to learn English and save every dollar they could. The young family soon migrated east and tapped tiny Temecula as their workplace and the slightly-larger Fallbrook as their home. The couple purchased a small Temecula hardware store in 1968, a time when that town was crisscrossed by dirt roads and home to a few thousand people. Their son, Hank, helped run the store. Since then, Hank and his wife, Patty, have cemented their Temecula presence as an independent hardware store and plunged into an array of business and cultural entities that span the two communities. Each of them spotlights a different ingredient in this recipe that has netted them a family conglomerate that includes two hardware stores, a historic theater, a nonprofit performing arts group and commercial properties that are leased to shops, churches, a restaurant and a weekly newspaper. “You get up early and go to bed late,” said Hank, who owns and operates Hank’s Hardware & Lumber in Temecula as well as several other commercial and cultural interests. Patty sees it as an expression of God’s favor for the Hornsveld family’s selfless actions during the war. “God has blessed this family with the ability to gather this up and share these blessings with the community,” she said. The family’s ties to the Fallbrook and Temecula areas are akin to a pioneer tale. And the family’s expanding orbits in the business and nonprofit spheres mirror the growth that has swept over the communities that are separated by a county line. SOURCEBOOK 2015

Owner of ‘’Hank’s Hardware’’ in Temecula, Hank Hornsveld. Shane Gibson photo

From the Netherlands to a new world Like their shell-shocked countrymen, Bert and Gerda were caught up in the panic that ensued after Nazi soldiers swept over Holland and occupied the low-lying, neutral nation. Family members lived in their combination lumberyard and boat building facility. They tunneled into a Nazi storehouse to steal grain and gasoline. They helped hide a young Jewish couple, Flory and Felix, who had been ordered to report to a concentration camp. Flory and Felix survived the war and eventually made it to America. In turn, they sponsored Bert and Gerda’s exodus from war-torn Europe. Gerda was 25 years old when she and Bert and their small child spent 30 days aboard a freighter that passed through the Panama Canal en route to Los Angeles. The family settled in Newport Beach, but it was lured east in the mid-1960s by new opportunities. The couple fell in love with Fallbrook and Temecula, rural enclaves that had few traffic lights and just a smattering of small businesses. At the time, Temecula consisted of a cluster of humble wood and tin buildings that was surrounded by ranch and farm land and, at a distance, the Pechanga Indian reservation. But the area was on the cusp of dramatic change as a development company had recently purchased a former cattle ranch that once blanketed 87,500 acres and stretched from Vail Lake to the Santa Rosa Plateau. Bert spent much of his time growing his family’s business. He sold it in 1981 to a regional hardware chain, but the building burned down about a year later (where the Stampede is now in Old Town) and the chain succumbed to bankruptcy. Before long, Hank reentered the hardware business by opening his own store, which quickly grew as Temecula became a city and the region’s population exploded. 81


Hank Hornsveld helping to build the current store.

Courtesy photo

Gerda often worked in the store’s receiving department, and she volunteered with several Fallbrook groups and enjoyed walking, swimming and knitting. She liked to eat lunch at the Swing Inn, an Old Town Temecula eatery that is one of the city’s longest-operating businesses. In 2008, HarperOne published Flory: A Miraculous Story of Survival. Flory Van Beek’s 256-page autobiography spotlighted the role of the Hornsvelds who hid her family prior to their escape to the U.S. The book went on to win widespread praise from readers, commentators and Jewish leaders. The Van Beeks later sponsored the Hornsvelds into the U.S. The movie rights were reportedly sold, but there has been no news of a screenplay or a pending production. Gerda was 85 when she died in October 2009, about a decade after her husband had passed away. Business base grows The family’s business holdings multiplied with Hank and Patty at

The frame of the current store going up.

Courtesy photo

the helm. As Temecula’s industrial and commercial core expanded, their hardware and lumber store shifted to an existing building along Enterprise Circle South. The business soon outgrew that structure, and in 1989 Hank constructed the two-story building that now houses the bulk of the store’s inventory and operations. About five years later, the couple purchased a one-story building alongside the hardware store. A primary reason for that purchase was to obtain additional weekday and Saturday parking for their hardware store customers. That building, which is dubbed Hank’s Center, is leased to a linen shop and three small churches. The hardware business continued to prosper, and in 2000 the couple constructed another two-story building across the street. One section of that building houses various lines of lumber and hardware products. Another section is leased to Dustless Technologies and upstairs offices are leased to the Valley News. As the couple’s Temecula’s holdings grew, they also focused on Fallbrook’s commercial and cultural possibilities.

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Temecula Hardware 1973 “Carnafall” booth, Bert Hornveld middle.

Courtesy photo

The original Temecula Hardware store was located where the Stampede Dance Hall is now. Courtesy photo

Patty drew upon her lifelong love of acting when she formed the nonprofit Children’s Acting School & Theater in Fallbrook in 1991. Two years later, the couple purchased the iconic, but deteriorating Mission Theater building along Main Street. Over the years, they purchased a small storefront building alongside the theater and an L-shaped building across the street. Those buildings house CAST recital rooms, prop shop and other functions. The organization – which relies on student fees and other revenues to survive – typically stages about four productions a year and attracts about 100 young performers and helpers. The couple’s daughter, Jennifer Hornsveld, now oversees CAST operations and the activities of its dance, voice, drama and other instructors. The nonprofit program has weathered many financial challenges, and the cost to power the high wattage spotlights alone can total $3,000 for a round of performances. But it’s impossible to put a value on the fun that the youths share and the skills, self-esteem, poise and confidence that they gain

through their CAST classes and productions, Patty said. “It’s a struggle, but we think it’s important,” she said in a recent interview outside the theater. “We’ve seen so many benefits.” In 2000, the Hornsvelds purchased a floundering hardware store business that fills a sprawling commercial complex at Main and Fallbrook streets. Business has boomed since then, and the complex is leased to Patty’s brother, Joe Deroest, who operates Joe’s Hardware there. In 2010, the Hornsvelds purchased a landmark commercial complex at Heller’s Bend that is commonly referred to as the Valley Fort. Built in 1965 along South Mission Road as a Western-themed restaurant and campground, the property had become deteriorated, overgrown by oaks and blanketed by patches of weeds. The couple lovingly restored the five buildings in memory of Hank’s parents. They initially operated a steakhouse-type restaurant there, but recently decided to lease the place to Estrella’s Family Restaurant.

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Rows and rows of endless hardware items.

“It turned out that a restaurant wasn’t for me,” Hank said. Busy hands and crammed calendars The Temecula hardware store remains the bread and butter of the couple’s commercial and cultural bounty. Hank can often be found sitting at a desk behind the checkout counter of the store with a phone pressed to his ear. Three clerks rapidly ring up sales as the store’s department heads and other workers stock shelves, unload trucks and perform other duties. “I don’t know why, but I always end up at Hanks,” one customer mused as he paid his bill during a recent visit. Clad in shorts, a shirt and a red ball cap, Hank interrupted a string of phone calls to tell a pair of visitors that he’d be delayed a while in keeping his appointment with them. “Look around the store,” he suggested to them. “I’m trying to work out a couple of deals here.” Hank, 62, eventually climbed the stairs to the second floor of the store, a vast expanse that doubles as a warehouse and an office. He greeted a store worker who was searching for a particular item, and then slipped into a sectioned-off area that has a couple of chairs and a table but no pictures, posters or other trappings of an owner’s office. He cleared away boxes of power tools from the table to create an opening for conversation. It is doubtful, Hank grumbled, that he would be able to slip away that afternoon for a round of golf. He boasts an under-12 handicap at a Fallbrook club. He is also proud that his mom-and-pop business has survived and prospered despite the three Home Depot and Lowe’s big box stores that anchor key commercial zones in Temecula and Murrieta. It has taken hard work, long hours and attentive service to keep Hank’s parking lots brimming with contractors and other customers, he said. “I’ve just been doing it a long time, and we base ourselves on good pricing, good service and [having items] in stock most of the time,” he said. The store’s efforts to get and grow commercial accounts have paid off, he said. The store has gained a following for stocking exhaustive inventories in key product lines, as well as for its convenience at the hub of Temecula’s industrial area. www.my-sourcebook.com


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The store’s motto is: “If We Don’t Have It, You Don’t Need It!” The store and its related operations employ about 30 workers. “I run a pretty tight ship,” Hank said. Along the way, the couple has won loyal customers and close friends. Alice Sullivan, president and chief executive of the Temecula Valley Chamber of Commerce, said she and her husband, John, typically head to Hank’s for their hardware needs and fix-it products. She estimates that they have spent thousands of dollars in the store over the years. “John says he shops there because it’s homey,” Sullivan said. “He says, ‘I’d rather support a small business, and it feels like home when I go there.’ A lot of people feel that way. The community has been very loyal to them.” Much of the same has unfolded in Fallbrook, said Phyllis Sweeney, a business and community services leader who has known the Hornsveld family for 30 years. Sweeney said Gerda was an “amazing lady” who was athletic, competitive and interesting. Gerda would sometimes detail her war years and the hardships that her country and her family faced then. “She would share all of these things,” said Sweeney, who works as the special projects manager for the Fallbrook Senior Center and is a volunteer director of the Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce. She describes Hank and Patty as matter of fact and quick to roll up their sleeves. The couple has amassed a great deal of business savvy and they will take a lead role if needed, Sweeney said. Conversely, they are equally content to remain in the background if others step forward to take charge of a particular project or community challenge, she said. Sweeney attributed the couple’s quiet, unassuming approach to their upbringing. “Work isn’t like work for them, and that’s because of the way they are. That is their passion. To me, they are humble people and that’s how Gerda was,” Sweeney said in a recent telephone interview. Patty said those values are as ingrained in her family as their faith. “You have to live your life to please God,” she said. “That’s what we hope we’re doing.” SOURCEBOOK 2015

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Rick Marrocco reminisces on the birth of

Fallbrook Ag-Lab

and the oasis

in the hills of Rainbow that he calls home

by Laura Taylor The Marroccos extend their grounds to UCSD for executive retreats and the like. The property features a four-acre spring-fed lake.

Hidden amidst the rocky terrain in the hills of Rainbow there exists an oasis of lush vegetation which surrounds a four-acre springfed lake on the private property of Rick and Gayle Marrocco. This extraordinarily atypical setting embraces not only their adobe Rick Marrocco had always house but also the home of 100 acres of avowanted an avocado orchard. His property now hosts 100 cado trees. Numerous other species of trees acres of avocado trees. grace the property, including giant eucalyptus, oaks, ash, sycamores, redwoods, liquid ambers, crape myrtles, toyons, palms and ferns. Here is Rick’s story, in his own words. I grew up in Riverside. My mother was German and had nine brothers and sisters. My Italian father had eleven siblings. He was extremely strict and didn’t tolerate bad attitudes. He was fair though. When I asked for an allowance, he said that I had better get a job. I mowed the neighbors lawns while in grade school. I then asked my dad if he could help me out with a car and he said that I better get another job. At the age of fifteen, I got a job at Gallenkamp Shoe store on a commission basis. The Retail Clerks Union was very good money too. At the age of sixteen, I still didn’t have enough money for a car so my dad got me a job with the water company, cleaning horse tail moss out of the Riverside canal. I still wasn’t making enough money for a car so I went to the corner gas station and got a graveyard shift Friday and Saturday nights pumping gas at 24 cents per gallon. I finally had enough money for a new car, which my father wouldn’t even let me drive to school! I met my wife Gayle when she was fifteen years old. She is such a nice person and a very hard worker. I collected insects, snakes, bought igua86

nas and crocodiles; anything that moved I collected. My mom was great. She put up with all of my findings. Gayle would run with me through the Gavilan Hills and Mocking Bird Canyon next to the springs hanging onto my jar of cyanide while I chased anything that moved with a butterfly net. The insects were for my permanent collections and snakes for my live ones. I went to Riverside Community College for three years then to Cal Poly for another three. I worked at Sears shoe store while going to school at Cal Poly. I obtained my degree in Zoology Entomology. After marrying Gayle, we moved to Fallbrook in 1973 where we rented an add-on in a cow pasture! I commuted to work from Fallbrook to Ventura as a lemon entomologist. One day my boss said that we needed to set up a lab for the avocados that were being planted in Fallbrook, so he sent me to University of California Riverside for two days every week where most of the avocado research was being done. I was excited at the chance to start my graduate work on avocado culture. Eventually I set up Fallbrook Ag-Lab and in time bought my partners out, and then it was just Gayle and me running the lab. I had always wanted to own an avocado orchard. I had a longtime client who owned 100 acres in Rainbow with a lake and spring, two houses, avocados, macadamias and grapefruit trees. After his passing, his son asked me to help him with the ranch and I gladly obliged. I began bringing the neglected trees on the ranch back to health, and eventually the owner’s son asked if I wanted to buy it, which I did. After much negotiation over three years, the sale was finalized. We began in earnest planting over 6,000 baby clone Hass trees, and brought back 4,000 of the original trees. We are still replacing the old avocado trees with 200 Hass trees on Dusa roots each year. www.my-sourcebook.com


I plan to keep this fifty year old ranch going indefinitely. We truly value our life in paradise at our home ‘Rosa Sattoria.’ – Rick Marrocco

One of the many breathtaking views from the Marrocco’s ranch.

I plan to keep this fifty year old ranch going indefinitely. We truly value our life in paradise at our home “Rosa Sattoria.” We have four grandchildren: Kameron, Alex, Ava and Cody. My greatest pleasure these days is playing with my family by the lake on the weekends. Gayle and I feel so rewarded and blessed to be able to enjoy the fruits of our labor. It was a long road of hard work, but so worth it to be able to share it with those who appreciate the serenity of nature. The Marroccos also extend their grounds to UCSD; the liaison for arranging executive retreats for various San Diego-based companies to places such as the Marrocco’s ranch. The “Out of the Ordinary Team Building” program promotes character and team building skills through a series of outdoor activities which develop confidence within a group by using the resources found at the lake. Challenges

Laura Taylor photos

include building a bridge to the island, wall climbing, building boats from scratch, balancing on slack lines and crossing swamps. Paddleboats, paddleboards and fishing are other activities available. As the owner of Fallbrook Ag-Lab, Marrocco’s expertise and services include leaf and soil analysis, grove evaluations, root rot testing, water analysis, insect management (mites and thrips), watering and fertilizing recommendations, plant pathology, agricultural feasibility studies, EC&CL well water testing, EC&CL soil testing, soil pH testing and crop estimates. Marrocco consults for various industry related periodicals and provides guidance on topics such as how much water is appropriate, grafting selection and techniques, and the importance of data obtained from leaf and soil analysis for proper fertilization.

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Throughout Community by Shelli DeRobertis

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Juha Silvola shows a cutout created by a CNC Plasma cutting system at this shop in Temecula.

Shelli DeRobertis photo

he Welcome to Fallbrook sign at South Main Avenue is just one of many metal creations fabricated by Juha Silvola that are sprinkled throughout the Fallbrook area. Silvola’s company, JS Welding & Fabrication, recently relocated to 47671 Rainbow Canyon in Temecula, but for more than a decade its hub was in Rainbow, where Silvola has been a longtime resident.

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The crew at JS Welding & Fabrication work on a Fallbrook home constructed of mainly steel and concrete.

Courtesy photo

By age 14, Silvola was already repairing tractors at his parents’ landscaping business, Finnamex Nursery in Fallbrook. He took on a larger task one day, and said that’s when he used his first welder. “Welding started when I built a motor for my dad’s pickup when I was 14, and I broke some bolts and had to weld new nuts on the heads of them to get the broken bolts out,” Silvola said. After he graduated Fallbrook High School in 1988, he served one year in the Finnish Air Force as part of his dual citizenship with his native country Finland. By his mid-twenties, Silvola had started his own welding business that he operated solo for several years until switching to other jobs that would pave the way to his success today: He operated heavy equipment for four years, then became a certified welding inspector, spending another four years performing inspections on bridges, schools and hospitals. But in his spare time he was constantly fixing or building custom things for other people, and many of them requested invoices. “I just could not get away from it,” he said. He then realized one day that he had enough clientele to open shop – again. “Finally, I put the inspection hat away and started this business 12 years ago,” he said. About that same time, in 2004, he married his wife, Kimberly. They have two daughters, ages 8 and 10, and Silvola also has a 22-year-old stepdaughter.

A corrugated metal deck is custom fabricated by JS Welding & Fabrication for a Fallbrook Type 1 construction home.

Courtesy photo

He does work for about 400 contractors. Bob Fechtman, architect, is currently building a Fallbrook residential home and contracted with Silvola to build the beams, columns and roof of the house. “I think he has a generalist capability to fabricate anything custom, from small to architectural,” Fechtman said. Fechtman’s home design has a shoebox footprint, and is constructed with mainly steel and concrete materials. “There’s not one stick of wood in the house,” he said. Silvola’s company is also fabricating a corrugated metal deck and staircase for the all-steel-beams home.

If the job is not done the way you want it, he’ll get it done the way you want it. He is committed.

– Kimberly Silvola

Kimberly Silvola describes her husband as a “people-person” and a “social butterfly” who is passionate about welding. “If the job is not done the way you want it, he’ll get it done the way you want it. He is committed,” she said. Today, he has field trucks, service trucks, a large, full service shop with state of the art equipment, and several full-time employees. SOURCEBOOK 2015

89


A custom BBQ built for a customer in Orange County.

Foreman Jeff Stephenson welds upgraded seismic stiffeners on a communications tower. Courtesy photo

Courtesy photo

Juha Silvola donated welding services to the Rainbow Volunteer Fire Department by helping prepare the 1989 Chevy Caprice for the Firefighters Destruction Derby held in 2014.

“Everything is exposed. All of our steel work is exposed,” Silvola said. The variety of work performed by JS Welding & Fabrication ranges from repairing a homeowner’s lawnmower to building multistory structural steel buildings, he said. He explained that fabrication is the process of taking raw matter and building something out of it. JS Welding & Fabrication has built ATM machines, avocado hoppers, stainless kitchen equipment, performed work on cell phone towers,

Courtesy photo

and much more. “Every job is unique in its own way, whether it’s location, logistics, design or fabrication,” Silvola said. The custom Fallbrook sign near Del Rey Avocado Company was created doing plate cutting (CNC Plasma Cutting), which is another artistic service JS Welding & Fabrication provides. But Silvola’s hobby in competition BBQ also feeds his fabrication skills in creating one-of-a-kind smokers, such as the one purchased by George Garcia, owner of The Rib Shack in Fallbrook.

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An employee at JS Welding & Fabrication works on a stainless steel hopper used for avocados.

Shelli DeRobertis photo

“The quality of our food has gone up exponentially since we brought his pit into our restaurant,” Garcia said. The smoker measures 4-feet by 8-feet and is used to cook several hundred pounds of meat each week. “It literally looks like a shack and really does embody our restaurant,” Garcia said. Silvola said his company builds the custom BBQ pits from the ground up, and some of them have as much as 64 square feet of cooking space. Silvola is the pit master of Kritter Kookers team and avidly participates in BBQ Championships. The dozen trophies he won are topped with gold chickens, pigs and cows and are proudly displayed at his shop; proof that he’s just good at what he does.

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A catwalk fabricated by the crew at JS Welding & Fabrication. Courtesy photo

Juha and his former cooking partner, Mark, before Mark moved out of state. Courtesy photo

SOURCEBOOK 2015

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by Sandra Shrader Not many people would be happy to be described as having a heart of stone. But to Scott Morel, owner of Rock Solid Stone, Inc., a stone and tile setting company located at 308 Industrial Way in Fallbrook, such an assessment is a rocksteady compliment of the finest kind. That is because, despite nearly 30 years of seeing countertop and flooring decorating trends embrace tile to granite to marble to recycled glass to architectural Rock Solid Stone staff. (or manufactured) stone, Morel, 52, still loves his craft as much as he did the first time he added a beautiful touch to a customer’s home. “We started in the 1980s when tile was what everyone wanted, and then in the ‘90s granite and marble became the rage,” said Morel, who grew up on Bonsall, attended school in Fallbrook, and has revamped the kitchen and bathroom surfaces in the homes of many of his former teachers over the years. “A popular trend now is architectural ‘manufactured’ stone, which is not only the best way to ensure matching color, but it is also very effective at resisting scratches and stains because it is so non-porous,” he explained, while adding that the timeless and durable qualities of granite and marble still continue to keep those products at the top of renovation requests as well. “And people still want tile for homes that have a southwestern or Mexican-style decor.” 92

About every ten years or so, Morel said, people decide to change or upgrade their countertops, backsplashes and flooring either due to the effects of use and water on the surfaces, broken or damaged areas, or just plain boredom. “I have done several homes about three times each now since Rock Solid Stone has been in business,” he said, with an affable laugh. “Some of that is due to the fact that we also do a lot of restoration and resealing, Shane Gibson photo and some of it is due to new owners who want to change the look of things. And some of it is also happens because existing owners get inspired by what their neighbors have done.” However, cutting and installing those different products is not a “one-size-fits-all” process, said Morel. “For example, the company had to undergo a training and certification process to fabricate and install the newer manufactured stone products. The architectural stone is actually made from ground natural quartz silica, one of nature’s strongest minerals, and fused via several epoxies so different blades than what are used for natural stones must be used,” he explained. “But what is innovative about the new stone product is that the slabs can be much thinner in width than granite and marble are so there is less cutting that needs to be done. There is always new stuff to learn in this business, but it’s never boring!” www.my-sourcebook.com


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A finished bath by Rock Solid Stone.

Courtesy photo

Rock Solid Stone employee Jose Nava cuts out a section of stone where a sink will be inserted during the final installation of the marble countertop.

Another part of stone and tile cutting requires a lot of water use, but Morel said that Rock Solid Stone has a definite edge in avoiding water waste in drought-conscious Fallbrook and Southern California because the company recycles all its water. Yet life in the Fallbrook community is not strictly all angles

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and corners for Morel. The company, which has a client base within a radius of an hour’s drive, is very active in supporting organizations such as the Fallbrook Boys and Girls Club, youth athletic associations, and the Bonsall and Fallbrook Rotary Clubs. And helping one group in particular, military veterans, makes Morel especially proud. “Not only do we give military discounts, we just participated in getting a sixth house built for a military veteran and his family,” he said. “We work with the Wounded Warrior Project, which helps meets the needs of injured service members. I think it’s very important to help our military veterans.”

A popular trend now is architectural ‘manufactured’ stone which is not only the best way to ensure matching color, but it is also very effective at resisting scratches and stains because it is so non-porous.

– Scott Morel, owner of Rock Solid Stone, Inc.

With such a longtime commitment to its product lines, service, clients and the community, Rock Solid Stone, Inc. certainly lives up to its name. For more information, visit: http://www.rocksolidstoneinc.com or call 760-731-6191.

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Homes for Our Troops

2014

Homes For Our Troops builds custom-designed homes in Fallbrook for Wounded Warriors with special needs.

Marine SGT Julian Torres

Dozens of local volunteers lend their help installing the landscaping at Marine Sgt. Julian Torres’ new home.

Marine Sgt. Julian Torres, a double amputee, expresses his gratitude to volunteers and the Homes For Our Troops organization for the new, custom-designed home built for him in Fallbrook this past year.

96

Shane Gibson photos

Local building contractor, Scott Youngren, who built Torres’ home for Homes For Our Troops in 2014, works with other volunteers to plant a tree in the front yard of the home.

Jayden Torres, son of Marine Sgt. Julian Torres, helps dig holes for plants at the site of his family’s new home.

Volunteer Joey Dorsey plants blooming flowers in the landscape of Marine Sgt. Julian Torres’ home.

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Homes for Our Troops

2015

Homes For Our Troops builds custom-designed homes in Fallbrook for Wounded Warriors with special needs.

Marine GYSGT Brian Meyer

A large crowd of volunteers listens to instructions for the landscaping of Marine GySgt. Brian Meyer’s new home. This view is from the cab of an antique fire engine provided for the occasion by the Fallbrook Firefighters Association.

Double amputee, Marine Corps Gunnery Sergeant Brian Meyer speaks at the groundbreaking of the new home being built for him and his family by Homes For Our Troops in Fallbrook.

Ken Seals photos

Volunteers Brandon Lucore, kneeling, and Bill Poole work on laying sod at Meyer’s new home. The landscaping project was completed in approximately two hours by 100 volunteers who gave their time and effort to do the work.

Jim Wendt, left, works with a rake to smooth out an area surrounding freshly-planted groundcover at the specially built home for Marine Corps Gunnery Sergeant Brian Meyer. Adam Williams, center and Allison Thompson are also part of the volunteer crew.

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Volunteer Candy Schoenheit positions pots of vegetables in newly-built, elevated garden beds.

More than 100 volunteers assemble on the newly-laid sod in front of the almost-completed home for Marine Corps Gunnery Sergeant Brian Meyer in Fallbrook. The new home for Meyer is a project of Homes For Our Troops.

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Street Names and Their Origins by Karen Ossenfort

If you are new to town, you may shake your head at some of the street names that run through Fallbrook and the area. If you’ve been here awhile, you love sharing the tales behind the street names over a cup o’ Joe at a local coffeehouse.

Shane Gibson photo

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In Fallbrook Since 1980 Lic. #974849

Ed ShobE Plumbing

Jennifer Moosa photo

Sleeping Indian, Rabbit Hill, Ammunition, Wilt, Stage Coach, DeLuz, Potter, Porter, Clemmens, Morro, Alvarado, Pico, Rodeo Queen, are all such names. The Fallbrook Historical Society has quite the history of street names and the origins of such. “Many of the streets were named after or by the families who lived in that particular area. Gird and Reche were early pioneer families. Clemmens was an early settler in West Fallbrook,” Sherri Lenfers, a spokeswoman for the Fallbrook Historical Society, said. “Wilt Road was probably named after Vernon Wilt, whose family owned about 40 acres in the area,” she said. Dulin Road was named after the family who were the previous owners of the ranch on the south side of the San Luis Rey River, where the Vessels Ranch is now, Lenfers added. Vince Nicollette, the building chief for San Diego County Planning and Development Services, said that naming a road is not too difficult. “Roads are usually named by someone developing a property. When they come in to get their permits, we ask them then to name the roads.” This is an age-old custom, he explained, saying that county records go quite a way back. He said the county doesn’t like to hold up projects and is not in the business of street naming, so the approval process for a street name submission doesn’t take long. “We only have one real requirement, and that is we won’t accept or approve any offensive name requests,” Nicollete said. Potter Street garners its name from a popular high school principal, James E. Potter. Potter Middle School also is named for the educator. Capra Way was settled by the movie director Frank Capra, who lived in Fallbrook and owned the Red Mountain Ranch. Actress Norma Shearer has a street named in her honor, Shearer Crossing. Sleeping Indian was so named because from a distance the lay of the land looks like an Indian sleeping on his back. The building of Ammunition Road was around 1941, according to the historical society, and serves as the entrance to the Naval

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Many of the streets were named after or by the families who lived in that particular area. Gird and Reche were early pioneer families.

Weapons Station. Burma used to be an entrance to Camp Pendleton, so named because of the long drive it took to get on base. Heller’s Bend used to be part of the original Hwy 395. The story goes, Lenfers explained, that in the early 30s, an elderly couple, by the name of Heller, drove off the road and were killed. It’s been known as a dangerous section of road and was eventually named for them. “It would be great if the Fallbrook Latino Heritage group gets active and shares their stories with the Historical Society,” Lenfers said, “It would be a great addition.” Roads named after Latino families include Alvarado and Pico. DeLuz is another such road that has an unsure history. www.my-sourcebook.com


Shane Gibson photo

Angie Peters photo

There are more street names in which to explore how they were named. The best place to start is the Fallbrook Historical Society. And, just open a Fallbrook Directory and look at all the names. If you ever want to change a name of a street in an established neighborhood, keep in mind the county will have to obtain the approval of at least 60 percent of the residents in the neighborhood, and people tend not to like change. “People can be pretty fractured on whether to do it,” Nicollete said. So, instead, enjoy your neighborhood and research the street names you are interested in. Then you can imbibe a cup of java at your favorite coffeehouse and tell some tales yourself.

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TASTE, HEALTH & FUN Courtesy of Grangetto’s Farm & Garden Supply Blueberries are one of the healthiest fruits around; they are low calorie, almost fat free, packed with vitamin C, antioxidants and dietary fiber – and they taste wonderful. As if that weren’t enough, they can add striking beauty to your garden. Whatever your reason for growing them, blueberries will work very well in your landscape plans. In addition to the fruit they produce, they have beautiful bell-shaped blooms in spring, handsome glossy foliage in the growing season, striking fall color and bright red stems in winter. They are very low maintenance and easy to grow!! Berries are packed with plenty of essential nutrients your body requires: vitamins A, C, E, K, B6 and B12, which you probably already know have tons of health benefits. Another major health benefit of berries is their immunity boosting capabilities. In addition to keeping your defenses high against general illnesses, berries also improve heart health. These antioxidants also balance blood fat levels, which helps regulate high cholesterol. Other antioxidant health benefits of berries include its ability to fight certain types of cancer. The high amounts of manganese found in all berries are especially helpful in flushing out the digestive system of toxins. Blueberries are easy to grow, require little care and are seldom bothered by pests. They can vary in size from low ground-covering varieties to large bushes ranging 4-6 feet high. Their versatility allows them to be used as background shrubs or as border plants. They even make excellent hedges, if spaced correctly. If you are limited in space or just have a patio, consider planting them in 104

containers. Different varieties of blueberries produce different sizes of fruit, with flavor ranging from tart to very sweet. Larger fruiting varieties produce fruit perfect for fresh eating and large desserts, while smaller fruiting varieties are better for adding to cereals, muffins and pancakes. The Southern Highbush varieties of blueberries are especially suited to our Southern California climate. Be sure to select different cultivars to lengthen your harvest season from June until the end of August. For blueberry lovers, we suggest at least two plants per family member. When to Plant By growing early, mid, and late-season varieties you can harvest blueberries from early summer until fall. Blueberries ripen over a two- to five-week period. Harvest highbush blueberries every 5 days as the color becomes a deep blue. Blueberries can be planted almost any time of year in Southern California. Cultivars suited for this region include Misty, fruiting as early as April. Earlyflowering Reveille is harvested May through early July. Highyield Sharpblue harvests through June and July. There are a few varieties such as Ozark Blue which yield late season August berries. Due to the mild climate it is possible to have an extended season with fresh berries all year. Location Blueberries grow best in a sunny location. They tolerate partial shade but produce fewer blossoms and fruit. Blueberries should www.my-sourcebook.com


Photography by Cia Farrar Knapp

Breathing New Life Into Vintage Furniture Although it has beautiful lines and great sentimental value, that buffet cabinet inherited from your family is out of sync with your home décor. And the flat screen TV you mounted on the wall still needs a cabinet to hold your media components. What if the buffet could be transformed into a custom media center, perfectly updated to fit your style, at a fraction of the cost of purchasing a new one? Maybe you’re seeking a vintage accent piece to add warmth or whimsy to your home. If only it was the exact shade to match your new sofa pillows. Or perhaps you had great intentions of completing that Pinterest chalk painting project you started months ago, but have no time in your busy schedule. What to do? It’s time to consider a visit to “The

Friendly Village” of Fallbrook. There, tucked away on Industrial Way, you’ll find the charming shop known as POSH, where owner Julie Villelli has a passion for “Making forgotten furniture…Unforgettable!” POSH is a treasure trove of quality vintage furniture and accessories at affordable prices. Julie, a former designer for Shea Homes, carefully procures items that have withstood the test of time from estate sales, consignment shops, thrift stores, and attic corners. Once in her capable hands, these pieces are skillfully and lovingly transformed. Chalk painting, distressing, waxing, refinishing and upcycling with new shelves or hardware are just a few ways Julie and her team bring new life to once-forgotten gems. Long vintage

dressers restyled into media centers, changing tables or restroom vanities are especially popular with POSH clients. Not sure what color or finish will enhance your home? Let Julie’s design talents help you tap into your personal style. From the showroom floor displaying an array of available artistic pieces, to the vast warehouse of vintage furniture awaiting its POSH transformation, POSH has something for everyone.

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429 Industrial Way, Suite E, Fallbrook www.posh-living.com

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adding organic compost or peat moss as a soil additive, it will lower the pH factor to an acceptable level. Blueberries like to stay moist but not wet. If your soil does not drain well, consider building a raised bed to plant them in. Mulch around your plants about 4 inches from the main trunk to prevent weed growth and retain moisture. Fertilize twice a year in early spring and again in late spring/early summer with cottonseed meal or any another acid-inducing plant food such as Dr. Earth® Azalea and Camellia food.

not be planted near trees or crowded by other shrubs. Blueberry bushes live 30 to 50 years, so it is wise to give them adequate space to spread out. Good air circulation helps prevent fungal diseases. Highbush blueberries need 4 to 6 feet between plants, and the smaller half-highbush require 2 to 3 feet. Blueberry bushes come into full maturity in their fifth or sixth year, producing 5 to 10 pounds of fruit per bush. Soil They prefer a light, airy acid soil (with a pH level of 4.0 to 5.5). Adding 50% peat moss to each hole is highly recommended. By

Continued Care Prune during the dormant season. Starting in the fourth year, remove dead and weak branches. Thin out branches smaller than the diameter of a pencil. As the bush ages, remove old, unproductive branches to stimulate new growth, leaving 6 to 8 productive branches. Prune interior crossing branches to admit light to the center of the plant. Besides their amazing health benefits and taste, they are easy to grow! So why not grow your own blueberries! We love blueberries and invite you to add them to your garden. Check your local Grangetto’s or nursery for availability. For a step-by-step planting guide for blueberries, go to www.grangettosgardenclub. com/ planting-blueberries.

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Discover Your Community with the Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce

Supporting business and building a better community is what the Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce is focused on and we invite business owners, employees, residents and visitors of Fallbrook to take part in what we have to offer. Our staff is always ready to welcome you into our “home” at 111 S. Main in Historic Downtown Fallbrook. We strive to make sure that our members utilize everything the Chamber is offering – networking opportunities, educational seminars, web page design, advertising and member referrals are just a few of the benefits we provide. Likewise, we are committed to promoting tourism in the community with events such as the Avocado Festival, Wine & A Bite Art Walk, the Harvest Faire, Artisan Faire and Christmas Parade. The Chamber encourages you to “Discover Your Community”! There is so much that our Friendly Village offers and these discoveries can be found on the Chamber website community calendar. Simply explore www.fallbrookchamberofcommerce.org to see what is happening right here. We believe you will discover many things! Although the Chamber is a member-based organization, we work with the community as a whole. We thank our current members for their ongoing support, welcome new members and encourage prospective members to learn about what we offer. By working and collaborating together, we can support each other and build a better community for all.

Explore New Opportunities with the Chamber in 2015! 760-728-5845 | 111 S. Main Avenue | Fallbrook, CA 92028 www.fallbrookchamberofcommerce.org

• Membership • Exposure • Community


Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce Members ACCOMMODATIONS

APARTMENTS

 Country Inn 1425 S. Mission Rd, Fallbrook, CA 92028 (760) 728-1114  Econo Lodge Inn and Stes 1608 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA 92028 (760) 723-1127  Pala Mesa Resort 2001 S. Hwy. 395, Fallbrook, CA 92028 (760) 728-5881  Rodeway Inn Fallbrook 1635 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA 92028 (760) 728-6174

 Country Views Apartments, LLC 624 De Luz Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-8931  De Luz Apartments 420 N. Pico Ave, #4, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-1077  Pine View Apartments/Management Office 1101 Alturas St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-0162  Turnagain Arms Apartments 920 E. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-9864

ACCOUNTANTS

APPAREL

 Levering & Hvasta CPAS, Inc. 304 N. Orange Ave, Fallbrook, CA 92028, (760) 728-8393  Miranda & Associates 1595 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA 92028, (760) 723-1241  R. Greene & Associates, Inc 5256 S. Mission Rd. # 205, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (760) 726-4316  Sharon Mullin, CPA 120 S. Main, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-1113  William Super CPAs & Consultants 2188 Saffron Way, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (858) 531-7232

ACUPUNCTURE  Stephens Acupuncture & Wellness 131 W. Beech St. Ste. 202, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (714) 330-9244

ADVERTISING  Fallbrook Directory 416 S. Main Ave., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-5555  Friends of Fallbrook PO Box 3055, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 689-9055

AGRICULTURE

AIR CONDITIONING  American Plumbing Heating & Air 2315 Via Monserate, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-7000  Excel Air Corporation 530 Opper St., Ste B, Escondido, CA, 92029, (760) 723-9294  Fallbrook Heating & Air Conditioning, Inc P.O. Box 1658, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 728-8716

ANIMAL SUPPORT SERVICES  Fallbrook Animal Sanctuary 230 W. Aviation, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 685-3533  Live Oak Dog Park 3125 Los Alisos Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-5481

ANTIQUES  Fallbrook Vintage Village 1038 Mission Rd, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 645-3992  Second Chances Barn 3137 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-8566  Simply Vintage, 119 N. Main Ave Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-6440

Jerry Burke Jr. 2014-2015 Honorary Mayor of Fallbrook

Committed to serve YOU now!

ART GALLERY  Moonlight Drive Gallery 3137 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1447

ARTS  Brandon Gallery 105 N. Main Ave., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-1330  Fallbrook Art Association PO Box 382, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 728-7884  Fallbrook Arts, Inc. 103 S. Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 731-9584  Fallbrook House of the Arts LLC 432 E. Dougherty St, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 912-1108

ATTORNEYS

 Bejoca Grove & Landscape Management P.O. Box 2168, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 728-5176  Del Rey Avocado Company, Inc. 1260 S. Main, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8325  East Brothers Grove Service 112 E. Aviation Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-2013  Eli’s Farms 2929 East Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 483-3276  Fallbrook Irrigation, Inc. 115 Laurine Ln., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-9001  McDaniel Fruit Company 965 E. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8438  Powerland Equipment, Inc. 27943 Valley Center Rd, Valley Center, CA, 92082, (760) 749-1271  Russell Family Farms 205 Calle Linda, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8081

REALTOR® – 21 Year Navy Retired

 100 Main 100 N. Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-9221

 Andrea Aston, Attorney at Law 5256 S. Mission Rd., Ste 1010, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (760) 758-1565  Law Office of Deborah Zoller 566 E. Alvarado St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-2600  Law Office of Paul W. Leehey 210 E. Fig St, Ste 101, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-0711  Law Offices of Burke & Domercq 2755 Jefferson St., Ste 100, Carlsbad, CA, 92018, (760) 434-3330  Philip G. Arnold, Attorney 405 S. Main, Ste-A, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-6335  Robert James, Attorney 205 W. Alvarado St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1154  Samantha Berryessa, Attorney 616 E. Alvarado St., Ste. B, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-5513

AUTO BODY & PAINT  Costello’s Auto Repair 516 W. Aviation Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-7375

AUTO REGISTRATION SERVICES  West Coast Auto Registration Services 1032 S. Main Ave., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-0012

AUTO SALES  Fallbrook Motors 213 W. Elder St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-7100  Paradise Chevrolet Cadillac 27360 Ynez Rd., Temecula, CA, 92589, (951) 699-2699  Toyota Of Escondido 231 Lincoln Parkway, Escondido, CA, 92026, (760) 796-3819

AUTO SERVICE  Fallbrook Auto Parts 762 E. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8484  Indy-Performance/Pro-Tire Automotive 1367 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-8473  Neiman’s Collision Center 1381 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8810  Sonny’s Muffler Shop 212 W. Beech St, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1234  West Coast Truck & Auto 630 E. Alvarado, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-6835

Looking to sell your home? Paying too much for rent? Is now the time to buy?

Contact me today for a FREE market analysis. 619.302.5471 • JerryBurkeJr.com

Copyright 2015 Keller Williams® Realty, Inc. If you have a brokerage relationship with another agency, this is not intended as a solicitation. All information deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Equal Opportunity Housing Provider. Each office is independently owned and operated.

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109


Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce Members AWNINGS  SunBlock Exteriors 125 E. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 994-6779

BANKS  Pacific Western Bank 130 W. Fallbrook St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-4500  US Bank 1133 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-2500  Wells Fargo Bank 212 S. Main, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8542

BEAUTY  Hair Lounge 219 N. Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-2104  Mane Attraction Salon 1676 S. Mission Rd., Ste C, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-8200  Salon Ana 113 South Main Ave., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-5999

BICYCLES  Lean n’ Mean Bicycle 5519 Mission Rd. Ste B, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (760) 295-9582

BOOKKEEPING  Deadline Data 2434 El Cerise, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 390-9726

BUSINESS COACHING  Complete Business Coaching LLC 2020 Avocado Knoll Ln., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-6143

BUSINESS NETWORKING  Connections Fallbrook Networking Group P.O. Box 2772, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 845-6602  LeTip International 32351 Cahuka Court, Pauma Valley, CA, 92061, (760) 315-5548  North County Networking P.O. Box 32, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 500-7749  San Diego North Economic Development Council 950 Boardwalk, Ste 303, San Marcos, CA, 92078, (760) 510-3179

BUSINESS PARK

 Carl’s Hawaiian Shave Ice 1093 Alcott Ct., Hemet, CA, 92543, (951) 652-8966  Country Kettle Corn P.O. Box 247, Valley Center, CA, 92082, (760) 749-1211  Kentucky Fried Chicken 1077 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1767  Matheny’s Wagon Works 936 Morro Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 518-1386  The Sweet Stop 1351 Tolstoy Way, Riverside, CA, 92506, (951) 901-9750

CEMETERY  Masonic Cemetery Association of Fallbrook 1177 Santa Margarita Dr, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 468-9805

CHIROPRACTORS  Fallbrook Spine Center 746 S. Main Avenue, Ste D, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8999  Mary C. Ramsden Chiropractic Care 1588 S. Mission Rd. Ste 115, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-9229

CHURCHES  Christ The King Lutheran Church 1620 S. Stage Coach Ln., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, 760-728-3256  Community Baptist Church 731 S. Stage Coach Ln., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-2966  Community of Faith Church 1844 Winter Haven Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (312) 473-8658  Fallbrook Apostolic Assembly 135 E. Ivy St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1717  Fallbrook United Methodist Church 1844 Winterhaven Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1472  Hilltop Center for Spiritual Living 331 E. Elder St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-8291  Living Waters Christian Fellowship A/G 2000 Reche Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1685  New Song Inland Hills Church 3985 Mission Avenue, Oceanside, CA, 92058, (760) 716-5783  SonRise Christian Fellowship 463 S. Stage Coach Ln., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-5804  St. John’s Episcopal Church 434 North Iowa St., Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 728-2908  St. Peter the Apostle Catholic Parish 450 S. Stagecoach, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 689-6200  tHE PLACE 2938 Mackey Drive, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 791-1059  The Waters Church 40055 Ross Rd, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 703-0590

 Plaza “395” 1185 E. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-9642

CAR WASH  MAX Carwash Inc. 1148 S Main St, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 594-4113

COFFEE  Espresso Lounge 139 S. Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-1012  Fallbrook Coffee Company 622 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-6000

CARPET CLEANING  Bishop Carpet & Upholstery Cleaning PO Box 474, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 731-0971

COLLEGE PLANNING  College Planning SD 5256 So. Mission Rd., Ste 1010, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (760) 602-8586

CARPETS  Classic Flooring & Design 127 B Main Avenue, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-8131  The Flooring Guys 115 E. Hawthorne St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-5060

CASINO  Pala Casino Spa Resort 11154 Highway 76, Pala, CA, 92059, (760) 510-2270

CATERING  Barrett’s Lemonade - Lem N Man P.O. Box 407, Huntington Beach, CA, 92648, (714) 842-3475

COMMUNITY CENTER  Fallbrook Community Center-Parks & Rec. 341 Heald Ln., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1671

COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS  AAUW Fallbrook P.O. Box 1061, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (619) 957-0991  Bonsall Chamber of Commerce 5256 S. Mission Rd., Ste. 311, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (760) 630-1933  Bonsall Rotary P.O. Box 934, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (760) 758-0083  Bonsall Woman’s Club P.O. Box 545, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (760) 801-7443  Boys and Girls Club of North County 445 E. Ivy St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-5871

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Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce Members COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS

DENTISTS

 Fallbrook Ag Boosters P.O. Box 2913, Fallbrook, CA, 92088  Fallbrook Alumni Association P.O. Box 596, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 645-0101  Fallbrook Democratic Club P.O. Box 293, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 895-1778  Fallbrook Food Pantry 1042 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-7608  Fallbrook Garden Club P.O. Box 1702, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 728-6373  Fallbrook Knights of Columbus P.O. Box 551, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 723-1192  Fallbrook Land Conservancy P.O. Box 2701, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 728-0889  Fallbrook Masonic Lodge No. 317 203 Rocky Crest, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-7830  Fallbrook Quilt Guild P.O. Box 1704, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (951) 704-0913  Fallbrook Village Association P.O. Box 2438, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 723-8384  Fallbrook Village Rotary Club P.O. Box 2186, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 908-3507  Fallbrook Vintage Car Club P.O. Box 714, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 723-1181  Fallbrook Woman’s Club 238 W. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, 760-728-9971  Fallbrook/Bonsall Rally for Children PO Box 2575, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 723-4238  Friends of Fallbrook Com. Air Park P.O. Box 322, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 728-9062  Friends of the Community Center 341 Heald Ln., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1671  Friends of the Fallbrook Library 124 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-9606  Kiwanis Club of Fallbrook P.O. Box 54, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 805-1930  Legacy Endowment the Community Foundation 111 West Alvarado St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-3304  Mission Resource Cons. District 1588 S. Mission Rd., Ste 100, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1332  Opportunities for Kids 1224 Valentine Ln, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 703-4981  Republican Women of Fallbrook P.O. Box 1328, Fallbrook, CA, 92088  Soroptimist Club of Fallbrook P.O. Box 1258, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 622-0204  The Rotary Club of Fallbrook P.O. Box 1227, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 694-8688  VFW Post 1924 P.O. Box 194, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, 760-728-8784

 Daniel A. Flores, DDS, MS 210 East Fig St., Ste 201, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1182  Dr. Richard G. Goble, DDS 1108 S. Main, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-2261  Edwin W. Stewart, DMD 521 E. Alvarado St. #B, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-3535  John E. Duling, DDS 1385 South Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-9558  Nicholas Beye, DDS 645 E. Elder, Ste. A, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8375  Randy D Carlson DMD & Charles L Drury DDS 5256 S Mission Rd, Ste 1101, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (760) 630-5500

DRY CLEANERS  Manor Cleaners 125 E. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1307

EDUCATION  Bonsall Education Foundation P.O. Box 1217, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (760) 631-5205  California Retired Teachers Association 1757 Chapulin Ln., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 550-2445  California State University San Marcos 333 S. Twin Oaks Valley Rd., San Marcos, CA, 92096, (760) 750-8889  Fallbrook Union Elementary School Dist. 321 North Iowa, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-5400  Fallbrook Union High School District 2234 S. Stagecoach Ln., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, 760-723-6332 x6497  Montessori Adolescent Academy 5570 Old Ranch Rd, Oceanside, CA, 92057, (760) 758-3309  Palomar College - Fallbrook Ed Center 1140 W. Mission Rd., San Marcos, CA, 92069, (760) 744-1150  REINS 4461 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-9168  Rock Rose School for Creative Learning 2809 S. Mission Rd., Ste G, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 468-8129  St. Peter the Apostle Catholic School 450 South Stage Coach Ln., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 689-6250  Zion Lutheran School 1405 E. Fallbrook St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-3500

ELDER CARE  Foundation for Senior Care PO Box 2155., Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 723-7570  Innovative Healthcare Consultants 746 S. Main Avenue, Ste C, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-1334  Jo Anne’s Retirement Manor 3009 Via Del Cielo, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 689-5228

COMPUTER REPAIR  Fallbrook Lemon Tech 5090 Avocado Park Ln, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (442) 222-4014

CONSIGNMENT

EMBROIDERY  All Things Fallbrook 1816 Via Entrada, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-9990  SewGo Logo 1398 Red Mountain Dam Drive, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 712-5621

 She She La A Sheek Boutique 127 N Main St, Ste A, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-0070

CONSTRUCTION  John McNeill General Contracting 2251 Aqua Hill Rd, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 207-8571  Youngren Construction, Inc. 443 East Alvarado St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-9874  Zebu Construction & Design, Inc. P.O. Box 2978, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 723-7205

COPY CENTER  Village Copy Center 132 S. Main, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-7177

CRAFT BREWERY/TASTING ROOM  Fallbrook Brewing Company, Inc. 136 N Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA, 92028

EMPLOYEE BENEFITS  AFLAC 1580 Shadowridge Drive #181, Vista, CA, 92081, (442) 222-0504

ENERGY  Sun’s Domain - Solar Solutions 1559 Malaga Way, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (877) 739-1622

ENGINEERING  Karn Engineering and Surveying, Inc 129 W Fig St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1134

ENTERTAINMENT  Curtain Call Company PO Box 682, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 468-6302  The Welk Resort Group 2851 Camino del Rio S, Ste 300, San Diego, CA, 92108, (619) 516-7814

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113 S. Main Ave., Fallbrook salonanainfallbrook.com 111


Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce Members ESCROW SERVICES

GOLF

 Fallbrook Country Escrow 1676 S. Mission Rd., # E, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-5400

EVENT FACILITIES

 Fallbrook Golf Course, Inc. 2757 Gird Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8334  Vista Valley Country Club 29354 Vista Valley Dr., Vista, CA, 92084, (760) 758-2800

GRAPHIC DESIGN

 Grand Tradition Estate and Gardens 220 Grand Tradition Way, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-6466

FARMERS MARKET  Valley Fort Sunday Farmers Market 3757 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (619) 417-8334

 Hopkins & Associates, Inc. 1816 Via Entrada, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-9990  KK Grafix 425 E. Dougherty St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-9690

GROCERY STORE

FEED & FERTILIZER  Crop Production Services 28690 Las Haciendas, Temecula, CA, 92590, (800) 223-4749  Fallbrook Fertilizer & Feed 215 W. Fallbrook St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-5101

FINANCIAL SERVICES  Ameriprise Financial Services 424 S. Main, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-2693  Merrill Lynch - Jon Frandell 1615 S. Mission Rd, Ste. A, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-5541  Merrill Lynch - Tiffany Saxon 1615 S. Mission Rd, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-5542  Stifel Nicolaus & Co. , Inc. 5256 S. Mission Rd., Ste. 1201, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (760) 643-1235  The Hegardt Group - Merrill Lynch, 5256 S. Mission Rd., #1005, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (800) 562-2993  Union Bank 1678 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-0611  WealthBridge Advisors - Brad Tedrick 5256 S. Mission Rd., Ste 301, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (760) 758-3702

FINANCIAL WEB SERVICES  PDS Financial Enterprises, Inc. PO Box 2191, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 935-1040

 Albertson’s 1133 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-8177

HARDWARE/LUMBER  Joe’s Hardware 640 S. Main, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-4265  Pine Tree Lumber 215 E. Ivy St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-6151

HEALTH  Fallbrook Healthcare District, 577 E. Elder, Ste. U, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-9187  Healthy Home Company Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (619) 838-2006  Isagenix/Nutritional Cleansing 478 Rosvall Drive, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (713) 302-4230  One Body Health & Wellness Bonsall, CA, 92003, (760) 607-6911  Phyllis Sweeney, Encouragement Factor 120 South Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-3037  Scripps Health 4275 Campus Point Ct., CP10, San Diego, CA, 92121, (858) 678-6202  Young Living Essential Oils (760) 468-9235

HOME CARE

FIRE & RESCUE  North County CERT 337 E. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 519-9224  North County Fire Protection District 330 S. Main, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-2005

 Visiting Nurse Association California 25467 Medical Center Dr., Ste 100, Murrieta, CA, 92562, (951) 842-7930

HOME IMPROVEMENT  Superior Rain Gutters & Awnings, Inc. P.O. Box 2318, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 731-0122

FITNESS  Anytime Fitness - Snizco 855 S Main Ave, Ste B, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-2433  Club Paradise Fitness, Inc. 1371 S. Mission Rd, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-0133  Fallbrook Village Fitness/SIFT Personal Training 1588 S. Mission Rd., Ste. 115, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-3488

FLORISTS

HOSPITAL  Temecula Valley Hospital 31700 Temecula Parkway, Temecula, CA, 92592, (951) 331-2200

HOTELS  Quality Inn 3135 Old Hwy 395, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-2888

 Sheri’s Flowers 839 E. Mission, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-7756

HUMAN RESOURCES

FOOD VENDOR

 Employers Workforce Relations Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 497-7823

 The Perfect Blend 3137 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-9883

FOOD/SPECIALTY  Dream Dinners 31757 Temecula Pkwy Ste E, Temecula, CA, 92522, (951) 302-6982

FURNITURE  Bucket of Nails 3137 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 468-7927  Fallbrook Furniture 201 N. Main St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, 760-723-0300  POSH Making forgotten furniture...Unforgettable 29 Industrial Way, Ste E, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 525-1221

760-645-0792 • 128 S. Main Ave, Fallbrook www.CRPropertiesRealEstateServices.com

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ICE CREAM  Baskin-Robbins 31 Flavors 1123 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8831  Bo Bo’s Munchies 1422 Peach Ave, Apt 6, El Cajon, CA, 92021, (619) 456-8968  Fallbrook FroYo, LLC 127 E. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-7678  Tutto Dolce, 110 So Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 726-7040

Helping our clients buy and sell residential, commercial, land, new construction, equestrian and luxury properties. There is a difference, and you deserve the best.  FREE MAPS  FREE WI-FI 

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Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce Members INDIVIDUAL MEMBER  Individual Member - Abbott, Allison (760) 310-0372  Individual Member - Bamber, George (760) 728-6786  Individual Member - Branche, Dianna (760) 828-7711  Individual Member - Branson, Ronne (760) 731-9648  Individual Member - Chesney, Ron (760) 803-6119  Individual Member - Deming, Brian (760) 828-1683  Individual Member - Erickson, Judith N. (760) 731-2515  Individual Member - Hunter, Duncan (619) 448-5201  Individual Member - Michell, Dale (760) 645-3771  Individual Member - Mosher, Michael D. (310) 871-6326  Individual Member - O’Brien, Anthony (760) 520-0205  Individual Member - Rashkin, Arnold & Emma (760) 728-2807  Individual Member - Ross, Vince (760) 505-0820  Individual Member - Shin, Susan (760) 728-2844  Individual Member - Steinhoff, Ralph & Ln.ta (760) 728-4368  Individual Member - Hiscock, Roy & Glad (760) 207-0582

LIQUOR/SPIRITS  Fallbrook Liquor 1051 S Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-6187  The Happy Jug, 138 S. Main Ave., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8622

LOANS  Re/Max United Agent - Craig Grimm 1667 S. Mission Rd., #AA, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-2900 x425  Wells Fargo Mortgage, N.A. 41619 Margarita Rd., Ste. 100, Temecula, CA, 92591, (951) 723-0440

LONG TERM CARE  Palomar Health Continuing Care-Fallbrook 325 Potter St, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-2330

MANUFACTURING  Standish Precision Products Co. 323 Industrial Way, #1, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-7229

MARKETING  Lyoness US 1120 E Mission Rd, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (903) 262-8288

MARKETS  Major Market 845 S. Main St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-0857  Northgate Markets, Gonzalez, LLC 1346 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-4512

INDUSTRIAL SAFETY PRODUCTS  Gloves Plus 4325 Los Padres Drive, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 390-2239

INSURANCE  Cyan Insurance Solutions 3726 Oakview Court, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 477-7542  Farmers Insurance - Cecilia Taylor agent 1191 E Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-7309  Hatter, Williams & Purdy Insurance, Inc. 43446 Business Park Dr., Temecula, CA, 92590, (951) 296-6833  LanMarc Insurance 40878 Daily Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-7440  Robert Bell Insurance Brokers, Inc. 605 E Alvarado St, Ste 200, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-8556  State Farm Insurance Agent - Thomas Logue 1672 S. Mission Rd. #D, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-3268  Stromsoe Insurance Agency 24901 Las Brisas Rd., Ste 117, Murrieta, CA, 92562, (951) 600-5751

INTERIOR DESIGN  Village Interiors 115 E. Hawthorne St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-2637

INTERNET MARKETING  aabdesign marketing inc. 125 S Main Ave, Ste E, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (617) 459-7989

JEWELRY  Jewelry Connection 101 N. Main, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-4629  The Collector Fine Jewelry 912 S. Live Oak Park Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-9121

LANDSCAPE  Executive Landscape, Inc. P.O. Box 1075, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 731-9036  ProLawn Turf 41110 Sandalwood Circle, Ste 103, Murrieta, CA, 92563, (951) 600-4600  Waterscape Creations, Inc. PO Box 1147, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 731-5233

MEDICAL  All Star Physical Therapy 577 E. Elder St., Ste I, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-2687  Community Health Systems, Inc. - Jack E. Johns Fallbrook Family Health Ctr 1328 South Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-4720

 Fallbrook Family Health Clinic - Dr. Theresa Sheridan

577 East Elder St., Ste F, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-8815

 Fallbrook Healthcare Partners 591 E Elder Ste C, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-8989  Fallbrook Pregnancy Resource Center 113 E. Hawthorne, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-4105  Graybill Medical Group 1035 S. Main, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-2777  My Imaging Center 616 E. Alvarado St., Ste D, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 689-6100  Pediatric Partners 1107 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-0070  Peter Strutz, MD 605 E. Alvarado First Floor, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8489  Rancho Family Medical Group 521 E. Elder St., Ste 103, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8344  Rancho Physical Therapy 521 E Elder, Ste 106, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-8337,  Temecula Valley Cardiology 5256 S. Mission Rd., Ste. 802, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (951) 698-4600

MOBILE HOMES  Crestview Mobile Home Estates 1120 E. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-2962

MORTGAGE LENDING  Wells Fargo Home Mortgage - Karla Patino (760) 271-5000

MORTUARY  Berry-Bell & Hall Mortuary 333 N. Vine St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1689

Chris & Kim Murphy

760.310.9292

www.murphy-realty.com

Whether you’re buying or selling, please give us an opportunity to show you the quality service that Chris and Kim Murphy are known for. Personal service with outstanding results. CA. BRE #01918026

130 N Main Ave, Fallbrook Corner of Hawthorne & Main SOURCEBOOK 2015

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Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce Members MOTORCYCLE REPAIRS & SERVICE

PEST CONTROL

 Patriot Cycles & Customs 128 E. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 385-3994

 Fowler Pest Control 855-K S. Main, #397, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-2592

MUSEUMS

PHARMACY

 Fallbrook Gem & Mineral Society 123 W. Alvarado St., #B, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1130  Fallbrook Historical Society 260 Rocky Crest Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-4125

MUSIC

 Village Pharmacy 587 E. Elder St., Ste. C, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 645-3021

PHOTOGRAPHY  Ahrend Studios 211 E. Alvarado, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-7613  Angie Peters Photography 209 Shetland Way, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (843) 597-3201  Mendozas Photography 3137 S. Mission Rd. Ste A, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 689-5080

 Fallbrook Band Boosters, Inc PO Box 1604, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 560-7807  Fallbrook Chorale P.O. Box 2474, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 390-9726  Fallbrook Music Society P.O. Box 340, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 451-8644

PIZZA

NEW HOME SALES

 Scoreboard Pizzeria 1125 S. Mission Rd, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-9997

 Malabar Ranch - Davidson Communities 5256 So. Mission Rd., # 206, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (760) 295-1400

NEWCOMERS INFORMATION

PLUMBING  Fallbrook Plumbing 1619 Jackson Rd, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-1017  George Plumbing Company, Inc. PO Box 607, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 451-3229

 Fallbrook Encore Club P.O. BOX 1233, Fallbrook, CA, 92088  Fallbrook Newcomers Club P.O. Box 1392, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 645-0029

POSTAL SERVICES

NEWSPAPERS

 Fallbrook Goin’ Postal 1374 S Mission Rd, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1188

 Village News, Inc. 1588 S. Mission Rd. #200, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-7319

PRINTING

NON-PROFITS  American Cancer Society 2655 Camino Del Rio North, Ste 100, San Diego, CA, 92108, (619) 682-7412  California Protea Association PO Box 2553, Valley Center, CA, 92082  Fallbrook Beautification Alliance PO Box 434, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 468-3162  Fallbrook Senior Citizens Service Club 399 Heald Ln., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-4498  Fallbrook Sports Association PO Box 503, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 208-8141  Operation Silver Star 26100 Newport Rd Ste 12 PMB1, Menifee, CA, 92584, (951) 550-7584

NURSERIES

PROPERTY MANAGEMENT

PUBLIC UTILITIES

 Perfection Imaging Technologies 3336 Old Post Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 931-8388

PAVING  Peter’s Paving & Grading, Inc. P.O. Box 2285, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 723-3822

PROPANE & PETROLEUM

 Heritage Square Investments, LLC 1119 S. Mission Rd # 346, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1588  Otis P. Heald, Industrial Property Manager P.O. Box 1707, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 728-6131

OFFICE EQUIPMENT OPTOMETRISTS

PROMOTIONAL  Laser Light Images P.O. Box 1720, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 723-0770  Fallbrook Oil Co. 1208 S. Main, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-7703  Fallbrook Propane Gas Company 1561 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-9353

 Hall’s Plant Nursery 46385 Camaron Rd., Temecula, CA, 92590, (951) 538-2733  Madd Potter 136 Ranger Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-5635  Maddock Ranch Nursery 1163 Ranger Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-7172  Mellano & Company 734 Wilshire Rd, Oceanside, CA, 92057, (760) 433-9550  Myrtle Creek Gardens & Nursery 2940 Reche Rd, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-5340

 Dr. Eric Ramos 645 E. Elder, Ste-D, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-9440  Inland Eye Specialists 521 E. Elder St. #102, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-5728

 Fallbrook Printing Corporation 504 E. Alvarado St., Ste 110, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-2020  Genco Printers 302 N. Brandon Rd., Unit 1, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-6520  Murphy’s Printing 203 E. Alvarado St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-2827

 Fallbrook Public Utility District 990 E. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1125  San Diego Gas and Electric 571 Enterprise St. SD1460, Escondido, CA, 92029, (760) 480-7650

REAL ESTATE  Berkshire Hathaway Home Services PO Box 1768, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 685-5405  Big Block Realty - Kathleen Gillis 1191 East Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 703-4981  Broadpoint Properties 1119 S. Mission Rd., Ste 140, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 813-3277  Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 40 Main St., E-100, Vista, CA, 92083, (760) 941-6888

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Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce Members REAL ESTATE

RECYCLING

 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage - Mia Smyth 40 Main St., Ste E-100, Vista, CA, 92083, (760) 213-0072  Coldwell Banker Village Properties - Abby Elston 1615 S Mission Rd, Ste C, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 715-2229  Coldwell Banker Village Properties - Chris Hasvold 5256 S. Mission Rd., Ste 310, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (760) 728-8000  Coldwell Banker Village Properties - Susie Emory 5256 S Mission Rd., Ste 310, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (760) 525-9744  Coldwell Banker Village Properties - Tess Hansford 5256 S. Mission Rd.., Ste 310, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (760) 803-8377  CR Properties Real Estate - Steve Vanni 128 S Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 458-1580  CR Properties Real Estate Services - Bob Hillery 128 South Main, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 696-7482  CR Properties Real Estate Services - Jane Kepley 128 South Main, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 622-0204  Jameson Investments 116 W College Unit C, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-6108  Keller Williams Realty - Jerry Burke Jr PO Box 1231, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (619) 302-5471  Keller Williams Realty - Lauren Bogart 720 W. Fig St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, 760.645.5767  Lisa Higbee, Realtor 1593 S. Mission Rd., Ste B, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (951) 225-5009  Mission Realty 337 E. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8410  Paradise Homes & Gardens Realty - Eden Silver 3973 Sleeping Indian Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-7888  Paradise Homes & Gardens Realty - Leo Romero 6 Rolling View Ln., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 638-1732  R. J. Campo Realty, Inc. 1119 S. Mission Rd., #318, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-3417  Re/Max United Agent - Fred Christiansen 10650 Scripps Ranch Blvd. #100, San Diego, CA, 92131, (760) 731-2900  Re/Max United Agent - Janine Hall 1667 S. Mission Rd., #AA, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-5814  Re/Max United Agent - Lisa Willett 1667 S. Mission Rd., #AA, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-2900  Re/Max United Agent - Lynn Stadille-James 3668 Katie Lendre Dr., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 845-3059  Rogan & Associates 218 W. Fig, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-3553  Streamline Realty 328 Natalie Way, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (510) 229-9667  Sun Realty 431 S. Main, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8323  Sunshine Properties Real Estate 330 N. Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8855  Thompson & Associates 1120 S. Main Ave., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-1708  Weichert Realtors® - Murphy & Murphy 130 N Main Avenue, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 310-9292  Windermere Homes and Estates 1593 S. Mission Rd. #B, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 434-6873

 Fallbrook Waste & Recycling Services/EDCO 550 W. Aviation Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-6114

REAL ESTATE DEVELOPERS

RENTALS  ACE Party Productions 584 Industrial Way, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-0639  Allies Party Equipment Rental, Inc. 130 Vallecitos De Oro, San Marcos, CA, 92069, (760) 591-4314 x108  Diamond Environmental Services 807 E. Mission Rd., San Marcos, CA, 92069, (760) 744-7191  Fallbrook Equipment Rentals 235 W. College St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1555

RESTAURANTS  127 West Social House 127 W. Elder St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 645-3803  Brother’s Bistro 835 S. Main St. # A & B, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-9761  Cafe Des Artistes 103 S. Main St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-3350  Carl’s Jr. Restaurant - M & N Foods Inc. 1137 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 471-2494  DMSD Restaurants, Inc., dba Denny’s 713 S. Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-4517  Dominick’s Sandwiches and Italian Delicatessen 118 North Main St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-7978  Dominick’s Sandwiches and Italian Delicatessen 1672 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-7911  Domino’s Pizza #8375 1075 South Mission Rd. #B, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1223  El Jardin Mexican Restaurant 1581 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-4556  Fallbrook Cafe 739 E. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1898  Garden Center Cafe and Grill 1625 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-4147  Greek Style Chicken 904 S. Main Ave., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-8050  La Caseta Mexican Restaurant 111 N. Vine, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-9737  Las Islas Marias 1019 S. Main Ave., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1160  MaGee’s Tavern 125 S Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 525-8403  Nessy Burgers Just West of I-15 on Old Hwy 395, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 505-9955  Peking Wok 5256 S. Mission Rd. Ste. 303, Bonsall, CA, 92003, (760) 724-8078  Servanos Neighborhood Bar & Grill 1415 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-2100  Subway Sandwiches 1105 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-9151  Trupiano’s Italian Bistro 945 South Main Avenue, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-0200

RETAIL

 Accretive Investments, Inc. 12275 El Camino Real, Ste. 110, San Diego, CA, 92130, (858) 546-0700 x135

REAL ESTATE LOANS  Bank of America 1125 S. Main, Fallbrook, CA, 92028-3326, (760) 630-3220  Cushner Capital Group, PO Box 2162, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 845-9035  First Choice Loan Services 111 South Main Avenue, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 877-8107  Mountain West Financial - Craig Griffin 1660 E. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 468-9898  Mountain West Financial - Steve Campbell 1660 E. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 912-3885

RECREATION  Fallbrook Trails Council PO Box 2974, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 822-0888  The Paintball Park At Camp Pendleton 1700 Vandegrift Blvd, Oceanside, CA, 92055, (866) 985-4932

 Fallbrook Mattress 205 N. Main Avenue, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-0300  Island Divas 119 N. Main Avenue, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-6601  Jackson Square Shops 119 N. Main Ave., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 695-7380  Labors of Love 116 N. Main St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-3452

RETIREMENT  Regency Fallbrook 609 E. Elder St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8504  Silvergate Retirement Residence 420 Elbrook Dr., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8880  Succession Capital 7590 Fay Ave Ste 200, La Jolla, CA, 92037, (314) 620-7046

Health, Life, Dental & Long Term Care Specialists

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Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce Members SCREEN PRINTING  Ultra Graphix Screen Printing 3674 Olive Hill Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-3332

SIGNS  Jim’s Sign Shop 429-D Industrial Way, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-8761

SOLAR  HelioPower, Inc. 25747 Jefferson Ave, Murrieta, CA, 92562, (951) 677-7755  New Day Solar 23811 Washington Ave, Ste C 110 #224, Murrieta, CA, 92562, (855) 444-6329  Sullivan Solar Power 8949 Kenamar Drive, Ste 101, San Diego, CA, 92121, (858) 271-7758  Sunpro Solar 34859 Fredrick St. Ste 101, Wildomar, CA, 92595, (951) 678-7733

SPORTS  Fallbrook Football Boosters Inc. PO Box 2645, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 500-2207  Fallbrook Pop Warner P.O. Box 1866, Fallbrook, CA, 92088  Fallbrook Tennis Club 2141 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-1100  Fallbrook Youth Soccer League P.O. Box 271, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 529-0909  Seasick Sports Marketing Group 2120 Jimmy Durante Blvd # 109, Del Mar, CA, 92014, (858) 259-1501

STORAGE  Brandon St. Mini Storage 307 N. Brandon Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-0570  Citrus Plaza Self Storage 202 W. College St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-3548  Fallbrook Mini-Storage 550 W. Aviation, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-6114  Oakley Relocation, LLC 849 Grand Avenue, San Marcos, CA, 92078, (858) 602-1010  Zippy Shell Mobile Storage & Moving 1577 Greenacres Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (619) 818-7895

TAX PREPARATION  Fallbrook Tax Professionals 412 S. Main Ave, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-3700  Patty DeJong Income Tax 1622 E. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-5215  Reed Financial Services 106-B West Hawthorne St, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-1375

TAXI/LIMO SERVICE  Fallbrook Transportation 715 Las Ramblas, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-9665

TECHNOLOGY  Audio & Computer Enterprises 413 W. 9th Ave., Escondido, CA, 92025, (760) 741-6511  Springston Design PO Box 1569, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 691-0507

TELECOMMUNICATIONS

THRIFT STORE  Angel Society of Fallbrook 1002 S. Main Ave., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-6513  Jonathan Sellers and Charlie Keever Foundation 129 E Hawthorne St, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-2175  St. John’s Thrift Shop 1075 So. Mission Rd., #G, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-9520

TIRES  Scrappy’s Tire & Auto, Inc. 346 S. Main, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-9252  Tire Center 615 S. Main Ave., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-2076

TROPHIES  Fallbrook Awards 235 E. Mission Rd., Ste. C, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-7686

VETERINARIAN  Alvarado Veterinary Hospital 347 E. Alvarado St., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-6606  West Coast Equine Medicine, Inc. 147 Pamela Dr., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-3606

WAREHOUSE CLUB  Sam’s Club Murrieta 40500 Murrieta Hot Springs Rd, Murrieta, CA, 92563, (951) 696-4500

WATER DAMAGE RESTORATION  Pulido Cleaning & Restoration 26063 Jefferson Ave., Murrieta, CA, 92562, (951) 296-9090

WELDING  North County Welding Supply, Inc. 1561 S. Mission Rd., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 728-5764

WINDOW CLEANING  Fallbrook Window Washing P.O. Box 185, Fallbrook, CA, 92088, (760) 728-8116

WINDOW TINTING  Wise Guys Inc. 1217 S Mission Rd, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-9648

WINERY  Beach House Winery 1534 Sleeping Indian Rd., Oceanside, CA, 92057, (760) 732-3236  Casa Tiene Vista Vineyard 4150 Rock Mountain Rd, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-2356  Estate d’Iacobelli Winery 2175 Tecalote Dr., Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-0616  Fallbrook Winery 10620 Treena St., #100, San Diego, CA, 92131, (760) 728-0156

YOGA  Sage Yoga Studios 115 N. Main Avenue, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 451-8771  Sage Yoga Studios - Sandra Buckingham 115 N. Main Avenue, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 845-6602

 The Phone Man 1782 Bellington Ln, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 723-0884

THEATERS  Mission Theatre C.A.S.T. 200 N. Main, Fallbrook, CA, 92028, (760) 731-2278

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Charley Wolk 116

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Civil War hero,

Fallbrook pioneers Henry H. Gird and his wife Martha L. Gird who both died in 1913 are laid to rest at the Odd Fellows Cemetery in Fallbrook. Shane Gibson photos

William Pittenger, and baseball great, Duke Snider,

rest in historic Fallbrook cemeteries by Nathalie Taylor Two historic cemeteries are found in the Fallbrook area: Odd Fellows Cemetery and the Masonic Cemetery. It is interesting to note that each cemetery was founded by a man who was later buried there: J.L. Durbin/ Odd Fellows Cemetery and Horatio S. Smelser/Masonic Cemetery. Odd Fellows Cemetery At the corner of Alturas Street and Clemmens Lane in Fallbrook sits the four-acre Odd Fellows Cemetery. J.L. Durbin homesteaded the land and reserved it for a burial ground sometime before 1881. Durbin, himself, was buried on the land in 1887. In 1889 the cemetery was sold for $93 to F.W. Bartlett of Fallbrook Land and Town Company. The Fallbrook Independent Order of Odd Fellows purchased the land in 1904. Some of the grave markers are wooden, so their painted epitaphs have long worn away, but the oldest known graves are those of H.H. Bowen, 1881, and Eveline Tracy, 1883. Some of the SOURCEBOOK 2015

marble gravestones are chipped and broken, or encrusted with lichen, making it difficult or impossible to read the names. One legible marker just reads: “Pete, Rest in Peace.� A few gravestones, reminiscent of European grave markers, have photos of the deceased worked into the design. Some are adorned with faded plastic flowers and others have new arrangements. Many still visit the graves of their loved ones. The cemetery is the resting place for many Fallbrook pioneers such as Henry and Martha Gird, who both died in 1913. Several veterans, including Civil War veterans, have also been buried there. 117


The 10 acre Fallbrook Masonic Cemetery established in 1921, is located at 1177 Santa Margarita Drive.

William Pittenger (1840-1904) Perhaps the most famous grave is that of Civil War veteran William Pittenger, who is known for his part in a Union raid behind enemy lines. He was a recipient of the Medal of Honor in 1863. Born in 1840, Pittenger was first a private, then a sergeant, in the 2nd Ohio Infantry. He enlisted in 1861 and participated in the First Battle of Bull Run that same year. He was presented the Medal of Honor for penetrating nearly 200 miles into Confederate territory and capturing a railroad train in Georgia. This experience, sometimes referred to as “Andrew’s Raid,” or the “Great Locomotive Chase,” is recorded in a book which Pittenger penned. Following his military service, Pittenger became an ordained minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church and later served as minister of the Fallbrook church. His Fallbrook home was designated a National Historic Site by the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Masonic Cemetery At the other end of town lies the Masonic Cemetery on the corner of Hillcrest Lane and Santa Margarita Road. Horatio S. Smelser was authorized by the Masonic Lodge to locate suitable land for a cemetery and did so in 1917. His sister, Eliza Smelser, died that year and was buried in the new cemetery. Smelser, himself, was buried in the Masonic Cemetery the year after his sister. The first recorded community celebration at the 10-acre Masonic Cemetery was on Memorial Day, 1922, when a memorial service was conducted by the minister of the First Baptist Church of Fallbrook, after which the graves were decorated with flowers. Other celebrations ensued, including the Dia De Los Muertos event last fall where families were able to build altars by their loved ones’ gravesites. The Fallbrook Masonic Lodge # 317, Free and Accepted Masons of California, administers and maintains the cemetery with an endowment fund. It is open to the general public. 118

H.H. Bowen headstone laid to rest Oct. 2, 1881 is one of the oldest known graves in the area.

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William Pittenger who died at the age of 64 in Fallbrook is buried at Odd Fellows Cemetery. Pittenger was the fifth recipient to ever receive the Medal of Honor. The Medal of Honor was awarded to him for his actions in the ‘Great Locomotive Chase’ in Georgia during the Civil War.

Marble obelisks dating back to the late nineteenth century stand next to an aged stone wall at the Fallbrook Odd Fellows Cemetery.

[Left] Horatio Smelser, who was appointed by the Masonic Lodge to find a plat of land for a cemetery in Fallbrook in 1916. The Masonic Cemetery has been in service officially since 1921. Horatio Smelser died and was buried at the Masonic Cemetery in 1918.

Duke Snider (1926-2011) The Masonic Cemetery is the final resting place for Duke Snider, a Hall of Fame Major League Baseball Player. Snider spent most of his career playing center field for the Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers (1947 to 1964). He played in 36 World Series games and in 1955 and 1959 was a Dodgers team member when they won the World Series. His batting average was .295, he hit 407 home runs and his career total of “runs batted in” was 1,333. The Los Angeles

Dodgers retired Snider’s uniform number “4” in 1980. As a resident of Fallbrook for over 50 years, he and his wife Bev had four children – all of whom graduated from Fallbrook High School. Snider was an active supporter of local youth sports; and in 2002 the Fallbrook High School baseball field was christened the Duke Snider Field. *The late Don Rivers contributed to the Masonic Cemetery portion of this article.

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to eart H Art by Sandra Shrader

The creative vibe just keeps getting stronger at the Fallbrook School of the Arts.

The Fallbrook School of the Arts offers many classes including jewelry making.

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Located on Alvarado Street in downtown Fallbrook, the school, which opened in 1999, continues to draw students of all ages, novices to accomplished artists, from near and far, all seeking to turn their art-inspired visions into reality. With curriculum in ceramics, jewelry making, glass fusion, photography, printmaking, fine arts, fabric and textile arts, stone carving, and sculpture and welding art, the arts campus appeals to both kids and adults who are kids at heart. “The Fallbrook School of the Arts offers a variety of classes and workshops in many disciplines to both adults and youth on its 3,500-square-foot campus,” said Mary Perhacs, executive director for Fallbrook Arts, Inc., a nonprofit organization which governs the school and four other art venues in the community. “They are all very popular and are offered in a variety of ways — half-day workshops, six or eight week sessions, weekends and evenings.” “Not only do we have fully equipped studios for printmaking and ceramics in addition to other areas specifically designated for sculpture and metal arts, we have other studios for the smaller and larger classes and workshops,” she continued, adding that drawing, painting, fabric arts and jewelry making are among the top choices of classes with adults. With twelve wheels, five kilns and large worktables, the ceramics studio is also a perennially favorite choice at the school, as well as the printmaking studio which has four presses, Perhacs said. Since 2012, the campus has also been home to the California Sculpture Academy which utilizes an operational bronze foundry. The academy provides not only classical training in sculpture, but also an education in valuable skill sets such as metal fabrication, welding, machining, woodworking and 3D modeling. “The California Sculpture Academy’s unique concept is a perfect fit for the overall program of the Fallbrook School of the Arts,” said Perhacs, “The popular response to it has been strong and growing, and we are presently entertaining the idea of having a sculpture show in 2016 at the Fallbrook Art Center. It will be a juried show and the academy students will be welcome to submit entries.” The school also rents out studio workshop space to individual artists such as painter/printmaker Igor Koutsenko, stained glass artist Suzie Parker, and the Fallbrook Art Association. And the facility’s prestigious www.my-sourcebook.com


We are proud of the two new sculpture installations in front of the two main campus buildings: Girl with Kite which is Melissa Ralston’s colorful steel sculpture, and Yeibichai, a bronze by Peter Mitten.

reputation is further enhanced by the support of highly-regarded international artists such as Australian master watercolorist Joseph Zbuvkic, renowned for his moody impressions of rural life. “We are just thrilled that Zbukvic will be teaching a workshop on September 5-9,” Perhacs said, adding that the artist had only been scheduled to do a handful of workshops in the United States in 2015. “His workshop here sold out in 24 hours. We have students traveling to Fallbrook from Moscow (Russia), Montana, Pennsylvania, Oregon, Arizona, Kentucky, and Virginia, as well as California.” But at the Fallbrook School of the Arts, a love of the arts isn’t just to be enjoyed by adults and professionals. Children as young as five years old can be enrolled at the campus for summer workshops and year-round programs. Girl with Kite by Melissa Ralston.

Courtesy photo

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A student takes part in the drawing class at Fallbrook School of the Arts.

Courtesy photo

“Our Youth Program is very popular,” said Perhacs, “and we’ve worked very hard to develop a wide ranging program for children ages 5+ in working with fused glass, ceramics, painting, drawing, and mixed media.” Keeping the Youth Program art activities affordable is largely due to outside funding, according to the executive director. “We’re indebted to our many financial contributors who allow us to offer these classes at reasonable prices due to the underwriting we receive from both community organizations as well as individual donors,” she said, adding that the school remains committed to enhancing Fallbrook’s art-infused ambience with more works of art in the community.

The youth program at Fallbrook School of the Arts is very popular.

Courtesy photo

“In keeping with the growing success of the Fallbrook School of the Arts Campus, we’re updating paint, signage, and landscaping this year. And we are so fortunate to have the wonderful Fallbrook Fence which was created by Wendell Perry and surrounds the campus,” said Perhacs. “And now we are proud of the two new sculpture installations in front of the two main campus buildings: Girl with Kite, which is Melissa Ralston’s colorful steel sculpture, and Yeibichai, a bronze by Peter Mitten.” The Fallbrook School of the Arts is located at 310 East Alvarado Street in Fallbrook. For more information about the school and its schedule of classes and workshops through the rest of 2015, visit www.fallbrookschoolofthearts.org.

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Richard A. Nervig, P.C. Dedicated to the recovery of investment losses

“Nervig’s practice is dedicated to the recovery of investment losses on behalf of seniors.”

M

Yeibichai, a bronze by Peter Mitten.

Courtesy photo

eet Richard Nervig: A former Dean Witter stockbroker of the 80’s who began law school during the era of the classic Richard A. Nervig TV show “L.A. Law.” The insider trading scandals of Ivan Boesky and Michael Milken were shaking up Wall Street back then, and Rudy Giuliani was the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York who helped convict the notorious pair. Nervig’s interest in the stock market led him to clerk for a securities litigation law firm that represented investors. “At the time, I thought, ‘I want to be like Giuliani and go after these white collar criminals,’” he said. In 2003, Nervig, his wife and two children made Fallbrook their home, which is also home to the law firm of Richard A. Nervig, P.C. Nervig’s practice is dedicated to the recovery of investment losses on behalf of seniors. Nervig is licensed to practice law in California, Colorado and Arizona. “Retirees unfortunately fall prey to investment schemes all the time,” Nervig said. Specializing in elder financial abuse, Nervig’s favorite cases are the most egregious ones where he says he can make a real difference in his clients’ lives. “When you recover a decent chunk of money for them … you’ve made a genuine impact in improving a situation that at first seemed hopeless,” he said. Nervig offers free portfolio reviews to seniors who have suffered significant investment losses and have suspicions about the safety or legitimacy of their investments. For a free consultation, call (760) 451-2300 or visit www. nerviglaw.com

Richard A. Nervig, P.C. 1588 S. Mission Road, Suite 210 Fallbrook, CA 92028 (760) 451-2300 www.nerviglaw.com | info@nerviglaw.com Bronze pouring at the California Sculpture Academy foundry.

SOURCEBOOK 2015

Christine Rinaldi photo

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Faye Jonason, History Museum Officer, Camp Pendleton says

Camp Pendleton

Invites & Welcomes You...

A Marine artillery unit carries out maneuvers on MCB Camp Pendleton on this postcard photo from the 1940s.

Rancho Santa Margarita Docents ready to give tours.

...and even challenges you to discover the beauty, the boldness, the mystery, and the raw roaring adventure of a land and its courageous inhabitants that have become a treasured American legacy – on Fallbrook’s very doorstep. The U.S. Marines call this 125,000 acre ecological gem, home.

Model T Marine Truck readied for transport to a community event.

With only 8% of the acreage developed, it is the last unspoiled portion of the California coastline south of Santa Barbara and remains a mostly pristine parcel and a developer’s dream – denied only by the presence of its 70,000+ U.S. Marines, Sailors and civilians. Over 1,000 species of wildlife, including free

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M50 “Ontos” a Vietnam era light armored tracked anti-tank vehicle aka the “Rife.”

Courtesy photos

roaming bison, foxes, mountain lions, deer, and 16 endangered species also find this their home. Acquired in 1942 by the U.S. Department of Defense, Camp Pendleton has been a training base for Marines and Sailors who have answered our country’s call from World War II through conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. When driving through or near the Base, you may glimpse a view or hear battle tanks rumbling through the hills and ravines, an amphibious landing of troops on the beach, concussions from exploding artillery shells, or aircraft landings, as you view America’s finest warriors in training. Their presence is the latest chapter in the long history of a land that served as a battlefield long before the Marines came to inhabit it. The History Museum Office on base is tasked not only with discovering, recording and preserving the history of this land and its inhabitants, but providing the community-at-large, a window into that past. Visit historical sites and museums and let docents bring alive for you the historical charm and vibrancy of bygone eras and illuminate the military history since 1942. Search the newly expanded Base Archives for individuals and events that are part of this land’s history. You are invited to attend heritage events and re-enactments of Camp Pendleton’s colorful past for a most stimulating and memorable experience. For information on these events access www. rsmglf.org. Thousands of years of history are the subject of interpretation to visitors by the museum docents beginning with history of Native Americans and then the arrival of Franciscan missionaries. In 1769 a Spaniard by the name of Captain Gaspar de Portola led an expedition to the area known now as Camp Pendleton on St. Margaret’s holy day, baptizing this land in the name of Santa Margarita. This land was once a part of the Mission San Luis Rey, the largest of the Spanish missions. Explore California’s largest land grant and the Ranch House, residence to Spanish Dons and Commanding generals – the place where the romantic past meets the strength of the future. Tour the Ranch House, Bunkhouse Museum with gift shop and the Ranch House Chapel, the oldest structure on the base.

SOURCEBOOK 2015

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Camouflaged caboose stands behind the Marine Corps Mechanized Museum in preparation for restoration.

From its humble beginnings as an early Mission San Luis Rey building, thought to be a winery, the Chapel is significant for its nearly continuous use for two centuries. The chapel later became temporary living quarters for Pio Pico, last governor of Mexican California, while he waited for the Ranch House to be built on the Rancho Santa Margarita y Las Flores property in the mid 1800s. The Santa Margarita Ranch House complex is listed on the National Register as a Historic Site. Discover another piece of California history at the Las Flores Adobe National Historic Landmark, built in the Monterey colonial architectural style. This unique two-story adobe, built in 1868, has undergone significant restoration and is available for tours by appointment. Re-enactment events are sometimes held on these grounds and are open to the public. In addition to the preseveration of historic buildings and sites, there is an active restoration program for military vehicles

O’Neill family women at the Hospitality Cross near the Santa Margarita Ranch House.

and equipment for the ever-changing displays on Base and other venues. Vehicle restoration projects are all accomplished by volunteers who call themselves, “Dirty Docents.” These volunteers work in conjunction with the History Museum office to seek out and restore examples of vintage vehicles and artillery pieces used by the Marine Corps, resulting in the 2002 opening of the Marine Corps Mechanized Museum. Today, the Mechanized collection continues to grow and now includes such significant pieces as the WWII Rocket Truck and a Vietnam era Ontos, both beautifully restored and functional. For military history buffs and enthusiasts, the Marine Corps Mechanized Museum, often called the MECH, is not to be missed. It holds the world’s largest collection of fully and meticulously restored and researched Marine Corps post-1942 vehicles and artillery unit, reflecting the service of Marines and Sailors on battlefields and humanitarian efforts around the world.

The Ranch House Chapel stained glass window of Santa Margarita of Antioch. (Far Right) Inside the Ranch House Chapel.

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www.my-sourcebook.com


Marine Captain Archibald Gillespie fights California lancers in the painting of the “Battle of San Pasqual” by Col. Charles Waterhouse.

The mission at the History Museum office embraces community outreach, as many Fallbrook residents have experienced on the tours and with the involvement of the MECH collection at Fallbrook’s Summer Nights and in Fallbrook parades. They hope you can

Trencher on display at Marine Corps Mechanized Museum.

“Join the Few, the Proud, the Always Faithful” to discover your own rich American heritage. For additional information on accessing exhibits or becoming a volunteer contact: (760) 725-5758 or email: Mcbcampen_ history@usmc.mil. WW II Model T ambulance at a special event.

Investing money is serious business.

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Offering

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Roxanne L. Greene, CPA • 760-726-4316 R. Greene & Associates, Inc

5256 S. Mission Road, Suite 205 Bonsall, CA 92003 SOURCEBOOK 2015

So is losing it! Securities fraud costs American investors in excess of $10 billion annually. And, one in three securities fraud victims is a senior citizen.1

The law firm of Richard A. Nervig, P.C. is dedicated to the recovery of investment losses on behalf of investors who have lost money due to fraud or negligent investment advice. If you have sustained investment losses in excess of $100,000, call today to learn about your rights and how you can try to recover your investment losses.

FOR A FREE INITIAL CONSULTATION CALL 760-451-2300 Richard A. Nervig, P.C.

1588 S. Mission Rd, Suite 210, Fallbrook, CA 92028 Bonded & Insured

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Most securities cases are handled on a contingent fee basis. Clients pay no attorneys’ fees unless and until funds are recovered on your behalf. Costs associated with litigation such as filing fees, copy costs, etc. are the responsibility of the client. 1 See, North American Securities Administrators Association 2010 Enforcement Report (October 2011).

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Robert W. Jackson Changing the Perception of Attorneys

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hen Robert W. Jackson puts on his suit for court, it comes with more than three decades of experience as a respected nationwide trial attorney. His message is simple and heartfelt, “I want to change the public perception of lawyers, and I do that by focusing on one client at a time and doing the very best that I can for each and every client.” Robert’s first law office was opened in Fallbrook in 1984, and the Fallbrook High School alumnus expanded the small town practice over the years to include three Southern California locations where he attracts and serves clients from around the nation. Jackson specializes in catastrophic injury cases, and is joined by a partner who is also a personal injury attorney. “We treat people like they’re family,” Jackson said. “Every aspect of the case is handled on an individual basis.” After attending the University of California, Berkeley and then earning his Juris Doctor from Pepperdine University School of Law in 1984, Jackson quickly discovered that being a part of a large law firm didn’t suit him well. Robert was recruited by several large power house law firms, but quickly left his first firm in Orange County and came home to San Diego to start his own law practice. Robert quickly found his niche was in representing

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“We treat people like they’re family...every aspect of the case is handled on an individual basis.” people that had suffered catastrophic personal injury claims – within a decade, he had become a nationally known expert in handling traumatic brain injury cases. His caseloads have ranged from wrongful deaths and traumatic brain injuries to pedestrian cases and construction site accident. To date, he has taken more than 80 cases to jury trial and mediated and arbitrated hundreds of cases. But it’s no secret amongst legal affiliates that a high percentage of cases handled by Robert W. Jackson are ultimately settled before they reach a trial. “We have outstanding trial results. The insurance industry knows we’re not going to settle for anything short of full justice,” Jackson said. Another specialty practice area of Jackson’s is Mass Tort litigation, which can include cases where a group of people have become injured due to a defective product or medicine. Currently, Jackson is part of the steering committee for the type2 diabetes drug Actos©, which he said is the fourth or fifth top-selling drug in the United States, and is under fire from the FDA. His firm is reaching out to individuals who have taken the drug Actos© and have been diagnosed with a bladder related illness or bladder cancer. “The lawsuit we have filed

Robert W. Jackson at Trial Stars Dinner

alleges the manufacturer was aware of a causal link between bladder cancer and the prolonged use of Actos©,” Jackson said. The law firm also handles other pharmaceutical litigation and defective product claims including Testosterone Therapy, Takata exploding air bag cases, GM defective ignition claims, and the firm is on the cutting edge of helping victims of other bad drugs and products. After the 2007 San Diego County wildfires, Jackson became the lead liaison council for the Rice Canyon Fire, said to be the largest single combined case in the history of California. Those settlements totaled more than $3 billion against the responsible parties. Many of those wildfire victims were here in the Fallbrook area and had their homes, lives and property destroyed, he said. “I want to say ‘Thank you’ to them for entrusting me with their cases and allowing me to tell their stories.” But recognition also comes back to him as Jackson has been awarded either “Trial Lawyer of the Year” or “Outstanding Trial Lawyer” six times in his career, and over four times in the past ten years. “Every case that we take in my office has a story, and we strive to be the messenger of that unique and personal story,” he said.

www.my-sourcebook.com


Brett Parkinson Helping the Individual

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orking on behalf of others and representing them in court is what Attorney Brett R. Parkinson does best. Often people come into Parkinson’s office feeling mistreated by an insurance company and confused about how to proceed. The insurance company just didn’t seem to care, they say. Parkinson has found that “if you don’t stand up to the ‘bully’ in those situations, people will keep being mistreated.” Parkinson enjoys being able to use his experience to help level the playing field for his clients. Parkinson’s legal career began as a law clerk to two federal judges. He then worked for several years as a prosecutor in the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Utah before he decided to transition to helping people involved in personal injuries. Although it might not seem like a natural transition, Parkinson’s father was a personal injury lawyer, so it was like “going home.” “I wanted to help individuals,” he said. “It was time to put my skill set to use on a very personal and individual level.” Parkinson works hard and is dedicated to helping clients receive full compensation for their injuries. It is not uncommon for Parkinson to be in his client’s home learning their story. “You can only learn so much in your office. To really understand how an injury has affected someone, let them walk you around their home,

“To really understand how an injury has affected someone, let them walk you around their home, showing you what they can and cannot do. Only at that point, do you know your client’s sotry well enough to share it with a jury.” – Brett Parkinson showing you what they can and cannot do. Only at that point, do you know your client’s story well enough to share it with a jury,” says Parkinson. He brings his courtroom skills - honed from his days as a prosecutor - into each case he takes on. Although he has spent years in the courtroom, he is constantly attending seminars throughout the country to continually improve his stills. Parkinson recently graduated from Gerry Spence’s Trial Lawyer College in Dubois, Wyoming. “Working with Gerry and other great trial lawyers from across the country helped better me as a person and a trial lawyer... it was a life-changing experience.” Parkinson travels throughout the country for training, and also represents individuals beyond Southern California as well. Currently, the firm has about over 100 clients in Utah who were affected by the large Wood Hollow Fire in 2012 as well as many others throughout the country who

Law Offices of Robert W. Jackson 205 West Alvarado Street Fallbrook, CA 92028

SOURCEBOOK 2015

Brett Parkinson

were injured when prescribed medication for “low testosterone.” The San Diego County-based Law Offices of Robert W. Jackson have also enjoyed success in their new opened office in Riverside County. Parkinson was raised in Indio so it was natural to open up an office in the desert. His father, James Parkinson, is of-counsel to the firm. Parkinson graduated from Indio High School, followed by a Bachelor of Science degree from Brigham Young University before attaining his Juris Doctor from San Diego’s California Western School of Law in 2003. Outside of the courtroom, Brett spends time with his wife and six children in their Fallbrook home. When not enjoying their home, Parkinson said his family likes to participate together in outdoor family activities.

(760) 723-1295 www.jacksontriallawyers.com robert@jacksontriallawyers.com brett@jacksontriallawyers.com

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Bridging Business Opportunity with Community Growth

BONSALL CHAMBER OF COMMERCE 5256 S. Mission Road, Suite 311, Bonsall, CA 92003 In River Village Plaza

760.630.1933 WWW. B O N SA LLCH A M B ER . ORG admin@bonsallchamber.org

Roxanne Greene, Bud Coale, Lori Gaye

Get Connected. Stay Informed.


Bonsall Chamber of Commerce

member Directory A

Accretive Investments, Inc......................... 760-731-0973 32444 Birdsong Dr Escondido CA 92026 www.LilacHillsRanch.com Accretive Investments, Inc......................... 858-546-0700 12275 El Camino Real, Ste. 110, San Diego, CA 92030 www.lilachillsranch.com Ace Party Productions & DJ....................... 760-451-0639 584 Industrial Way #C Fallbrook CA 92028 www.acepartyproductions.com Action Design Services.............................. 760-529-6430 www.actiondesignservices.com Adolfo & Manny Pool Supplies LLC............ 760-728-2621 1506 S. Mission Rd Fallbrook CA 92028 www.poolsfallbrook.com All State Propane........................................ 714-403-5105 21520 Yorba Linda Blvd #G-508 Yorba Linda CA 92887 www.allstatepropane.com Allies Party Rentals.................................... 760-591-4314 130 Vallecitos de Oro, San Marcos CA 92069 www.alliesparty.com All-Star Duct & Vent Cleaning.................... 760-685-0638 Bonsall CA 92003 www.allstarductandvent.com American Tattoo.......................................... 760-639-4545 525 S. Mission Rd. #F, Bonsall, CA 92003 www.Americantattoobonsall.com Archi’s Acres, Inc. VSAT............................. 760-751-4380 10079 W. Lilac Rd Escondido CA 92026 www.archisacres.com Art of Paradise @ Starlight Ranch............. 619-277-4010 1820 Winterwarm Dr. Fallbrook CA 92028 www.artofparadise.com ASSOS of Switzerland................................. 760-604-5994 Bonsall CA 92003 www.assos.com Aston’s Boutique......................................... 760-726-4263 5256 S. Mission Rd #704 Bonsall CA 92003 www.astonsboutique.com Audio & Computer Enterprises................... 760-741-6511 413 W. 9th Ave. Escondido CA 92025 www.n4i.com

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Bailey’s Frozen Yogurt............................... 760- 631-8455 5256 S. Mission Rd #831 Bonsall CA 92003 www.baileysfroyo.com Beach House Winery................................... 760-732-3236 1534 Sleeping Indian Rd Oceanside CA 92028 www.beachhousewinery.com

Bead Gallery................................................ 760-732-5997 5519 Mission Rd #C Bonsall CA 92003 www.beadgallery.org Bejoca Grove & Landscape Mgmt.............. 760-728-5176 POB 2168 Fallbrook CA 92088 www.bejocalandscape.com Berry-Bell and Hall..................................... 760-728-1689 333 N. Vine St Fallbrook CA 92028 www.berry-bellandhall.com Birchall Restoration.................................... 760-728-8735 www.waterrestorationsandiego.net Bonsall Dry Cleaners.................................. 760-732-3430 5256 S. Mission Rd #1004 Bonsall CA 92003 Bonsall Education Foundation................... 760-533-8450 POB 1217 Bonsall CA 92003 www.bonsallschools.org Bonsall Fine Wine and Spirits.................... 760-945-4427 5256 S. Mission Rd #841 Bonsall CA 92003 www.bonsallfinewine.com Bonsall Postal & Imaging........................... 760-941-9221 5256 S. Mission Rd #703 Bonsall CA 92003 www.bonsallpi.com/ Bonsall Unified School District.................. 760-631-5200 31505 Old River Rd Bonsall CA 92003 www.bonsallusd.com Bonsall Woman’s Club................................ 760-801-7443 POB 364 Bonsall CA 92003 www.Bonsallwomansclub.org Boys & Girls Clubs of North County........... 760-728-5871 445 E. Ivy St. Fallbrook CA 92028 www.bgcnorthcounty.org

Color Magic Creations................................ 951-852-7238 Murrieta CA 92562 Cortes Mexican Food.................................. 760-631-3909 5517 Mission Rd #C&D Bonsall CA 92003 CUETECH..................................................... 949-281-1831 125 S. Main St. #D Fallbrook CA 92028 www.cuetech.com CYAN Isurance Solutions............................ 760-477-7542 Fallbrook, CA 92028 www.cyaninsurance.com

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EDCO Waste & Recycling Services............. 760-728-6114 224 S. Las Posas Rd San Marcos CA 92078 www.EDCOdisposal.com Equipoise Pilates........................................ 760-533-5160 Fallbrook CA 92028 www.equipoise-pilates.com EuroAmerican Propagators........................ 760-731-6029 32149 Aquaduct Rd Bonsall CA 92003 www.PWEuro.com

California Sculpture Academy................... 760-987-4804 300 Alvarado Street, Fallbrook, CA 92028 www.californiasculptureacademy.com Dr. Randy D. Carlson................................... 760-630-5500 5256 S. Mission Rd #1101 Bonsall CA 92003 www.BonsallDentist.com Cellco Alarm (TVA Inc.)............................... 760-268-2000 701 S. Main, Fallbrook, CA 92028 Coldwell Banker Village Properties, Jerry & Linda Gordon....................... 760-728-8000 X 120 5256 S. Mission Rd #310 Bonsall CA 92003 www.cbvillageProperties.com Coldwell Banker Village Properties, Tess Hansford............................................ 760- 803-8377 5256 S. Mission Rd #310 Bonsall CA 92003 www.coldwellbanker.com/agents/Tess-Hansford-92003 Coldwell Banker Village Properties........... 760-728-8000 5256 S. Mission Rd #310 Bonsall CA 92003 www.CBVillageProperties.com

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Daniel Flores, DDS, MS, PC......................... 760-728-1182 210 E Fig St #201, Fallbrook CA 92028 www.floresortho.com Daniel’s Market........................................... 760-732-1135 5256 S Mission Rd #701, Bonsall, CA 92003 www.danielsstores.iga.com Digiplex River Village................................. 760-712-6673 5256 S. Mission Rd. Bonsall, CA 92003 www.carmike.com Doterra “Modern Oils”................................ 760-723-3700 412 S. Main St Fallbrook CA 92028 Dr. Charles L. Drury..................................... 760-630-5500 5256 S. Mission Rd #1101 Bonsall CA 92003 www.BonsallDentist.com Duncan Hunter for Congress...................... 619-448-5201 1611 N. Magnolia Ave #310 El Cajon CA 92020 www.hunter.house.gov

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Fallbrook Animal Sanctuary...................... 760- 685-3533 230 – 232 W. Aviation Road Fallbrook, CA, 92028 www.fallbrookanimalsanctuary.org Fallbrook Arts, Inc...................................... 760-731-9584 103 S. Main St Fallbrook CA 92028 www.fallbrookartcenter.org Fallbrook Band Boosters............................ 760-468-4415 POB 1604 Fallbrook CA 92088 www.fallbrookhsband.org

Aquaterra Memberships Receive 25% Off Everyday and 50% Off Food on Mondays!

Aquaterra at Pala Mesa Resort Open to All • Thursdays $10 Burger & Beer Combo, • Sunday Breakfast Buffet $3 Drafts All Day • Chef Sean’s Weekend Specials • Happy Hour with Sushi & $3 Drafts • No Corkage Wednesdays

760.731.6805 | 2001 Old Highway 395, Fallbrook | www.palamesa.com


Bonsall Chamber of Commerce

member Directory Fallbrook Country Inn................................. 760-728-1114 1425 S. Mission Rd Fallbrook CA 92028 www.fallbrookhotel.com Fallbrook FroYo Frozen Yogurt................... 760-728-7678 127 E. Mission Rd Fallbrook CA 92028 www.FallbrookFroYo.com Fallbrook Healthcare District..................... 760-731-9187 591 E. Elder St #U Fallbrook CA 92028 www.fallbrookhealthcaredistrict.net Fallbrook Healthcare Partners................... 760-731-8989 591 E. Elder St. #C, Fallbrook, CA 92028 www.FallbrookHealthcarePartners.com Fallbrook House of the Arts........................ 760-645-3229 432 E Dougherty St Fallbrook CA 92028 www.fallbrookhouseofthearts.com Fallbrook LemonTech................................. 442-222-4014 www.fallbrooklemontech.org Fallbrook Newcomers Club........................ 760-645-0205 POB 1392 Fallbrook CA 92088 www.fallbrooknewcomers.com Fallbrook Overhead Doors.......................... 760-728-3823 POB 991 Fallbrook CA 92088 www.fallbrookoverheaddoors.net Fallbrook Photo Booth................................ 760-659-3780 Bonsall CA 92003 www.fallbrookphotobooth.com Fallbrook Public Utility District.................. 760-728-1125 POB 2290 Fallbrook CA 92088 www.fpud.com Fallbrook Republican Women Federated... 760-728-9422 POB 1328 Fallbrook CA 92088 www.fallbrookrwf.org Fallbrook Rodeway Inn............................... 760-728-6174 1635 S. Mission Rd Fallbrook CA 92028 www.fallbrookrodewayinn.com Fallbrook Trading Company....................... 760-728-6310 840 S. Main St. Fallbrook CA 92028 www.fallbrooktradingco.com Fallbrook Window Washing Co.................. 760-728-8116 POB 185 Fallbrook CA 92088 www.fallbrookwindowwashing.com Fit by Design............................................... 760-777-0604 5256 S. Mission Rd. #809, Bonsall, CA 92003 www.fitbydesign.org Foundation for Senior Care........................ 760-723-7570 135 S. Mission Rd Fallbrook CA 92028 www.foundationforseniorcare.org

Fresco Grill & Wine Bar.............................. 760-631-1944 5256 S. Mission Rd Bonsall CA 92003 www.frescorestaurants.com Friends of Fallbrook.................................... 760-689-9055 www.friendsoffallbrook.com

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Gaye, Lori.................................................... 760-630-1933 5256 S. Mission RD #311 Bonsall CA 92003 www.Bonsallchamber.org Grimard & Associates, CPAs...................... 760- 945-0777 5256 S. Mission Rd #1010 Bonsall CA 92003 www.grimardcpa.com

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Halls Plant Nursery..................................... 951-538-2733 46385 Camarone Rd Temecula CA 92590 Hatter, Williams & Purdy Insurance Agency....................................... 760-468-4244 43446 Business Park Drive Temecula CA 92590 www.hwpinsurance.com Hilltop Center for Spiritual Living............... 760-723-8291 331 E. Elder St Fallbrook CA 92028 www.hilltopcenter.sbcglobal.net Home Smart Legends................................. 760-451-1600 701 S. Main Ave Fallbrook CA 92028 www.TomforHomes.com Hopkins & Associates, Inc.......................... 760-731-9990 1816 Via Entrada, Fallbrook, CA 92028 www.HopkinsDesigns.com Howard Townsend Financial Planner........ 760-630-1220 6447 Via De La Reina Bonsall CA 92003 Hummingbird Hill-RCFE.............................. 760-723-9414 1027 Calle de Limar, Fallbrook, CA 92028

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Irie Coast Vape............................................ 760-732-5925 5525 Mission Rd. Ste. E, Bonsall, CA 92003

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Jeremiah’s Ranch....................................... 760-805-5214 855 S. Main St #K-345 Fallbrook CA 92028 www.jeremiahsranch.org

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Keller Williams Realty, Jerry Burke, Jr....... 619-302-5471 www.jerryburkejr.com

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Laser Light Images..................................... 760-723-0770 POB 1720 Fallbrook CA 92088 www.laserlightimages.com

Lean n’ Mean Bicycles................................ 760-295-9582 5519 Mission Rd #B Bonsall CA 92003 www.leannmeanbicycle.com Legacy Endowment Community Foundation... 760-728-3304 111 West Alvarado Street Fallbrook, CA 92028 www.legacyendowment.org Loan Warehouse......................................... 760-726-2073 5256 S. Mission Rd #801 Bonsall CA 92003 www.loanwarehouse.com/jmarelly Logos Tax Service....................................... 800-214-9629 5256 S. Mission Rd #137, Bonsall CA 92003 www.logospayroll.com

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Major Market.............................................. 760-723-0857 845 S. Main St Fallbrook CA 92028 www.majormarketgrocery.com Malabar Ranch Homes............................... 760-295-1400 5256 S. Mission Rd. Ste. #206, Bonsall, CA 92003 www.davidsoncommunities.com Marge Meyer Associates, Inc..................... 760-645-3458 1595 Baja Vista Dr. Fallbrook CA 92028 www.margemeyer.com Mimi’s Boutique.......................................... 760-695-7380 119 N. Main St #C, Fallbrook, CA 92028 Miranda & Associates................................ 760-723-1241 1595 S. Mission Rd Fallbrook CA 92028 www.mirandaassociates.com Mutual of Omaha........................................ 858-354-8657 Bonsall CA 92003 www.mutualofomaha.com My Imaging Center..................................... 760-689-6100 616 E. Alvarado St #D Fallbrook CA 92028 www.myimagingcenter.com

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Nancy’s at Jackson Square........................ 760-728-2072 123 N. Main St. Fallbrook CA 92028 Neiman’s Collision Center, Inc.................... 760-728-8810 1381 S. Mission Rd Fallbrook CA 92028 www.neimanscollision.com New Song Church....................................... 760-716-5783 31505 Old River Road, Bonsall CA 92003 www.newsongchurch.com nGAP Inc...................................................... 760-477-8700 5256 S. Mission Rd #210 Bonsall CA 92003 www.ngap.com North County Academy of Dance............... 760-703-4958 5256 S. Mission Rd #806 Bonsall CA 92003 www.northcountyacademyofdance.com

SDG&E® is proud to support and partner with the Bonsall Chamber of Commerce. We’re committed to improving and maintaining a comfortable, safe and productive community. For more information, visit sdge.com


Bonsall Chamber of Commerce

member Directory North County Fire Protection District......... 760-723-2012 330 N. Main St Fallbrook 92028 www.ncfire.org North County Networking Group................ 760-500-7749 POB 32 Fallbrook CA 92088 www.ncnetworking.net

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Pacific Western Bank..................................760 639-2000 5256 S Mission Rd #1001, Bonsall, CA 92003 www.pacificwesternbank.com Pala Mesa Resort........................................ 760-731-6811 2001 Old Highway 395, Fallbrook, CA 92028 www.palamesaresort.com Palomar College.......................................... 760-744-1150 1140 W. Mission Rd. San Marcos CA 92069 www.palomar.edu/foundation Paradise Homes & Gardens, Leo Romero..... 760-638-1732 www.fallbrookbonsallhomes.com PDS Financial Enterprises, Inc................... 760-935-1040 www.bc.evantagefinancial.info/pschumann Peking Wok................................................. 760-724-8078 5256 S. Mission Rd #303 Bonsall CA 92003 www.pekingwokbonsall.com Photo Bungalow.......................................... 951-314-8541 Fallbrook CA 92028 www.photobungalow.com PhotographyByMaryJane.com................... 760-801-7443 www.PhotographybyMaryJane.com Prohibition Brewing Company................... 760-295-3525 2004 E. Vista Way Vista CA 92084 www.prohibitionbrewingcompany.com

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R. Greene & Associates Inc........................ 760-726-4316 5256 S. Mission Road #205 Bonsall CA 92003 www.greeneassociates.org Rainbow Signs............................................ 760-728-9066 1215 Mission Rd Fallbrook CA 92028 Rawhide Ranch........................................... 760-758-0083 6987 W. Lilac Rd. Bonsall, CA 92003 www.rawhideranch.com Reins Therapeutic Horsemanship.............. 760-731-9168 4461 S. Mission Rd. Fallbrook CA 92028 www.reinsprogram.org River Village Properties.............................. 760-631-1030 5256 S. Mission Rd. #110 Bonsall CA 92003 www.rivervillageplaza.com Roadies Hideaway...................................... 858-336-6678 32170 Dos Ninsa Rd Bonsall CA 92003 www.roadieshideaway.com

c Hills nch GROW SMART, LIVE GREEN

Roadrunner Errands of Fallbrook............... 760-277-0089 Rogan & Associates Real Estate Maggie Rogan............................................. 760-723-3553 218 W. Fig St Fallbrook CA 92028 www.FallbrookRealEstate.com Rotary Club of Bonsall................................ 760-747-1040 POB 934 Bonsall CA 92003 www.BonsallRotary.org Ryan Timothy.............................................. 949-250-1423 Bonsall CA. 92003

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Salon de L’art Nouveau............................... 760-414-1008 5525 Mission Rd #G Bonsall CA 92003 www.BonsallHairSalon.com San Diego Gas & Electric............................ 760-480-7650 571 Enterprise St. M/S SD1460 Escondido CA 92029 www.semprautilities.com Shamrock Foods......................................... 760-628-5825 Bonsall CA 92003 www.shamrockfoodservice.com SHE SHE LA Boutique.................................. 760-728-0070 127 N. Main St, Fallbrook, CA 92028 Springston Design...................................... 760-691-0507 Bonsall CA 92003 www.springstondesign.com Straight Up Pilates...................................... 760-390-4433 2809 S. Mission Rd Fallbrook CA 92028 www.straightupilates.com Sullivan Solar Power................................... 858-271-7758 8949 Kenamar Dr #101 San Diego CA 92121 www.sullivansolarpower.com SUPPORT Bonsall & Fallbrook Team.......... 760-758-5633 Bonsall, CA 92003

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Tekila Cocina Mexicana............................. 760- 643-1278 5256 S. Mission Rd #907 Bonsall CA 92003 www.tekilacocinamexicana.com Temecula Valley Hospital........................... 951-331-2220 31700 Temecula Parkway www.Temeculavalleyhospital.com The Chadwicks at Hanna Salon................. 310-210-9069 5256 S. Mission Rd #705 Bonsall CA 92003 www.theChadwicks.com The Coulombe Law Firm............................. 760-723-7400 www.coulombe.com The Paintball Park At Camp Pendleton...... 866-985-4932 1700 Vandegrift Blvd Oceanside CA 92055 www.thepaintballpark.com

The Spoiled Avocado.................................. 760-695-7390 119 N. Main St. #B, Fallbrook, CA 92028

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Village Home Care...................................... 760-723-1140 234 Enander Way Fallbrook CA 92028 www.villagehomecarefallbrook.com Village News............................................... 760-723-7319 1588 S. Mission Rd., Suite 200 Fallbrook CA 92028 www.villagenews.com Village Pizza................................................ 760-803-8243 5256 S. Mission Rd #832 Bonsall CA 92003 www.villagepizzabonsall.com Vista Valley Country Club........................... 760-842-6567 29354 Vista Valley Drive Vista, CA 92084 www.vistavalley.com

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WealthBridge Advisors, Rebecca Eastom......................................... 760-758-3702 5256 S. Mission Rd. #301, Bonsall, CA 92003 www.wealthbridgeonline.com West Coast Auto Registration.................... 760-728-0012 1032 S. Main St Fallbrook CA 92028 www.wcarf.com Windermere Homes & Estates, Kim Carlson................................................. 760-434-6873 1593 S. Mission Rd #B Fallbrook CA 92028 www.kimcarlsonhomes.com Windermere Homes & Estates, Ken Follis.................................................... 760-230-8258 1593 S. Mission Rd #B Fallbrook CA 92028 www.KenFollis.com

Political affiliates

Congressman Duncan Hunter, Congressman 50th District........................ 619-448-5201 1611 N. Magnolia Ave. El Cajon CA 92020 www.hunter.house.gov Supervisor Bill Horn, Supervisor District 5................................... 619-531-5555 1600 Pacific Highway #3500 San Diego CA 92101 www.billhorn.com Senator Joel Anderson, Senator 36th District.................................. 951-676-1020 27555 Ynez Rd #204 Temecula CA 92591 Assemblymember Marie Waldron, Assembly 75th District............................... 760-480-7570 350 W. 5th Ave #110 Escondido CA 92025


Fallbrook/Bonsall The beauty of the area captured by our readers 134

www.my-sourcebook.com


The last day of 2014 brought a rare storm that covered our mountains with snow.

Sharon Arnstein photo

The setting sun fires up the sky in an array of colors.

Lucy Larson photo

View from Monserate Mounatin, Pankey Road, Post 1.

Ron Montoya photo

Dirk Thayer photo View showing Bonsall all the way to Fallbrook.

SOURCEBOOK 2015

135


INNOVATIVE PROGRAM Launches Project-Based Learning Environment for Bonsall High School Students by Karen Ossenfort

Bonsall High School freshmen stand under the new quad shade structure. A new two-story building is going to be built this summer to accommodate the growing student population.

Tucking 9th grade under its belt, Bonsall High School staff and students are not only welcoming 10th graders to the school next year, but also a New Tech Network-experienced Principal Lee Fleming. “When you first meet her, you realize this woman is very smart and has a lot of energy,” Bonsall Schools Superintendent Dr. Justin Cunningham said of the new principal. “Everyone is very excited and pleased,” he added. That excitement stems from Fleming’s wealth of knowledge and experience in setting up New Tech Highs across the nation. Bonsall High is poised to become such a high school, and administrators and staff couldn’t be more excited. “This is a very rare opportunity,” Cunningham said. “Why this is so amazing is that Bonsall gets this opportunity to start a high school right when it begins to grow. The New Tech model will attract a demographic profile that will influence the quality of the community and increase property values over the next few generations.” “The difference in a New Tech High,” Fleming said, “is that it exposes students to future possibilities that they wouldn’t get in other high schools. There is great teaching at all schools. We just incorporate great teaching in the context of authentic and rigorous projects. We’ve included all the good things about high school within the projects.” The project-based learning system starts out with application and what needs to be accomplished to have a quality product, Fleming explained, agreeing it’s a lot like unit study-type of learning. Fleming enthused that she has two immediate priorities. “We will invite the community to take part in building-out a master schedule for all four years, 9th grade through 12th.” Then she’ll create an advisory group, in which members are community professionals who will lend their expertise, innovativeness and ideas to the high school overall. All classes will be accredited high school classes, just presented more creatively, Fleming said. “All high schools have to teach integrated math to be college accredited. Some may call it Algebra or Geometry; we are calling 136

it Integrated Math, and will teach it that way,” she said. “Our goal is to graduate students aware, eligible, and prepared for college and career.” Classes are under the University of California (UC) A through G requirements, to enable seamless transfers to the UC system upon graduation. Principal Lee Fleming. Courtesy photos Bonsall High students use technology in the classroom, and there are plans to build that out over the next few years. “We are a high school that uses technology for authentic learning,” Fleming said. The district will add an additional two-story building on the Bonsall campus, which is located at Sullivan Middle School. To accommodate the 65-student high school population – which isn’t abundant now, but will be as grade levels are added – the district has its sights on the Gird Road property. This property was originally held by the Fallbrook High School District but because of Proposition BB and the resulting unification, Cunningham said that the real property belongs to the district it is within the boundaries of. The Bonsall district will build on the approximate 50 acres on Gird available to the district. Cunningham hopes the first classes locate there in 2019/2020. Right now the high school has 65 students and 7 teachers. Cunningham said by adding the sophomore level, the district will add three to four more teachers. “More like three point five more teachers,” he said. Though the district doesn’t have tallied figures as of yet, it did spend $5 million in start-up for the new high school in Bonsall. Consultant Wayne Oetken was brought in to study the district and make future projections. As a result, Cunningham expects the district enrollment to double in the next six years. “There are several developments going in at Hwy 76 and I15, and www.my-sourcebook.com


the Lilac Hills area, as well as another 100 homes going in here by the district office,” Cunningham said. The building of the new high school will “save” Sullivan Middle School from overcrowding, Cunningham said. The two-story building being built there now to accommodate the high school will benefit the middle school in future years. Ultimately, Cunningham said, the goal is to provide academic excellence and support for all students to be highly competitive in their chosen career path and/or college. “From Kindergarten right on through, is how we educate so our students are very competitive in the global economy,” Cunningham said. “When we hear that U.S. schools are being out-performed by other countries, it’s not so much that we are worse, it’s that they have improved, so we also have to get better to stay competitive in the global economy.” Fleming spent the last nine years as a part of the New Tech High National Staff. After being a high school teacher for five years, Fleming was introduced to the New Tech philosophy at an education fair in Sacramento. A principal of a New Tech High shared the New Tech ideas with her and hired her as a founding teacher at a New Tech High School in Sacramento and that launched her career with the organization. She started by coaching professionals in the New Tech environment, and traveled extensively in her job. When she started with the New Tech Network in 2006 there were 12 staff members. It’s grown to 68 today. As the company grew so did her position. She has worked with school committees, walking the halls and planning for New Tech on their campuses, talked to

NOW ENROLLING! Fallbrook’s Academic Based Montessori School for Your Children

GeoLit students work on their mythology, fairy tale and urban legend projects. The New Tech High model uses large classrooms to facilitate combining two classes/subjects together.

them about school plans, looked at blueprints and for “potholes.” The idea started to grow in elementary and middle schools, so her position shifted as the focus did. Last year she coached districts in “what it looks like to raise the learning of adults in service of student learning.” She jokes that she trained leaders for five years before becoming one. As her family life started to need her to travel less, and her husband was winding down in the pursuit of his doctorate, she felt the need to put down roots somewhere. She is originally from California, and they ended up in Utah, where her husband is from. When the Bonsall job opened, being a woman of faith, she committed it to prayer and waited. And then the Bonsall district hung a “Welcome” sign. To become thoroughly familiar with the New Tech approach, check out these links: www.newtechnetwork.org/about/our-elements www.newtechnetwork.org/sites/default/files/blocks/2014ntnstudentoutcomesreport.pdf www.newtechnetwork.org/sites/default/files/blocks/ntnoverview2014.pdf www.newtechnetwork.org/sites/default/files/blocks/ntn-faqs09-2014.pdf

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A Legacy of Excellence 137


Feeling Secure is of Utmost Importance

at Pinktower Montessori by Karen Ossenfort

T

alking with Suji Jayasinghe one senses her true love for educating children in a secure and safe environment. “When children are insecure,” she said, “they won’t learn anything.” Jayasinghe is the owner/director of the Pinktower Montessori School on Laurine Lane in Fallbrook. Suji Jayasinghe, owner.

She purchased the school with the help of her brother, Sisira Jayasinghe, an automobile technology engineer, in 2014. Dr. Maria Montessori is the founder of the Montessori educational system. She observed children and found that they teach themselves. She launched the Montessori method in 1970 in Italy. Children, in the Montessori setting, are able to choose from a number of developmentally appropriate activities. The learning method stresses concentration and focus. Children also learn that interrupting someone’s concentration is inappropriate. The Montessori educational philosophy concentrates on learning through all five senses, and combining grades so that younger children can learn from slightly older children. “Learning is an exciting process of discovery, leading to concentration, motivation, self-discipline, and a love of learning,” stated literature on www.montessori.edu/FAQ.html. Two books that explain the educational method are The Joyful Child, for birth to three years, and Child of the World, for three to 12 years, and are available through www.michaelolaf.net.

Experienced Waldorf Teachers Natural Setting Grades 1-6

www.SpiritMountainSchool.org 619.729.5971 138

Students at Pinktower Montessori School in Fallbrook use an engaging game-play apparatus that helps them learn to correctly pronounce and spell words.

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Students use a game that helps them learn the formation of numbers. The students are told a number to make and they select “number pieces” to visually form a larger number.

Shane Gibson photos

Pinktower Montessori employs two teachers for children ages 2 to 6 years old. Jayasinghe’s license is for 36 children and the school is at 31. She hopes to expand in the future. The school is open year-round (except for federal and major holidays) from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mondays through Fridays. “I always help people if they say they have financial problems,” she said, in regard to the cost of the school. Jayasinghe, originally from Sri Lanka, has been in the United States since 2003. She worked as a Montessori teacher in Encinitas from 2003-2010. She then was director of a Kearny Mesa Montessori school until 2014 when she purchased the Fallbrook school. She is married to Vipula Rajapakse. They have two sons, Navin Rajapakse, 19, and Suvin Rajapakse, 17. She acknowledged the days are long but are more than worth it. “You can always have fun with them (the children), that’s how I see it.” Contact Jayasinghe for more information at 760-728-4754.

Students at Pinktower Montessori School in Fallbrook use a visually engaging apparatus that helps them learn 11-19 teen numbers.

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139


Village News, Inc. Your best source for local news and advertising.

W

ith over 200 journalism awards and 40 people working every week, the Village News has not only become a well-respected news source over the last 18 years, but has also branched out electronically and in print to serve other communities. Village News, Inc. has been publishing the Valley News for about 15 years, covering Temecula, Murrieta, Lake Elsinore, French Valley, and the surrounding communities. Valley News prints approximately 20,000 copies every week. Its third newspaper, Anza Valley Outlook, was purchased by Village News, Inc. eight years ago and is adjudicated in Riverside County, just like the Village News is in San Diego County, enabling legal advertising. The print versions of the papers were changed in 2014 to a larger, broadsheet design with more color, a style that has been well-received by readers. There are imminent plans to launch a South Temecula edition of the Valley

“This year we will also focus on providing marketing training to our advertisers, to continue to work in partnership with them in order to help promote and grow their businesses.” – Julie Reeder News, which will reach all 5,000 homes in Redhawk, Bridlevale, and Wolf Creek every week. “We feel this will be an important and viable way for Fallbrook businesses to reach Temecula residents who are close enough to visit Fallbrook and Bonsall on a regular basis,” said Publisher Julie Reeder. Village News, Inc. also publishes four magazines. They include the annual Greater Fallbrook Area Sourcebook, which is mailed to 16,000 homes in Fallbrook, Bonsall, DeLuz and Rainbow with another 4,000 given out all year through advertisers, realtors and the chambers; The Menifee Sourcebook;

Julie Reeder, Publisher, Village News, Inc.

Lifestyle Magazine; and Valley News Sports Magazine. A Discover/Tourism magazine is planned for later this year. Last fall, Village News, Inc. purchased a small, online news organization, Daily SoCal, which has further boosted readership and added 24/7 breaking news assets by gaining two more experienced multimedia journalists. To further increase its ability to keep up on breaking news and important community issues, Village News, Inc. added eight new people to its staff in the last year. Village News, Inc. has just re-launched three news websites, which are more mobile-friendly. While the traffic on the old sites was in the millions of page views a month, the coding was old and problematic. The newspaper is also rebuilding its community sites, such as fallbrook.org, which will be re-branded as discoverfallbrook.com. It will feature the successful, previous focus on discovering the community as far as things to do, parks, trails and preserves, businesses, and events, as well as other community and political information. Discoverfallbrook.com will be helpful not only to visitors, but also local Fallbrook residents who may be surprised to learn

Village News, Inc. staff on the grounds of the beautiful Grand Tradition in Fallbrook.

140

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Village News, Inc. Your best source for local news and advertising.

something new about their town. The plan also includes a series of “discover” websites for other area communities the company serves as well, such as Murrieta, Lake Elsinore, and Wildomar, which can be used to cross-promote Fallbrook. Under development is a new app that is being built for news as well as a video site for weekly, community-based newscasts. Reeder explained that the newspapers’ archives are continually growing and very important to the local communities. “Our websites are very important as they contain the digital, historical archives of hundreds of thousands of stories, photos, and videos. It’s important to have this history available to everyone.” Another plan in the works for this year is a Spanish website. “We really hope that NuestraVidaHoy.com (Our Life Today) will act as a bridge in our community,” said Reeder. “We want all the Spanishspeaking parents to be able to read about their children that are receiving awards and playing sports in the community. We hope to have a print version as soon as September.” Valley News in Temecula has become a major sponsor in events such as the Temecula Valley Fair, Reality Rally, the Balloon and Wine Festival as well as auto events at Perris Auto Speedway and several sporting events at the Lake Elsinore Storm’s stadium. Reeder said the primary focus of the Village News will continue to be providing accurate

and fairly reported news, breaking news online, interesting features, and supporting the business community by providing advertising of their products and services to their local target market, which are also Village News readers. “This year we will also focus on providing marketing training to our advertisers, to continue to work in partnership with them in order to help promote and grow their businesses,” she said. The Village News relocated from its Main Avenue address to an office building on the corner of South Mission and Grand Tradition Way approximately two years ago. The office is located upstairs. For visitors to the office who prefer someone to meet them on the ground level, Mission Resource Conservation District

Debbie Ramsey, Managing Editor, Village News

graciously allows the Village News to use its conference room to meet with readers/ customers. Please visit us at 1588 S. Mission Rd. Ste. 200, Fallbrook, CA 92028 or call (760) 723-7319.

Village News 1588 S. Mission Rd., Suite 200 | Fallbrook, CA 92028 (760) 723-7319 www.villagenews.com | www.myvalleynews.com | www.anzavalleyoutlook.com

C o n n e C t i n g t h e C o m m u n i t y.

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Volume 18, Issue

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New Fallbrook pionship royalty chosen cham CIFPage A-4 Henry High by beating Patrick

grabs first history Boys soccerTeam makes Warrior

March 13, 2014

playoff

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Fallbrook Youth Baseball plays B-1 ball

Time for corned beef and cabbage A-8

Fallbrook & Bonsall

19

Water districts at war?

Fallbrook restaurants offer tasty avocado specialties Page C-14

out Rainbow backs asks of JPA; FPUD to dissolve RMWD

Village News LAFCO Fallbrook & Bonsall

Joe Naiman School in final Village News Correspondent i g h S c h o o l ’s Fallbrook H CIF team won a in boys soccer for the first time championship history. the program’s concluded their The Warriors a l s o se rV i N g with a 2-1 victory 2013-14 season High School in over Patrick HenryIII final March 8 April 10, 2014 the CIF Division at Mesa College. experiencing “It’s great emotionsaid Fallbrook this,” something like Luis Velasquez, junior forward the Warriors whose goal provided of victory. with the margin to come this far “It’s always hard a good team,” and lose, but they’re Cody Clark coach Patrick Henry Warriors. the of said and hoped for “We just prepared knew it was we the best because tough fight,” said going to be a Jorge Rojas. Fallbrook coach Patriots both The Warriors and final league their placed third in posted a team won the first-ever standings. Fallbrook of 8-10-4, varsity boys soccer record Fallbrook High School March 8. regular-season Avocado West The 2013/2014 on for the program including a 3-4-3

the

Joe Naiman Village News Correspondent t County Join The North consisting Powers Authority Public Utility commuN i t Fallbrook i e s o f D e l uRainbow of the and the z , r a i N b ow , c a m p p e N Dl e t o N , pa l a , District (FPUD) District will be Municipal Water April 5. www.VillageNews. dissolved effective com vote March 5, A 4-1 Rainbow in opposition, with Dennis Sanford the termination of approved the agreement with joint powers to give them FPUD. “We votedto end the joint the 30-day notice Rainbow board powers,” said McManigle. president George the notice McManigle deliveredon March 6. FPUD of termination to

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28th annual Avocado Festiv Phoenix coming Sunday, April 13 al Patriot Band to perform see WATER, page

Ken Seals photo

Volume 18, Issue 15

ENTERTAINMENT

A-12

at Avocado Festival

REAL ESTATE

Special district in Fallbrook tax d for forme I-15 housing project

TEMECULA – The Phoenix Patriot Band will be performing at the Avocado Festival Sunday, April 13 from 1 to 4 p.m. at the food court located at E. Hawthorne St. They will be playing a mixed genre of rock cover songs. The band serves as a signature band supporting the music program of the Phoenix Patriot Foundation (PPF), may be a a 501 c3 Sgt. Julian Torresthat doesn’t non-profit organization but providing rs finalize double amputee, in “giving Superviso see BAND, page B-7 slow him down combat veterans arrangement for back” to other the same plight. Ridge Creek experiencing Torres the Horse Debbie Ramsey That’s what makes a Homes for work by recipient Managing Editor many of localGird perfect Road MacDonald, Joe Naiman adding Village News photo off artists,” said they would in recent Troops project News Correspondent “The Fallbrook be Our MacDonald. Village years contest locations located in these spots: Avenue Football Boosters sell avocado a O n S u n d a y, A p r i have been at the “community in Fallbrook. l 1 3 , packs of the Arts, the beer garden location; Facilities dream every is our Main Avenue will undergo year; (at stage” across from our Fallbrook “This The Community Horse but not too Scrappy’s a Vintage theAve.), Mission Tire, for 346 S. country Main Car ofClub transformation that happens (CFD) has100 a mini little slice District car and now Theater, the stage percent only show two at the community city; it’s the festival; once each year, with an stage, located at the Elder will now be Ridge development packing houses far atfrom Creek expected Creek House, corner this yearexists. Torres. “When which Horse will be at Del Reyenthused Main and of Main and 70,000 plus visitors streaming like and McDaniel’s perfect,” officially areour Elder Elder. [where (the Elder development House property). location up and down the thoroughfare involved, well a proposed as many others. we sawasthe Ridge isare the be built], we fell Contests always For 15 corner would part ofnear to experience the 28th who the enjoy home Interstate the completedfun in newthose the Avocado annual each 76. at the When festival see FESTIVAL, page A-10 Yamkova, Drew, Huff, State Route Avocado Festival, sponsored of Festival. new it.” While “avocado” love with in year, items each always Torres will reside intersection year by the Fallbrook Chamber and Zelasco honored the eye. this year, latecatch B-10 of his high school “There with Commerce. will be see SPECIAL, page avocadoson 3, in the home Ashley, oilJJ, soaps, body oil, eand Lucette Moramarco This year’s event looks lotions; sweetheart-wif to 1. Analicia, Staff Writer artwork, as popular as ever. “Over be avocado avocado daughter and honey, ceremony 450 and avocado vendors are signed up and beer,” explained Gaita At a groundbreaking we have MacDonald. 9, Carlo Marchthere Nataliya Yamkova of a great cross-selection of “Of course, held Sunday, will Oasis crafts presided High School and Hailey more,” said chamber CEO and also beofguacamole for Our and Troops I believe how Drew, Lila avocadoHomes explaining Ben Huff, and Brittney MacDonald. gelato. Each of these homes over the event, Zelasco provides vendors will of Fallbrook High School T h e r e a r e s o m eChristine Rinaldi photo be identified with soldiers. the organization a l o c a l banner that wounded honored as Students of the were organizations says “Stop for his family’s new and Avocado andfor of for America’s businesses Month Our Troops; Products.” Julian Torres amongst for the Fallbrook Union Homes speakers in support Gaita,the ceremony for Sgt. from left, Carlo vendors. High daughter Live Additional included USMC Sgt. JJ and“Our groundbreaking School District (FUHSD) Avenue is also on tap. “There of thewith Artsson for Our Troops are, the project Participating in the wife Ashley features Majorwill music at a Larock Benford, be Major special celebratory breakfast provided by Homes Mayor; Sgt. Julian Torres and his Bill Horn; and USMC Sgt. the four live (Ret.) bands,” said Bill Fallbrook home Supervisor Honorary Supervisor held April 3 at the Fallbrook San Diego County World Industries; Martin Quiroz, Fallbrook Honorary Herrera, Community Center. field rep for Armstrong and Fallbrook Lee, Kyle, Horn, Joe Analicia, Quiroz. Cunningham, Mayor Martin for Our d (Ret.) Larock Benford. see STUDENTS, page C-11 Torres said Homeshis wife’s Tucker recognize his and Troops made true. come Ramsey dream one short Debbie Editor On July 15, 2010, deployed to Managing month after being lost his left of Ivy High Jasmine Herrera Cunningham, Afghanistan, Torres right leg his and knee leg below the an School and AmandaHailey Tucker after stepping on Kyle, and above the knee device (IED) James School were Joe Naiman improvised explosive in Marjah. of Fallbrook High of the Month Village News Correspondent crossing a canal out of the honored as Students while High Debbie Ramsey evacuated Fallbrook Union at a committees and Medically limit on Gum those can contain Managing Editor had to be for the (FUHSD) The 35 mph speed Stage Coach Torres said, “I an additional two country, to 25 people all along School District breakfast per Tree Lane betweenLane has been subcommittee.”taken to major hospitals me special celebratory Throwing a special event Lane and Hamilton enforcement. they could keep with a Planning thethe way soFestival Avocado guest list of 70,000 is not , page B-13 recertified for radar an until I got stateside.” County see STUDENTS stabilized task. Fallbrook’s signature easy begins on the day of the event the States, Torres Joe Naiman A 5-0 San Diego vote annual Once in the UnitedWalter Reed event, the Avocado Festival, year prior. Village News Correspondent Board of Supervisors the radar treated at “On the day was where of the takes a full year of planning festival, February 26 approved and we give each vendor in Bethesda, Md., Hospital for the 0.76-mile collaboration on behalf a ‘speedy The Avocado West League recertification sure his initial rehabilitation of the renewal’ form he received need to make Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce which allowstherapies before soccer coaches conferred girls segment. “We and has all 2 them to sign up for allsurgeries to produce. the next yearDiego. league honors upon five ts ������������������������Ato that law enforcement members coming to San ������� A-10 tools available Diego Announcemen “It’s a team effort,” said chamber and receive a discount,” of the Fallbrook High School said ���������������������������� the necessary opinion, San MacDonald. “About“In team. to keep our roads CEO Lila MacDonald. “We 50 my percentMedical Center is Business �������������������������������� B-11 Jocelyn Urbina was a member them in order have take advantage Balboa Bill Horn. two co-chairs this year, of this, Naval of the league’s first which that’s where Classifieds����������������������������������� A-14 safe,” said SupervisorTree Lane’s George means we are already team. top of the sphere; said. thehalf-full Coupons Gum Archibald (one of the Honorable mention recognition for he ���������������A-8 photo “Recertifying original theShane Gibson for rehab,” for radar next ���������������������������� year.” went I limit his founders) Dining and went to Angelina Rojas, he speed and Frazier in GaryH. ������ B-12 Shimer, 35 mph Savannah explained that n of plans and Logistical Torres allow officers in fronttoofaWilliam been Education ���������������������������� B-14 addition re-authorizatio McInerny, Jenna Murphy, needed committee enforcement will radar guns to Traffic accumulates over 26 years old, had Lane whereofthe supplies arefrom and �������������������������� Tree wife,iteach many when Gum to use 25on people Lilly Durbin. comes help withtoallhelp School monitortomotorists to buy in recent Entertainment A-12 to continue to aspects the big event. in place of vehicles and Elementary looking for a home have to contain Health & Fitness ��������������������� of will be put festival planning. 4 Also, even measure the speed radar enforcement years, but it would cessary.” en ������������������������B-

see SOCCER, page

B-3 CIF championship

home get new amputee soldier, family home for double WoundedTroops to build custom Homes for Our

Debbie Ramsey Managing Editor

EDUCATION

Outstanding students recognized

Village News Reader Janet M. Swenson photo

SOURCEBOOK 2015

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Pala Mesa Resort –

The

Crown

Jewel

of Anil Yadav’s Portfolio by Julie Reeder

A

Shane Gibson photos

fter years of bank ownership, Pala Mesa Resort and Spa is now in the capable hands of new owner Anil Yadav, who is the perfect person to recreate the property into something beautiful. He says, “Not one inch of this resort will be untouched by the time we finish with it. When we’re done, it will be one of the elite properties in this vicinity.” Anil Yadav initially walked away from buying the property twice, but on the third approach from the bank, he said “I just couldn’t say ‘no,’ and now I’m so glad I didn’t. We were looking to diversify and this property became available. When I pulled into this resort it was so peaceful. With the surrounding hills, it makes you feel love and positive energy.” He knew that in order to bring the property up to a standard that he would be proud of, he would need to make a significant investment and the property would need a lot of attention. Yadav believes, however, that it will be well worth it. “I believe this property is going to be my pride and joy and the crown jewel of my portfolio by the time we are finished.” Anil and his team are turn-around experts. He owns 314 restaurants and has over 8,000 employees. “I’m used to a lot of moving parts and blending it all into a complete package. We will do it right. It’s harder than just a restaurant.” Over 200 of the restaurants he owns are Jack in the Box stores, where Anil started as a fry cook at the age of 18 while he was in high school in Northern California. He came to this country in 1982 from India. He was seeking a better life in the U.S. His family was sponsored into this country by his brother. “My brother owned a hotel. That’s how we got here and since then I have always liked the hospitality industry.” 142

At the time, Anil was a senior in high school. “I didn’t know a word of English or the culture. We didn’t really even have TV then.” It was a challenge for him but he learned to talk to people and he learned the culture. He wanted to learn electronics, which his high school didn’t offer, so he rode his bike four or five miles to Sequoia High School every day for a good electronics program. In 1984, while in school as a senior, he started a job at Jack in the Box as a fry cook. “I liked what I was doing at the restaurant.” However, he said being a minority was a challenge at the time. “I was overlooked at first and trained myself. I wanted to perform at the highest level.” His hard work paid off and he was promoted to Team Leader, Assistant, and then Manager in 1986. He continued, “There’s always been the desire to be successful.” Anil went on to community college in a nearby town where he transferred to another Jack in the Box restaurant. He was working full time and working nights at the restaurant. After transferring to San Jose State University, Anil transferred to a San Jose Jack in the Box as well, where he worked nights. It was while he worked at this restaurant that he heard the term “franchise” and wanted to learn more. “Franchising wasn’t big then. In 1987 Jack in the Box sent letters out explaining that they were looking for candidates to be franchisees.” His manager at the time explained that people could own the franchises. Anil was intrigued and excited, believing this was part of his American Dream. He went back to his family and friends and was able to secure enough investment for a down payment on a store that was struggling, and he purchased his first franchise for $625,000. “I’m very fortunate that my brother and sister were willing to help. July 7, www.my-sourcebook.com


1989 is the day an entrepreneur was born!” Again, Anil’s hard work paid off and his store was a success. Jack in the Box noticed what a great job he did with the turn around. They offered him another store, which he purchased and successfully turned that around as well. Soon they offered him more stores, one by one. He was successful with all of them. In December of 1991, when the E. coli scare happened — which Anil is quick to point out, didn’t originate with Jack in the Box — Anil lost 50% of his business overnight. He turned to the community and rolled up his sleeves. He says he worked with churches and schools and did deliveries and phone orders. “By God’s grace the consumers came back.” After that rough time, Anil made Marketer of the Year for Jack in the Box. His stores gained all that was lost, but the franchise as a whole was down over 30%. Jack in the Box became a champion in the food safety arena. After hiring a NASA scientist, eventually their new food handling systems became industry standard for the HACCP (Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points) restaurant food handling. After the storm, he was offered three more stores because they were in trouble and he turned them around in 1995. “In 1997 two others were in trouble so they asked me to buy them. That’s when I brought in my manager. He became a partner, and we had seven total.” Anil makes the point that it was important to him to go back to the people who had helped contribute to his success, including his last manager, and bring them into his company. “I have gone back

Indoor dining area of Aquaterra restaurant at Pala Mesa Resort in Fallbrook. Shane Gibson photo

and taken care of the people who were some sort of connection to my success. For instance, the person who recommended for me to get a job, I gave him ownership.” In 2003 his success was threatened when Jack in the Box came to him with a group of 25 corporate stores in the Bay Area. These stores were a part of a re-franchising effort and had many operational opportunities. Anil was able to procure the financing to purchase the large number of stores outside his market area, but he said the large project almost broke him. “We didn’t have the systems and people in place for such a large number of stores. It totally takes a different style of management, and that’s when I almost went broke because we grew too fast and didn’t have infrastructure.” But, like most entrepreneurs, they worked tirelessly, invested everything they had, and got through it.

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SOURCEBOOK 2015

k

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143


“I didn’t give up and I put they can talk to me about anything.” everything we had into it and stuck “You have to connect with the to my belief system. We stuck with people and early in my career I it and it was successful and they never got that, and I wished I could saw again what we could do.” have.” “Again they asked me to enter the Anil understands that an market in Texas with 25 more stores. important part of the success of Pala In the Houston market we bought Mesa depends on creating a culture 25 stores and we were prepared that will foster long-term quality and ready to take over and apply employees. “I enjoy creating the Hotel lobby entrance at Pala Mesa Resort in Fallbrook. Shane Gibson photo best practices. We learned from our culture where you’re comfortable previous experience. Jack in the Box saw what we could and have the tools you need and you’re rewarded for do so they offered us 20 more. We kept doing the things hard work. I believe in a nurturing atmosphere where we needed to do. Then we were offered another 10 in there is consistent respect for who they work for, and northern California and then another 20 and 58 in San employees are given an environment in which they wish Antonio, so currently I own about 220 Jack in the Box to work.” restaurants.” In his personal life, he’s now been happily married 25 His company has now diversified their portfolio to years and has three kids, ranging in age from age 13 to 22. over 300 restaurants with seven brands. He says, “It’s With all his entrepreneurial success, he is most excited been great.” When asked, “How do you do it with over about Pala Mesa. 300 restaurants?” He said, “Good people and good According to Anil, he is living the ultimate American structure.” Dream, for which he is very thankful. “We’re blessed “I now have in excess of 8,000 employees who work Anil Yadav’s family. Courtesy photo with what God has given us, and we don’t want to take for me, but I still feel like the same guy who started as a it for granted.” fry cook.” He laughed as he said, “I still pick up the mop in the kitchen Pala Mesa Resort is located at 2001 Old Highway 395 in Fallbrook. For more and people get nervous when I do that. I believe I’m approachable and information, visit www.palamesa.com or call (760) 728-5881.

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Marilee Lowe Community supporter and expert Realtor An active leader in the community for over 30 years, Marilee Lowe is also a successful Realtor who is passionate about maintaining Fallbrook and Bonsall’s rural atmosphere, beautiful trail system, and country lifestyle. A President’s Gold Award-winner with Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties, Marilee is a top producer that specializes in equestrian properties as well as single-family homes, condos, investment properties, and more.

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Susie Emory Selling Cottages to Castles Coldwell Banker Village Properties

W

hen you call Susie Emory to list your house for sale, she is backed by a team at Coldwell Banker Village Properties who all work together to meet your home-selling needs. “We have a unique marketing concept that no one else provides,” Emory said. “We have a full time graphic artist and an in-house print shop.” What this means for clients, is that Coldwell Banker Village Properties can respond immediately in providing all of the marketing materials needed to get your house noticed. Susie Emory can also help you find your next home. As a Fallbrook-area Realtor for more than 25 years, Susie Emory wears many hats. “I’m an adviser, a good listener, a caregiver, a problem-solver and sometimes I have to be a mind-reader,” she says with a warm smile. In business, as in life, Emory treats others as she likes to be treated. “I handle my clients with care and constant attention,” she says. “I love meeting new people and figuring out what

“I figure out what my clients need and then I try to meet those needs through good, honest work... I’m not greedy. I know what’s out there and I know my competition. I am willing to work with other agents and I always put my clients first.” – Susie Emory they need and want in a home purchase or sale. No two deals are the same. I welcome the challenge of meeting my clients’ needs.” Emory’s office is filled with awards and photographs of satisfied clients. Numerous testimonials, repeat business and referrals are a tribute to her honest work ethic and upbeat, positive outlook on life. “I figure out what my clients need and then I try to meet those needs through good, honest work,” she says. “I’m not greedy. I know what’s out there and I know my competition. I am willing to work with other agents and I always put my clients first.”

Susie Emory

Today’s homebuyers are more astute than they used to be, thanks to the Internet. “Oftentimes clients know what areas they want to look at and are pre-qualified for a loan when I meet them,” Emory says. “They’ve done their homework.” When asked what advice she would give new and seasoned buyers, Emory is quick with her answer: “Make sure your credit is exemplary,” she says. Emory knows north inland San Diego County like she knows the back of her hand. She also represents clients in Riverside County and provides them with the same hard work and genuine caring. Call Susie Emory to list your property for sale, or to help you discover a new life by finding your dream home!

Susie Emory Coldwell Banker Village Properties 5256 S. Mission Rd, Ste 310 Bonsall, CA 92003 1615 S. Mission Road, Ste C Fallbrook, CA 92028

(760) 525-9744 CalBRE #01079037

SOURCEBOOK 2015

145


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TEMECULA— At the Jan. 13 Temecula Valley Unified School District Board Meeting, the Temecula Valley Foundation for Excellence in Education presented 61 educators with funds to support arts and science programs benefitting students at 23 schools in the Temecula district.

Day of Action highlights Former Menifee resident human trafficking in the Nia Sanchez competing Temecula Valley in Miss Universe pageant

see page B-3

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as Circus Varg coming to A-8 Temecula,

Safe Place Director Fonda McGeasy explains the purpose of Day of Action to nearly three dozen volunteers at Calvary Murrieta on Kim Harris photo Saturday, Jan. 17.

Nia Sanchez, a former Menifee resident and Miss USA 2014, will compete in the Miss Universe pageant on Sunday, Jan. 25 in Doral, Courtesy photo Fla.

Kim Harris Managing Editor

Laura Rathbun Writer

Nearly three dozen volunteers gathered at Calvary Murrieta on Saturday, Jan. 17 to raise awareness about human trafficking and how to stop it. The Day of Action campaign included the distribution of fliers in the Riverside metropolitan area, Lake Elsinore, Murrieta, Temecula and parts of the Coachella Valley. The notice details the consequences of sex and labor trafficking and how victims can get help.

Volunteers were given a brief training and then went out into town to place anti-human trafficking posters in adult book shops, bus stops, hospital emergency rooms, rest stops, truck stops and liquor stores. The event came about as a way to help enforce legislation signed into law by Gov. Jerry Brown in 2012. The legislation added to section 52.6 of the California Civil Code, creates a legal requirement for certain types of businesses to

see ACTION, page A-6

Nia Sanchez, a former Menifee resident and Miss USA 2014, will compete in the Miss Universe pageant on Sunday, Jan. 25 in Doral, Fla. The event will be televised live on NBC at 8 p.m. EST and recorded for rebroadcast at 8 p.m. PST. Sanchez, 24, won the title of Miss USA on June 8 at the Baton Rouge River Center in Louisiana. She represented the state of Nevada where she now lives after moving to Las Vegas in 2013. She beat out

50 other contestants from all the states and the District of Columbia for the title of 63rd Miss USA. Her other past titles include Miss Menifee Valley 2008, Miss Citrus Valley USA 2009, Miss Riverside County USA 2011 and Miss Hollywood USA 2012. “My life has completely changed,” Sanchez told Las Vegas Sun reporter Robin Leach in a recent telephone interview as she prepped for the upcoming pageant. “It’s been an unforgettable year,

see SANCHEZ, page A-9

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I-15/SR76 Projects Shane Gibson photos

Mostly in Formative Stages by Joe Naiman

T

he Campus Park, Horse Creek Ridge, Meadowood, and Campus Park West projects along State Route 76 east of Interstate 15 are for the most part now in the formative stages. Approvals such as general plan or specific plan amendments, rezones, and tentative maps are discretionary actions, as are any necessary annexations. Ministerial actions, which are granted upon fee payment and compliance with a checklist, do not require the approval of a governing body or department director. In May 2011 the San Diego County Board of Supervisors approved the General Plan Amendment, Specific Plan Amendment, zone reclassification, vesting site plan, vested tentative map, and environmental findings for Passerelle’s Campus Park project. The supervisors approved 521 single-family dwelling units, 230 condominium dwelling units, a town center commercial area totaling 61,200 square feet, 157,000 square feet of professional office area, an 8.5-acre active sports park, six neighborhood parks, a community center, 5 miles of trails, and 197 acres of biological open space. D.R. Horton subsequently purchased the residential component, which is now called Horse Creek Ridge. The one percent base property tax will not be sufficient to fund county, San Diego County Flood Control District, or North County Fire Protection District services, and in February 2014 the Board of Supervisors approved a Community Facilities District for Horse Creek Ridge which assesses an initial total of $1,123 per singlefamily unit, $852 per multi-family unit, and $7,400 per acre of undeveloped property with an annual two percent increase to cover the increased cost of service. In January 2012 the Board of Supervisors approved Pardee Homes’ Meadowood project which will include 397 single-family homes, 447 multi-family units, 13 acres for an elementary school which will be built by the Bonsall Unified School District, four acres of park land, 128 acres of biological open space, 47 acres of agricultural open space, 5.9 miles of trails, and a wastewater SOURCEBOOK 2015

treatment plant. The supervisors’ action also certified the Environmental Impact Report which included a statement of verified water service ability. The Meadowood area was within the San Luis Rey Municipal Water District, which is not part of the San Diego County Water Authority, and the Board of Supervisors’ conditions included annexation of the Meadowood property into the SDCWA. In April 2014 San Diego County’s Local Agency Formation Committee, which is responsible for jurisdictional boundary changes, annexed 267 acres of the total 390-acre project into the Valley Center Municipal Water District, the CWA, and the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, detached 243 of those acres from the San Luis Rey Municipal Water District, and annexed the entire 390 acres into the North County Fire Protection District while detaching that area from the San Diego County Regional Fire Authority. Although only the 267 acres proposed for development were annexed into the water districts, the desire to avoid a non-contiguous “island” resulted in the entire property being detached from the countyadministered SDCRFA and annexed into the North County Fire Protection District. In March 2013 the NCFPD board approved a property tax transfer agreement which will transfer seven percent of the one percent base property tax from the county to the fire district; the NCFPD board approved such a transfer for Horse Creek Ridge in October 2013. Pappas Investments’ Campus Park West development was approved by the Board of Supervisors in June 2014. Campus Park West will consist of 283 multi-family dwelling units, 513,000 square feet of commercial use, 120,000 square feet of limited industrial use, and 31 acres of biological open space in a 116.5-acre area. Some of that land is already within the Rainbow Municipal Water District, CWA, and MWD boundaries, but 99.94 acres will be detached from the San Luis Rey Municipal Water district and annexed into the Rainbow Municipal Water District, the CWA, and MWD. The annexation will also include 141.3 acres of 147


California Department of Transportation right-of-way, although the Caltrans area will not be subject to the annexation fees and property tax assessments. The annexation will still need final approval from the SDCWA and MWD as well as final paperwork and fee payments, but LAFCO approved the annexation by an 8-0 vote February 2. The CWA has provided two of the three necessary board approvals in the process, including a January 22 approval of MWD’s conditional approval of the annexation which also requested that MWD set formal terms and conditions. MWD’s next step is to adopt a resolution along with consent for the annexation while fixing terms and conditions. The CWA will follow by adopting the resolution to approve, conditionally approve, or deny the annexation and accepting MWD’s terms and conditions for any approval. LAFCO will then file a notice of completion after the terms and conditions of the water agencies are satisfied. A tentative parcel map becomes a final map after all conditions of the tentative map, other than those for which permits cannot be issued until a final map is recorded, are fulfilled. The conditions of a final map include secured agreements to ensure that the infrastructure will be built and that payment for labor and materials used to build the infrastructure will be made. The Board

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Significant brush clearing will take place during the development of the I-15 corridor.

of Supervisors must approve the secured agreements. A final map only creates legal lots; grading and building permits must comply with all elements of the checklist including environmental protection measures. Payment of the Transportation Impact Fee as well as of processing fees is required to build new development. The TIF ordinance designates the area by State Route 76 east of Interstate 15 as a Village Core area; the current TIF payments are $3,760 per single-family residential unit, $3,192 per multi-family residential unit, $2,621 per 1,000 square feet for general commercial stores, $2,073 per 1,000 square feet for office use, and $1,155 per 1,000 square feet for industrial space.

www.my-sourcebook.com


Jameson Investments, LLC We Buy Houses Fast for Cash

T

his team of U.S. Marine Corps veterans know what it’s like to serve, and their combined expertise in buying and renovating homes is focused on keeping the charm in their own community: Fallbrook. Kris McCullough has 14 years’ experience in real estate investment, and his wife, Kim, is a licensed real estate agent. After buying and beautifying homes in Texas, Greater San Diego and Riverside areas, they decided in 2014 to establish Jameson Investments, LLC, and base their real estate solutions company in Fallbrook, where they call home. “When we looked around, especially in Fallbrook, we saw that we had so many opportunities to buy houses and give them a new life because the homes here are mainly custom, which, during the renovation process allows the house to become what it should be,” Kris McCullough said. But their first priority is in helping the current homeowners quickly sell their home for free. They help homeowners who may be faced with situations such as divorce, probate, a tax lien on their house, a foreclosure, an unwanted rental or an immediate need to relocate. “We buy houses, and are looking to pay cash,” he said. Many times, he added, Jameson Investments is able to nearly offer retail price for the home. The seller pays no real estate commissions or closing costs, and the houses purchased by Jameson Investments are bought in as-is conditions with no

(L-R) Kenneth Ziembo, Kim McCullough, Kris McCullough, Chet Smith

repairs required by the homeowner. “We go above and beyond to provide a service for people,” Kim McCullough said. They offer a fair market value price for the home, which can be in any location or any condition. “It has to be a win-win for them and for us,” she said. The course of action moves quickly, and with the team handling all of the necessary paperwork, inspections, escrow and such, its aim is for a hassle-free experience. Chet Smith, acquisitions manager, personally interacts with sellers and guides them step-by-step, up to moving day. “I go on site and visit the home, talk with the people, break it down and show them the process,” he said. “If everything works out, I get them into escrow.” The homeowner chooses the day they want escrow to close, which can be as soon as 3-to-7 days. Then, on the flip side, the team begins the dream building and implements the design for the renovation.

“The seller pays no real estate commissions or closing costs, and the houses purchased by Jameson Investments are bought in as-is conditions with no repairs required by the homeowner.”

SOURCEBOOK 2015

Kim McCullough said that the beauty lies in giving the home a new life and a new purpose. “We are here to purchase homes, renovate homes, and sell renovated homes to wonderful families,” she said. Kenneth Ziembo, marketing manager, is the man behind the curtains who then contacts real estate agents about the newly remodeled homes for sale. Jameson Investments also offers renovation services for homeowners who want to fix up their home. Kris McCullough said they can help with the design and affordability by offering the team’s experience in home makeovers, and Jameson Investments’ contractor’s prices. “And after we renovate it, we’re doing our part, one house at a time to revitalize Fallbrook,” he said. Call 760-451-6108 or visit www. Jameson-Investments.com.

Jameson Investments 116 W. College Fallbrook, CA 92028 (760) 451-6108 www.jameson-investments.com

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The

Brown Family by Nathalie Taylor

R

iding horses in old west costumes, shooting rifles from atop a horse at full run, driving a stagecoach – do these activities sound like a page from a history book? Yes, for most of us, but “no” to the Brown family of Rainbow. Jerry and Colleen Brown and their daughter Lori have been living a page of history for a long time. In 1945, Jerry moved to Rainbow with his family and even rode his horse to school as a child. The school was Vallecitos School, then a one-room schoolhouse. Jerry eventually became a pilot for United Airlines in 1964,

Kodi Rogers photo

Colleen Brown, Jerry Brown and Lori Brown Smith in the 2013 Rose Parade representing the Ramona Pageant.

Jerry Burke Jr. REALTOR® – 21 Year Navy Retired 2014-2015 Honorary Mayor of Fallbrook

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of Rainbow Ride for History retiring in 1999 as a Boeing 747 Captain. That was when he learned to drive a stagecoach, pulled by the family’s own Arabian horses. “He traded his four engines for four horses,” Colleen said with a laugh. Their life as performers started with driving horses for parades and weddings and evolved from there. In 1997, the family was in a show called the “Ramona Pageant,” and has participated every year since then. It is based on a novel entitled, “Ramona,” written by Helen Hunt Jackson. Jerry commented, “The Ramona Pageant enhances the cultural heritage of the future by preserving the traditions and lessons of the past.” Parading in Pasadena Jerry and Colleen have ridden in 12 Pasadena Tournament of Roses Parades with different equestrian units including the Ramona Pageant and the Spirit of the West Riders representing the John Wayne Cancer Foundation. (The latter group is outfitted in historically accurate costumes and gear – even down to saddles and bridles.) Jerry and Colleen’s last Rose Parade

appearance was in 2013. A rider since age five, Lori rode in her first Rose Parade in 2000. To date, she has appeared in 15 Rose Parades. Over the years she has enjoyed her various horses and costumes as well as the energetic atmosphere. “There is an amazing charge of energy in the air after the B-2 bombers fly over,” she said. “It is going to start – it is real now… there is a flashing of moments – the flowers – the color – the crispness of the air,” she related. The family – horses and all – drive up to Pasadena the night before the parade. One direction of I-210 is closed and that is where they set up camp for the night. The next morning the parade officials direct the riders into the parade. “Not all horses can take the high tension, loud noises and music of the Rose Parade, but our horses can,” Colleen explained. In one parade they were positioned in front of the China Airlines float. This could have posed a problem for the horses because loud fireworks were being discharged, but the Brown horses weren’t skittish at all. On New Year’s Day 2006 it rained and rained. They all had

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SOURCEBOOK 2015

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rivers of rain pouring off their hats. But, although the rains soaked their costumes, it didn’t dampen their spirits. “It wasn’t ideal – it was cold and wet – but the rain didn’t bother the horses,” Lori said. “It was a new frontier – one more memorable moment.” On December 31, 2014, the day before the 2015 Rose Parade, it snowed in North County San Diego for the first time in at least 40 years. “Here we are in Southern California and we were getting snowed in,” Lori said. “It was touch and go for a while – I didn’t know if we were going to be able to make it to the parade.” Jerry and Colleen test drove the route on the winding road down the mountain to be sure that it would be safe for a motorhome pulling a horse trailer. They deemed it safe, so at 7 p.m. that evening the Browns wound down the mountain with their precious cargo – destination Pasadena. Creating Costumes Lori’s interest in sewing began at an early age with instruction from her grandmother – her dedication eventually led to a fashion design degree from Palomar College. Lori made her first Rose Parade costume in 2000 and has continued, sewing

many of her costumes by hand. She is particularly interested in the period between 1850 and 1930, and has used vintage and historical material, including ribbons and silk. Lori said she is excited about incorporating into costumes the historical pieces that have survived. One intricate dress inspired by the film, “Pirates of the Caribbean,” was a national award winner: “2005 IFSHA Grand Nationals Champion Period Costume.” She was honored with this title while riding the Brown’s Friesian stallion, Alger – sidesaddle. Hello Hollywood! The Browns have done film work with both the History Channel and the Discovery Channel. Lori created most of the costumes they wore during filming. In the Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid History Channel reenactment Jerry rode his own horse while appearing as a Pinkerton detective. He chased Butch and Sundance on horseback while shooting a rifle. Lori played the historical figure, Etta Place, in the same reenactment. The family appeared in several different episodes of a History Channel reenactment series of the First Train Robbery. They

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were costumed passengers, in a steam locomotive that was really chugging down the track. “To be able to be a part of this – something that really happened – it is a real joy,” Colleen related. “You see the countryside going past and it is like you are back in time.” Lori was a stunt rider (playing Annie Oakley) in an “Annie Get Your Gun,” play where she had to ride her horse at a run across the stage. If that wasn’t difficult enough, she also had to shoot The Brown’s Stagecoach and Arabian horses driven by Jerry Brown with Colleen Brown and Lori Courtesy photo her rifle at the same time. Bright Brown Smith as passengers. spotlights were trained on her so she couldn’t see ahead, but had to trust that her horse, Bud, been given to ride – to parade – and to showcase their skills and would go exactly where he was supposed to go. Bud did his job. horses. “We all love horses – it was fun to take the horses and do Lori played Annie Oakley in nine shows. Like Annie Oakley – Lori is an accomplished riflewoman, in fact, she was the “2005 something with them,” Jerry noted. Lori said, “There is nothing better than being on a horse in a CMSA Women’s World Rifle Champion.” The Browns are grateful for the opportunities that they have beautiful costume and just riding like the wind.”

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SOURCEBOOK 2015

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153


Advertiser Index 127 West Social House......................... pg 69 A Healing Touch Massage Therapy....... pg 54 A+ Urgent Care................................. pg 1, 44 Ace Party Productions........................... pg 25 Acupuncture & Chinese Herbal Medicine................................. pg 47 Adolfo & Manny Pool Supplies.............. pg 79 Affordable & Quality Home Care Services.......................... pg 40 All Star Physical Therapy...................... pg 45 Allstate Insurance - Ross E. Curtis...... pg 122 Angel Society of Fallbrook..................... pg 59 Aquaterra Restaurant at Pala Mesa Resort...................... pg 70, 131 Autoheim............................................... pg 15 Beach House Winery............................. pg 19 Bead Gallery............................................ pg 9 Bejoca Landscape Management..........pg 116 Bishop’s Tree Service............................ pg 85 Bonsall Chamber of Commerce.......... pg 130 Boys & Girls Club of North County........ pg 61 Brett Parkinson, Attorney..................... pg 129 Brother’s Bistro...................................... pg 71 Bucket of Nails...................................... pg 77 Café Bloom at Myrtle Creek.................. pg 67 Cahuilla Casino............................... pg 23, 68 Choices, The Buffet at Pala Casino Spa & Resort................. pg 67

154

Club Paradise Fitness........................... pg 39 Coldwell Banker Village Properties..... pg 143 Complete Pest Control........................ pg 103 County of San Diego Recycling............. pg 89 CR Properties Real Estate Services....pg 112 Curbside Cafe....................................... pg 67 Custom Touch Electric........................... pg 90 Cyan Insurance Solutions....................pg 115 Diane Hartcorn.......................................pg 11 Dr. Richard Goble, DDS........................ pg 41 Dr. Theresa R. Sheridan, DO................ pg 47 Ed Shobe Plumbing............................. pg 101 El Jardín.......................................... pg 68, 75 El Parque Restaurant............................ pg 71 Eli’s Farms............................................. pg 10 Equity Management............................ pg 125 Espresso Lounge.................................. pg 69 Fallbrook Air Service............................. pg 14 Fallbrook Alarm..................................... pg 94 Fallbrook Cafe....................................... pg 68 Fallbrook Chamber of Commerce....... pg 108 Fallbrook Chorale.................................. pg 27 Fallbrook Eyecare Center...................... pg 48 Fallbrook Food Pantry........................... pg 63 Fallbrook FroYo..................................... pg 68 Fallbrook Golf Course........................... pg 73 Fallbrook Healthcare District................. pg 55 Fallbrook Healthcare Partners......... pg 52, 53

Fallbrook Heating & Air Conditioning..... pg 87 Fallbrook Overhead Doors and Entry Gates................................. pg 83 Fallbrook Podiatry................................. pg 36 Fallbrook Pregnancy Resource Center. pg 63 Fallbrook Propane Gas Co.................... pg 97 Fallbrook Vintage Village....................... pg 77 Fallbrook’s Paradise Pet Spa.................. pg 9 First Choice Loan Services, Inc............pg 110 Fit By Design......................................... pg 38 Foundation for Senior Care................... pg 49 Fresco Grill and Wine Bar..................... pg 72 Garden Center Cafe & Grill............. pg 71, 74 Geri Sides - Coldwell Banker Village Properties............................. pg 152 Goin’ Postal........................................... pg 20 Golden Kitchen Thai Food..................... pg 67 Graybill Medical Group.......................... pg 51 Hartcorn Construction........................... pg 93 HomeSmart Real Estate...................... pg 139 Innovative Healthcare Consultants........ pg 43 Isagenix................................................pg 114 Jack’s Place........................................... pg 70 James C. Alvord, Attorney................... pg 122 Jameson Investments................. pg 148, 149 Janine Hall - Remax United................. pg 144 Jerry Burke, Jr. Keller Williams Realty.............. pg 109, 150

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John Hine Subaru.............. Inside Back Cover John Hine Temecula Mazda.. Inside Back Cover Johnson Interiors & More, Inc............. pg 100 Juice Vault............................................. pg 69 Kaiser Permanente.......................Back Cover Knockout Pest Control & Termite........... pg 99 La Caseta Fine Mexican Food.............. pg 69 Las Brisas Mexican Restaurant............. pg 70 Lilac Hills Ranch.................................. pg 133 Magee’s Tavern..................................... pg 70 Maggie Rogan - Rogan & Associates... pg 151 Main Street Cafe................................... pg 71 Marilee Lowe - Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices.................................. pg 144 Merrill Lynch Wealth Management...... pg 121 Miranda & Associates...........................pg 119 Mr. B’s Discount Blinds.......................... pg 95 Mulligan Family Fun Center.................. pg 31 Myrtle Creek Botanical Gardens..... pg 32, 33 Nessy Burger......................................... pg 65 New Day Solar.................................... pg 102 North County Welding Supply............... pg 80 North County Window & Door............. pg 106 Pala Transfer Station........................... pg 103 Palomar Health..................Inside Front Cover Paradise Buick GMC............................. pg 17 Paradise Chevrolet Cadillac.................. pg 16 Paul W. Blake, Attorney....................... pg 120

Pediatric Partners.................................. pg 46 Peking Wok........................................... pg 72 Photo Bungalow...................................... pg 8 Pinktower Montessori School.............. pg 137 POSH Making Forgotten Furniture... Unforgettable................................... pg 105 R. Greene & Associates...................... pg 127 Rancho Family Medical Group.............. pg 37 Ray White Cement................................ pg 82 Richard A. Ferreras, MD........................ pg 42 Richard A. Nervig........................ pg 123, 127 Road Taken Media................................. pg 20 Roadrunner’s Bar & Grill at Cahuilla Casino.............................. pg 68 Robert W. Jackson, Attorney............... pg 128 Rosa’s Mexican Restaurant................... pg 70 Salon Ana.............................................pg 111 Salon de l’art Nouveau.......................... pg 10 Scoreboard Pizzeria.............................. pg 71 SDG&E................................................ pg 132 Shred and Go...................................... pg 124 Sonny’s Muffler & Auto.......................... pg 13 Spirit Mountain School........................ pg 138 Stellar Solar......................................... pg 107 Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Inc...........pg 118 Straight Nutrition.................................... pg 42 Sunpro Solar......................................... pg 96

Susie Emory - Coldwell Banker Village Properties............................. pg 145 T.A.K. Electric & Solar........................... pg 84 Team Gallegos - Rudy & Sandy, Remax United.................................. pg 153 Tekila Cocina Mexicana......................... pg 72 Thai Thai Restaurant............................. pg 68 The Collector Fine Jewelry...................... pg 7 The Madd Potter.................................... pg 88 The Pond Guy....................................... pg 83 Thompson & Associates...................... pg 151 Tony Ward & Jo Arends HomeSmart Real Estate.................. pg 152 Trupiano’s Italian Bistro......................... pg 69 Tutto Dolce............................................ pg 64 Udder Feed........................................... pg 12 Village Home Care................................ pg 38 Village News.................. pg 63, 140, 141, 146 Village Pizza of Bonsall......................... pg 72 Vista Valley Country Club........................ pg 3 Wash Me Please Car Wash..................... pg 5 Weichert, Realtors® Murphy & Murphy..............................pg 113 Welk Resorts Theatre............................ pg 29 Yama Restaurant & Sushi Bar......... pg 66, 67 Youngren Construction Inc.................... pg 91 Z Cafe.................................................... pg 72 Zion Lutheran School.......................... pg 137

Donna J Weaver photo SOURCEBOOK 2015

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PHOTO CONTEST WINNERS Our 3rd Annual Sourcebook Photo Contest was more popular than ever!

We asked our readers to submit photos of the community - people, places, events and everything that makes Fallbrook and Bonsall special! You responded with a vast array of beautiful choices. After careful consideration the winners have been chosen. Please view the photographs that made publication. We’re looking forward to next year’s contest!

1st Place - Donna J. Weaver See her photo on page 154 Sharon Arnstein Fallbrook/Bonsall................pg 135 Gage Auge Honorable Mention.....................pg 156 Shirley Binn Honorable Mention...................pg 156 Cheryl Bonham Hiking Guide.......................pg 34 Lori Bryant Church Guide..............................pg 56 Lori Bryant Non-Profit Guide.........................pg 59 Dolly Harty Calendar of Events.......................pg 28 Dolly Harty Non-Profit Guide.........................pg 60 Barbro Hutchinson Hiking Guide..................pg 34 Barbro Hutchinson Non-Profit Guide.pg 58, 59, 60 Connor Kuhn Table of Contents........................pg 4

2nd Place - Mike McCoy Connor Kuhn Honorable Mention.................pg 156 Matthew Kuhn Non-Profit Guide....................pg 59 Neil Lakata Hiking Guide..............................pg 35 Lucy Larson Fallbrook/Bonsall.....................pg 135 Mike McCoy Calendar of Events.....................pg 26 Ron Montoya Hiking Guide..........................pg 35 Ron Montoya Non-Profit Guide.....................pg 59 Ron Montoya Fallbrook/Bonsall....................pg 135 Jennifer Moosa Street Names......................pg 101 Cheryl Nurse Calendar of Events.............. pg 27, 30 Angie Peters Street Names..........................pg 102

See his photo on page 26

Angie Peters Village News..........................pg 146 Thomas Rondeau Honorable Mention..........pg 156 Ryan Sodomire Non-Profit Guide..................pg 59 Janet M. Swenson Non-Profit Guide..............pg 60 Janet M. Swenson Village News................. pg 141 Dirk Thayer Fallbrook/Bonsall.......................pg 134 Dirk Thayer Hiking Guide..............................pg 35 Donna J. Weaver Non-Profit Guide................pg 60 Donna J. Weaver Advertiser Index............... pg 154

Congratulations to our winners!

Honorable Mention - Connor Kuhn

To be considered for next year’s Sourcebook photo contest, please send your high resolution photo submissions to sourcebook@ thevillagenews.com.

Honorable Mention - Gage Auge

Look for advertisements regarding the contest in the Village News fall of 2015.

Honorable Mention - Thomas Rondeau 156

Honorable Mention - Shirley Binn www.my-sourcebook.com



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