Guides DECEMBER 13, 2013

Farmers Insurance Open

Hot shots on a cool course

Farmers Insurance Open

More than 100,000 spectators will attend the Farmers Insurance Open, thanks to big-name players and a fat purse (this year it’s $6.1 million). The televised PGA tournament is also a chance to show off our home turf to 350 million global viewers, many of whom probably can’t believe these magnificent views can be seen from a public course! The annual tourney, organized by the Century Club of San Diego, has been held at Torrey Pines Golf Course since 1968. Pictured above, Tiger Woods taps it in on the fourth green of the South Course. Will the seven-time champion return to defend his title? He doesn’t have to commit until the Friday before, so tune in, or make your way to La Jolla January 23 to 26 to find out.

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Everything SD MARCH 2, 2026

The Locals’ Guide to Visiting La Jolla, CA

Explore the ins-and-outs of this coastal beach town, including what to do, see, and eat

The Locals’ Guide to Visiting La Jolla, CA
Photo Credit: Ariana Drehsler

Need help deciding which of La Jolla’s seemingly endless beaches to lay your towel out at today? Each little sandy sliver between the neighborhood’s sea cliffs has its own name and character: the Cove for swimming, Children’s Pool for seal-watching, Wipeout Beach for skim-boarding. Head to La Jolla Shores for that wide, sandy, picnic-with-the-family feel, and if you know what you’re doing, go surfing at Windansea or Bird Rock (if you’re a beginner, opt instead for the Shores, where most of San Diego learned to surf).

Surfers at Blacks Beach San Diego

Of course, beachy isn’t La Jolla’s only vibe. The Village (locals don’t call it downtown anymore, says La Jolla resident and senior editor of lajolla.ca Elisabeth Frausto) is La Jolla’s most walkable area—highlighted by the main drag, Prospect Street—with a wide radius of shop-lined roads sloping down to the coast.

At long standing neighborhood staples like Warwick’s bookstore and Harry’s Coffee Shop, “old-timers still belly up to the counter and talk politics,” Frausto says. Art enthusiasts visit to peruse through its many galleries, including Quint and Joseph Bellows, and check out what’s on at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (MCASD). Shoppers wander Girard Avenue, picking out activewear at Lululemon and Vuori and fancier digs at Thread + Seed and Sigi’s Boutique. Friends gossip and sip coffee at locally owned outposts like Flower Pot Cafe and Il Giardino Di Lilli.

Il Giardino Di Lilli
Courtesy of Il Giardino Di Lilli

Once isolated from the rest of San Diego, La Jolla became a popular resort destination when the San Diego, Pacific Beach, and La Jolla Railway arrived in the 1890s and made the area more accessible to visitors (who wanted to spend time there so badly they stayed in tents during the summer). Some of those tourists got creative, too.

“Our tradition of supporting the arts goes back to the days of the Green Dragon Artist Colony that was founded in 1894,” says Athenaeum Music & Arts Library Executive Director Christie Mitchell. Anna Held started the Green Dragon Colony to attract visiting artists to La Jolla for a weekend getaway; it quickly became a venue for ad-hoc performances and bohemian artists’ salons.

However, it was Ellen Browning Scripps more than anyone who shaped La Jolla into the neighborhood we know today, commissioning buildings like the structure that now houses MCASD. The arrival of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in 1907 laid the foundation for the establishment of UC San Diego 53 years later at the longtime site of the military base Camp Matthews. All of these developments helped establish La Jolla’s layered identities: high-dollar beach town, arts magnet, academic research hub.

Athenaeum Music & Arts Library
Photo Credit: Ariana Drehsler

Facts About La Jolla, CA

  • Ellen Browning Scripps commissioned Irving Gill to design a building for the La Jolla Woman’s Club in 1914; it still meets today in the same building.
  • La Jolla’s scenic beauty is a backdrop for many movies, including Thor, Gattaca, Traffic, Mr. Jones, and Andy Warhol’s 1968 experimental film San Diego Surf.
  • Every summer, thousands of pregnant female leopard sharks gather in La Jolla’s Marine Protected Areas to incubate their pups.
  • Zillow reports the average home price in La Jolla is $2.3 million.
  • Old Hollywood film star and La Jolla native Gregory Peck was one of the founders of La Jolla Playhouse, which opened its doors in 1947.
Christie Mitchell
Photo Credit: Ariana Drehsler

Locals’ Guide to La Jolla, CA

Athenaeum Music & Arts Director Christie Mitchell is a bona fide La Jolla local, having grown up in the LJ neighborhood of Bird Rock. Her dad still surfs, and Mitchell met her own surfer husband at La Jolla High (their toddler has already tried surfing, too). Mitchell’s mom still lives in Bird Rock, and “it’s gotten a lot livelier and more pedestrian-friendly,” she says.

On weekends, she makes sure to hit Wayfarer Bread for “the gooiest, heaviest, stickiest cinnamon loaf—definitely preorder because there’s always a line,” she advises. Friday and Saturday are pizza night at Wayfarer, and the bakery’s industry collabs produce some unique pies. For coffee, head to Bird Rock Coffee Roasters, of course, where you can grab a cup and hang out in the open-air seating or stroll to La Jolla Hermosa Park for ocean views (and a skate park and bike paths for little ones to tire themselves out on).

One of Mitchell’s favorites for lunch with coworkers in the Village is Peruvian-inspired Pepino, owned by one of her high school classmates. “The sweet potato bowl is really good,” she says.

The Marine Room
Courtesy of The Marine Room

She also cherishes La Jolla institutions. The Ascot Shop, a longtime men’s clothing boutique, is a go-to for gifts; founded by a local fisherman, El Pescador Fish Market is the place for the freshest seafood and fish tacos; and The Marine Room is for special occasions, with on-point service against a backdrop of crashing waves. “And nothing says ‘La Jolla’ like George’s at the Cove,” Mitchell adds. “With the John Baldessari mural and the view, it’s a great mix of the arts and the ocean.”

There’s a surprising amount to do on the weekdays in La Jolla, Mitchell says, with free live music every Monday at the Athenaeum (and weekly ticketed events), late-night DJ sessions at Le Coq, acts at The Comedy Store, concerts at the The Conrad (home of La Jolla Music Society), and the monthly First Friday Art Walk.

Lucien La Jolla
Photo Credit: Kimberly Motos

What’s About to Happen

The biggest talk of the town for La Jollans? Possible secession from the city of San Diego, Frausto says. Proponents want to separate so La Jolla can maintain its own infrastructure and make decisions about development (critics say La Jolla should contribute taxes to the rest of the city). If the initiative advances, final say would come down to a city-wide vote.

Additionally, locals and visitors alike are witnessing a genuine culinary explosion. Restaurateur Sami Ladeki’s Roppongi, a Japanese fusion and sushi favorite that closed in 2015, reopened in December 2025 under returning chef Alfie Szeprethy. Michelin-starred chef Elijah Arizmendi launched tasting-menu-only restaurant Lucien last year, and chef Accursio Lota of North Park’s Cori Trattoria Pastifico opened his new spot Dora in November. Local designers Paul Basile and Jules Wilson are building Roseacre, 5,000 square feet of culinary concepts on Girard Avenue. And one of La Jolla’s favorite restaurant families is opening a completely new eatery near Torrey Pines Golf Course in summer 2026: From the guys behind Puesto and Marisi comes an Eastern Mediterranean spot called Ikaria.

Back in the Village, a new boutique hotel by Orli is landing in the old nurses’ quarters (now condos) next to the original 1924 Scripps hospital (the institution moved to Genesee Avenue in 1964). La Jolla is also getting in on the thrifting trend—Goodwill opened a shop on Herschel Avenue in early 2026.

Pedestrian-friendly changes are afoot in two of LJ’s walkable areas. At La Jolla Shores, look for enhancements to Avenida de la Playa from El Paseo Grande to Calle de la Plata, where the street has been closed to vehicles since 2020 for outdoor dining. The Village Streetscape Plan is coming to Girard Avenue between Silverado Street and Prospect Street, bringing expanded walking areas, corner parks, improved lighting, new seating, public art, and landscaping to create shade canopies and gathering spaces.

La Jolla
Photo Credit: Ariana Drehsler

Also look for beautification projects along the coast. The 1920s stairs leading down to the tide pools at Whale View Point are finally getting a redo; Ellen Browning Scripps Park will receive fresh sod and much-needed widened sidewalks. And ADA trail improvements and a new restroom facility are on their way at Torrey Pines State Natural Reserve, making the beloved natural area more accessible.

As for housing, Frausto says, affordable units are hard to come by, and that probably won’t change soon. Most new homes and apartments are geared toward the luxury market, like La Jolla’s first new gated community in 40 years, Foxhill, which broke ground in October 2025 on the site of a former golf course—with empty lots selling for more than $8 million.

Where to Eat in La Jolla

Le Coq

Marisi

Catania

Where to Shop in La Jolla

Mitch’s Surf Shop

Mood Indigo

Gracie James Co.

More Things to Do in La Jolla

Birch Aquarium

Torrey Pines Gliderport

La Jolla Kayak

Leorah Gavidor won her first essay contest at age 5. She writes features, news, and non-fiction in San Diego.

Guides JULY 10, 2024

A Guide to SUP and Snorkeling in La Jolla

The area between the Shores and the Cove is a protected marine area perfect for spotting wildlife

A Guide to SUP and Snorkeling in La Jolla
Courtesy of the San Diego Tourism Authority

From the Marine Room, I paddle through the surf break, trying not to get knocked into the water. Once through, I stand on my stand-up paddleboard (SUP), navigating the next set of challenges: avoiding the groups of snorkelers directly in front of me, and then the flotilla of kayakers working their way from La Jolla Shores in the direction of the sea caves—each of us connecting with the ocean in our own way.

At a little over one square mile in size and reaching offshore depths of some 330 feet, the area between the shores and La Jolla Cove is technically a marine protected area called the Matlahuayl State Marine Reserve. Under the surface of the water, you might spot sea lions and seals, leopard sharks, garibaldi and other fishes, various kinds of rays, lobsters, and possibly even moray eels. Above water, winged creatures like brown pelicans and egrets dart through the skies. One of the joys of snorkeling here is when you spot a Brandt’s cormorant “flying” underwater, fishing for a meal.

Snorkeling in La Jolla, San Diego featuring a stingray on the sea floor
Photo Credit: James Murren

Past most of the snorkelers and in front of the flotilla, I turn south and head over to where the water is more open and less hectic. After 10 minutes or so, with the leash wrapped around my ankle, I squat down and straddle my SUP. Then, I secure my paddle through the accompanying loops on the side of the board. Strapped under the SUP’s bungee webbing are my snorkel, mask, and fins. I put them on and drop into the water.

The visibility is okay, about 15 feet or so. Immediately, I see the territorial garibaldis protecting their watery turf. Juvenile ones, identifiable by the iridescent blue-purple spots on their backs, swim by. Snorkeling in the direction of the undulating grasses, I pass over a patch of sand. Down there, round stingrays hover. No bigger than a small dinner plate, they are in their element, fluttering with ease.

Snorkeling in La Jolla, San Diego featuring seagrass on reef
Photo Credit: James Murren

Above the grasses, I hover, emulating the rays. It is one of my favorite things to do while snorkeling: I simply float, using my fins only to maintain my position and avoid being pushed into the rocky underwater cliffs. As the waves roll in and back out, the green grasses shimmer in the sunlight, dancing to and fro.

Amidst it all, my body sways with the grasses, recalibrating my being for the days ahead.

Snorkeling in La Jolla, San Diego featuring two women on stand-up paddleboards
Courtesy of Visit California

Tips for Stand-Up Paddleboarding in La Jolla

  • La Jolla Shores and La Jolla Cove are very busy and crowded areas. Be mindful of those around you while SUPing. Your board can cause injury to others in the blink of an eye. Be very aware that open ocean swimmers and sometimes scuba divers are out there as well. 
  • You cannot SUP in the La Jolla Cove zone. Lifeguards will get on the intercom and ask you to leave the cove. As a rule, I suggest staying around the sea caves—if you’re going to pass them, go north, not toward the beach-goers in the shore break zone.
  • You can rent SUPs in the village area at La Jolla Shores. Be sure to have a waterproof bag—also called a dry bag—for your phone and other valuables. 
  • Do not forget to wear sunscreen, a hat, sunglasses, and perhaps a long-sleeved sun shirt with a hood. You get burned more quickly out on the water.
James Murren

About James Murren

James Murren is an award-winning adventure/travel writer, with nearly three decades of independent journalism experience. He's often having a good time in our local mountains, deserts and waters, when he's not teaching classes at SDSU.

Guides NOVEMBER 30, 2020

Things to Do in San Diego at a Distance in December

The can’t-miss virtual and socially distanced events of the month

Things to Do in San Diego at a Distance in December
Dane Hodgson

December 3


San Diego Model Railroad Museum’s Modeler Citizen Series

Join this virtual series for a special viewing and discussion about Walt Disney’s Carolwood Barn in Griffith Park, Los Angeles. Learn about Disney’s great love for trains and hear from two volunteers at Walt’s Barn on the story behind the amusement park’s mine train. The series is part of the museum’s 40th anniversary campaign, raising money to commemorate its grand opening in 1981.

 

December 5


Iration at Del Mar Racetrack

Watch the reggae rock band Iration perform music from their latest album, Coastin’, which debuted at no. 2 on the Billboard Reggae Albums chart. The live show, Coastin’ at the Drive-In, will be the band’s first in-person, socially distanced concert.

2260 Jimmy Durante Boulevard, Del Mar

 

December Things to Do / Intercontinental Hotel Betsy Blumenfield

Salt Hot Pilates instructor and owner Betsy Blumenfeld teaches at the Intercontinental Hotel

Vistal at the Intercontinental Hotel Pilates and Happy Hour

The Intercontinental Hotel’s on-site restaurant, Vistal, is hosting a Pilates and happy hour combo from 3 to 5 p.m. on December 5. The event is complimentary (the ticket price is only to cover Eventbrite fees) to celebrate the restaurant’s new happy hour menu. But first, get your sweat on with Salt Hot Pilates instructor and owner Betsy Blumenfeld on the hotel’s terrace overlooking the bay. Then, reward yourself with $7 happy hour specials and White Claws to sip. Masks are required and social distancing guidelines will be enforced.

901 Bayfront Court, Embarcadero

 

December 5–31


Mission Fed ArtWalk’s Virtual Experience

Mission Fed ArtWalk’s 36th annual show is going virtual. The monthlong celebration of the arts will feature nearly 100 local, national, and international artists; discussions; activities for the little ones; and plenty of opportunities to purchase original works for your own personal art collection. The activities will be hosted by ArtReach San Diego, a nonprofit dedicated to providing workshops and classes to schools without an arts program.

 

December 6


San Diego Vintage Collective Market

Shop gifts from San Diego’s community of over 80 vintage and handmade vendors at Liberty Station’s Art District. The collective’s very first event will host guests with a California Dreamin’ theme and plenty of unique finds to shop for you and your loved ones. Masks are required and social distancing guidelines will be enforced.

2825 Dewey Road, Liberty Station

 

December 13


Cocktail Hour: Songs of the Rat Pack at CSU San Marcos Drive-In

Head to the drive-in at Cal State San Marcos for an evening celebrating the works of Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, and Sammy Davis Jr. The live performances, accompanied by bands like the D. Ben-jamin’ Horns, will cover the Rat Pack’s most notable hits, like “The Best Is Yet to Come” and “My Funny Valentine.”

333 South Twin Oaks Valley Road, San Marcos

Iration at Del Mar Racetrack on December 5

Dane Hodgson

Studio S JUNE 12, 2026

Nominations Open for the San Diego Business Impact Awards

The annual event honors middle market companies creating jobs, scaling up, and investing in the region

Nominations Open for the San Diego Business Impact Awards
Photo Credit: Kimberly Motos

San Diego is known for its startup culture and innovation economy, but what happens when the company moves beyond its early-stage years? The San Diego Business Impact Awards aim to answer that question, spotlighting the middle market businesses helping drive the region’s economy.

Hosted by San Diego Regional Economic Development Corporation (EDC) and JPMorganChase, the second annual awards celebration takes place on Thursday, July 23, from 4:30 to 7:00 p.m. at Scripps Research Auditorium. More than 200 executives, entrepreneurs, and business leaders are expected to attend the networking and cocktail event honoring some of San Diego County’s fastest-growing companies.

Businesses headquartered in San Diego County that have operated for at least two years are encouraged to submit their nomination by Thursday, June 18 at 4 p.m. Companies across industries—from technology and life sciences to tourism and consumer products, as well as pre-revenue startups—are eligible for recognition.

For EDC President and CEO Mark Cafferty, the event is as much about building connections as celebrating success. “We’ve had a longtime partnership with JPMorganChase; their work aligns with our efforts to support underserved communities and drive talent development,” says Cafferty. “And the networking was invaluable last year. I’m still in touch with people I met at last year’s awards.”

Photo Credit: Kimberly Motos

EDC is an independently-funded nonprofit that works directly with San Diego companies to help them grow the local economy, make the region as a whole more competitive, and attract and retain top-tier talent with quality jobs. Through EDC, companies can get help starting or expanding their business with support for things like site selection, permit navigation, and regulatory guidance, plus connections to local resources and potential business collaborators.

The San Diego Business Impact Awards began as an idea with one of EDC’s longtime strategic partners, JPMorganChase. The two organizations share a commitment to San Diego and are dedicated to bolstering middle market businesses.

“We’re blessed with a robust innovation economy and startup community,” says Aaron Ryan, San Diego Region Manager for JPMorgan’s Commercial and Investment Bank and vice chair of the firm’s’ San Diego Market Leadership Team. “But one of the segments of the business community we felt was overlooked was emerging middle market companies—the businesses that are no longer small but not yet large.”

Ryan says supporting those companies is critical as they scale and decide where to invest, hire, and grow.

San Diego’s high cost of living remains one of the region’s biggest business challenges, making talent recruitment and retention increasingly competitive. But local leaders point to the region’s quality of life, climate, and collaborative business community as advantages that continue to attract employers and workers.

Photo Credit: Kimberly Motos

“In order to support thriving households, there has to be enough high-quality jobs for people to be able to afford to live here,” Cafferty says. “Once a company grows and excels past that middle market point in their growth cycle, they become much more likely to pay higher wages and compete globally.”

Both Cafferty and Ryan proudly tout the unique collaboration that exists among San Diego County businesses. Bringing together top universities producing high-quality talent, cutting-edge research institutions, a robust military and defense presence, leading ocean science and environmental organizations, and a binational, cross-border identity creates a distinct business ecosystem that defines and strengthens the San Diego region. 

Last year’s San Diego Business Impact Awards celebrated nearly 60 honorees from 49 industries, representing a total of 8,232 jobs across eight sectors, including: software and technology, healthcare and life sciences, consumer goods, professional services, finance, construction and manufacturing, defense, and hospitality and tourism. On average, honoree companies doubled their revenues over the previous year, employed more than 145 San Diegans each, and offered an average annual compensation of $192,415.

Top honorees included defense contractor Innoflight, environmental consulting firm Bancroft Construction Services, life sciences startup Element Biosciences, defense technology contractor GALT Aerospace, organic grocery store chain Jimbo’s, and biopharmaceutical company LENZ Therapeutics. During the event, Innoflight Founder and CEO Jeff Janicik held a fireside chat offering his insights on investing in the community and embracing San Diego culture.

This year, organizers hope to continue highlighting the middle market players driving economic impact across the region. Nominations are now open through June 18 at 4 p.m. Get your tickets to the San Diego Business Impact Awards celebration to enjoy drinks by Snake Oil Cocktail Co., light bites, live music, and networking.

Guides DECEMBER 13, 2013

Scripps Pier

Inside the icon

Scripps Pier

THE PRICE IS RIGHT

The original wooden pier, built in 1915–16, cost just $36,000. (Thanks, Ellen Browning Scripps!) Its stronger concrete replacement, built in 1987, cost $3.95 million. (Thanks, state of California!)

PHOTOGRAPHERS, TAKE NOTE

Twice a year, in early May and August, the setting sun perfectly aligns under the pier’s concrete supports, allowing a picture-perfect framing of the sun beneath the pier—as long as there’s no marine layer.

PIER FOR RENT

The pier used to be available for rent, though no one ever did. The price tag: $15,000 per event. A few informal faculty weddings have happened here, says pier manager Christian McDonald.

LABS AND LIGHTS

The building at the end houses lab space and seawater pumps. Amid the gauges, monitors, and scientific equipment on the roof is a pole used only for Christmas lights.

Scripps Pier

Scripps Pier

Scripps Pier

PUMP IT UP

The pier is built on a slight incline. Pumps suck as much as 1.8 million gallons of seawater each day into a trough that runs the length of the pier. Gravity takes care of getting the water to the Scripps Institution of Oceanography’s campus. The water is used for experimental aquariums and the Birch Aquarium’s exhibits.

MISSION LAUNCH

A 3-ton hoist at the end of the pier lowers small boats into the ocean 500 times a year for research missions.

RIPPLE EFFECT

A tsunami gauge kept track when the sea rose almost a foot here after the deadly March 2011 Japanese tsunami.

GREAT TRACK RECORD

Scientists have tracked the ocean’s daily temperature at the pier continuously since 1916, the longest of such readings. Devices on the pier also track ocean acidity, the weather, cliff erosion, tide levels, and even the locations of tagged leopard sharks.

Guides DECEMBER 2, 2013

Review: Side Show

A worthy wonder to see at La Jolla Playhouse

Review: Side Show
Review: Side Show

Review: Side Show

From left: Emily Padgett, Erin Davie and Matthew Hydzik. Photo: Kevin Berne

A musical can be harder to enjoy when you go into the theater not knowing the music. But Side Show, for all its freakishness, was accessible, had catchy tunes, and was easy to love.

The true story follows conjoined twins Daisy and Violet Hilton (1908-1969). Abandoned by their unwed mother, the sisters are forced to perform in a sideshow until their beautiful singing voices land them headlining gigs in vaudeville. Eventually, they make it to the big screen in Hollywood. But the exploitation they experience, and the alienation they constantly feel provides built-in conflict for the show. Such good drama! (For example, how could you marry someone who’s sister is always in the room with you and your wife?) Even the sisters’ friendship was complex but relatable and endearing and fun to watch.

The casting of the sisters was brilliant. Emily Padgett (Daisy Hilton) and Erin Davie (Violet Hilton) were impressively similar in size, voice, and face. They even had similar legs.

Side Show is a little Tim Burton-esque with all the sideshow freaks. Tim Burton’s not my thing, but I could appreciate the challenges (and solutions!) that went into costuming the armless woman, the lizard man, the three-legged dude, the albino woman…

Shout out to cast member Matthew Patrick Davis, one of our 50 People to Watch in 2013. You won’t recognize him as he wears a mask for most of the show, but he’s the 6’8″ guy with the misshapen head and black-and-white leggings. He also plays Doctor #3.

The male lead voices were the weakest link, although Matthew Hydzik (Buddy Foster) had a great voice. Book and lyrics by Bill Russell, music by Henry Krieger. While I enjoyed the score, and most of the lyrics, I thought some of the rhyming was forced. I did, however, walk out of the theater singing a few of the songs—always a good sign. My poor boyfriend had to listen to “I will never leave you!” all the way home. But he liked the show so much, he didn’t mind.

Side Show
La Jolla Playhouse
Directed by Bill Condon
Through December 15

Partner Content JUNE 10, 2026

New Options for GLP-1 Users

Scripps study shows that some patients may be able to taper their dose and maintain results

New Options for GLP-1 Users
Courtesy of Scripps Health

While glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agents have been used to treat Type 2 diabetes for more than 20 years, their recent emergence as weight-loss wonder drugs marked a new frontier in medicine. But their effectiveness has left some patients wondering what to do once they’ve reached their goal. Stopping the medication could mean regaining some, if not all, of the weight. A Scripps Clinic internal medicine physician recently conducted a small study of whether GLP-1 patients who had reached their goal weight could maintain that weight by taking their regularly prescribed injection every other week instead of weekly. Spoiler alert: 30 of 34 patients did. Read more about the study here and what that may mean as pharmaceutical companies roll out oral GLP-1s.

For more nutrition, wellness, and healthy living tips, sign up for the San Diego Health newsletter here.

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