shrinking the globe…..

San Diego harbor skyline with boats and tree

San Diego

I grew up in San Diego. Not “went to college there” or “lived there for a few years.” Grew up. Played in the surf at Mission Beach, bodysurfed at La Jolla Shores, ate fish tacos before they were a trend. So when Leigh and I worked out our arrangement — once a year, I get to go back, see some friends, eat some Mexican food, and watch some baseball — it wasn’t a vacation. It was a homecoming.

You can find the normal tourist stuff on a million websites. Sea World, the San Diego Zoo, Hotel Del Coronado, Del Mar — the things you feel you must see and do when you’re visiting San Diego for the first time. And the amazing beaches I grew up on, which have spoiled me forever against east coast “beaches.” Sorry, Nags Head. Sorry, Ocean City.

This isn’t that guide. This is what a local does when he gets to come home.

First Stop: El Indio

El Indio Mexican Food exterior at dusk
El Indio — serving Mexican food since 1940, and the first stop every time I land

I almost always schedule my flight to arrive around lunchtime, and my first stop after hopping into a rental car or Uber from SAN is almost always El Indio — for either a two beef taco combo plate or a carne asada burrito. And a bag of their take-home chips to graze on all weekend in the hotel room. Maybe some horchata to drink.

El Indio carne asada burrito and bag of take-home chips
The carne asada burrito and a bag of those famous take-home chips

Aside from maybe a sit-down place or two on any given trip, El Indio is maybe the “nicest” place I’ll go. I always tell people that the best Mexican food in Southern California can be found in the places where you seriously question your personal safety. Bars on the windows, holes in the walls, an ATM chained in the lobby and a sign that says cash only. Knowing what you want in Spanish is useful, and don’t try to customize your order like you do at Starbucks. I’m looking at you, Miss Grande half-caf, two pumps of sugar-free, two-percent milk but whole milk foam and whip, stirred counter-clockwise, 170-degree latte.

Two beef taco combo plate with rice and beans
The two beef taco combo plate — rice, beans, and no questions asked

I eat a lot of Mexican food when I return to San Diego. Juanita’s in Leucadia. Albertos, Robertos, Filibertos — pretty much any-bertos. Several good spots in the Gaslamp. The real ones know.

The Gaslamp Quarter

Gaslamp Quarter arch — Historic Heart of San Diego
The Gaslamp Quarter — Historic Heart of San Diego

The Gaslamp District is a great place to stay, and I have a habit of booking the Marriott Gaslamp Quarter (across the street from Petco Park) or the Marriott Marquis at the Marina and Convention Center. Walking distance to everything — restaurants, bars, the ballpark, the waterfront.

Burrito with roasted pepper at a Gaslamp restaurant
One of the sit-down places — because sometimes you use a fork
View from hotel — Convention Center, bay, and Point Loma
The view from the Marriott — Convention Center sails, San Diego Bay, and Point Loma on the horizon

The trolley — San Diego’s light rail — is adequate for just about everything and runs frequently. Uber is plentiful. At my last visit in August 2025, right before the new terminal opened, the terminal for Southwest Airlines was awful. Crowded, nowhere to sit, and was a week away from moving to the new terminal. With a single runway, SAN is often fraught with delays, so plan ahead. But when you step off the plane and out of the terminal, the fresh salt air is something to behold.

Petco Park

Curt at Petco Park in Padres gear before the game
Reppin’ the brown and gold — early enough to watch batting practice

And then there’s baseball. San Diego Padres baseball at beautiful Petco Park. There’s something about sitting in those seats with the downtown skyline behind the outfield wall, the sun going down over the Pacific, and a ballpark full of brown and gold. It feels like home because it is.

Petco Park at sunset — downtown San Diego skyline
Petco Park at sunset — not a bad office for a few hours
PADRES WIN scoreboard banner at Petco Park
The best two words on the scoreboard

Coming Home

San Diego harbor skyline with boats and tree
San Diego — still the most beautiful skyline I know

San Diego isn’t a place I visit. It’s a place I return to. The taco shops haven’t changed. The salt air hasn’t changed. Petco Park still feels like a cathedral. And every year, when the wheels touch down at SAN and I step outside, I’m ten years old again — barefoot, sunburned, and home.