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My parents recently moved to the city of Vista in Northern San Diego County, who I occasionally visit from Anaheim. Even though it is thirty miles away from San Diego, I can still get to downtown & Mission Valley by transit! At many of the NCTD Sprinter, and SDMTS Trolley & Rapid stops features transit oriented development that we will see on the way. PLEASE keep all comments section to about SDMTS Trolley & Rapid, NCTD Sprinter, and San Diego County. If you comment off topic comments, it will be DELETED. Thank you for your support to help showcase SoCal as a more destinations via transit friendly region! From parent's house in Vista, I jogged over to the Buena Creek station in unincorporated San Diego County, which the surrounding road & sidewalks were not as well maintained than in Vista. Then took the NCTD Sprinter, a diesel hybrid of light rail cars on a heavy rail chassis, it is a passenger train service from Oceanside to Escondido along the CA 73 started in 2008. It is 22 miles long and takes about an hour using Siemens Desiro diesel trains on the Escondido branchline. It comes around every thirty minutes except weekend mornings and evenings when it is every hour like right now. It is great for a growing region of northern San Diego county. The Sprinter stops at most exits along CA 78 to show that you don't need a car to navigate the region. The Sprinter has stops right by the growing Cal State San Marcos with a student body of over 15,000 and Palomar College. At Escondido, the final stop on the Sprinter, we exit the train and wait to board the Rapid 235 towards San Diego. The original plan was At Claremont Drive, exit this bus and transfer to the MTS 44 to Fashion Valley Mall. The SDMTS Rapid 235 is a bus rapid transit route with limited stops to downtown San Diego with a regular fare of $2.50, going along Interstate 15’s Express Lanes & stop at transit centers, curbside in Kearny Mesa, highway median stops in City Heights, and on street in downtown. Since this is a bus rapid transit route that goes along I-15 to Santa Fe Depot, seats have tons of cushion for this over hour bus ride. Especially good going along the I-15 that can shake the bus a bit. There are limited stops along the route to transit centers that the bus has to exit for, along with freeway median stops in San Diego. At the Claremont Mesa stop, which actually was on the street, I exited the bus and tried to find the next stop. I missed the local 20 bus towards Fashion Valley, however, due to the road work, the stop was out of service and missed the bus at the relocated stop. Oh well. I got on the local 44 bus instead to Morena/Linda Vista, and then took the Green line trolley to Mission Valley Center. The Mission Valley Center station is on the premises of Park Valley Center, owned by Sunbelt Investment Holdings, where the platform is next to Breakfast Republic and soon will host Urban Plates, attracting the “discernable regional clientele”. Across the street is Mission Valley Center is a mall opened in 1960 at 100 stores & 7 anchored malls with over 1.1 million square feet of floor space. It is managed by Centennial Properties but the mall is split in half by ownership, formerly owned by Westfield. It started to become a trading card collecting adventure at Mission Valley Center by buying Pokémon trading cards at comics-n-stuff, and even at GameStop where you can buy individual cards. I also went to the San Diego FC team store, featuring merchandise for the brand new soccer team in the Major Soccer League, which is now playing at Snapdragon Stadium starting this 2025 season, located three stations away at Stadium Station. Then I took the trolley to Downtown San Diego and exited at Little Italy and walked along the San Diego Bayfront to Seaport Village to get a drink at Mike Hess Brewing taphouse in Seaport Village. Which is still a quick walk from the Seaport Village Trolley Station. Then walked more along the bayfront to Petco Park's Park at the Park, named Gallagher Square, home of the San Diego Padres. During the offseason, you can do a pickup game of pickleball, bask in the sun, play a pickup game of whiffle ball, or kids can play on the playground. I also walked up the street to the Padres team store. Then I took the trolley from Seaport Village to Nobel Drive in La Jolla to be picked up by my family to head out to dinner.