San Diego’s North County offers a wide variety of activities

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San Diego Zoo Safari Park, near Escondido, features tours up close with many animals. (MCT News Service)
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Solana Beach by design

Who knew, back in the late 1940s, what the Bill Jack Scientific Instrument Co. was starting? That company, housed in a series of Quonset huts along Cedros Avenue, has receded into Solana Beach history. But those swooping rooflines remain, the space now occupied by shops and restaurants — and Cedros Avenue has been reborn as a design district. Browse its many design and antiques shops (( www.cedrosavenue.com ), such as the Leaping Lotus (240 S. Cedros Ave., Solana Beach), which sells jewelry, furniture and art (and, regrettably, Obama and Romney toilet paper at $5.99 a roll). Across the street, SoLo (309 S. Cedros Ave., Solana Beach) is more sophisticated, with design books, curios and strangely compelling reclaimed industrial objects. Elsewhere on the avenue, you’ll find succulents (Cedros Gardens, 330 S. Cedros Ave., Solana Beach) and surf photography (Aaron Chang Ocean Art Gallery, 415 S. Cedros Ave., Solana Beach). Also — attention, bored husbands — camping gear and carabiners await inspection at Adventure 16 (143 S. Cedros Ave., Solana Beach), another Southern California brand with roots in San Diego. For a snack, try Lockwood Table Cafe (346B S. Cedros Ave., Solana Beach). For dinner, Wild Notes Bistro (143 S. Cedros Ave., Solana Beach) is a logical stop before a show at the Belly Up Tavern (143 S. Cedros Ave., Solana Beach), which has been booking live music (under a Quonset roof) since 1974.

Fletcher Cove swim

How to begin an ideal day: Rise early. Jump into the ocean at Solana Beach’s Fletcher Cove (111 S. Sierra Ave., Solana Beach), where a pleasant little green park meets the sea. Some locals call it the Pillbox because there was a gunnery installation here during World War II. On Thursdays in summer, the park often hosts community concerts. Whatever the day, you can load up on carbohydrates, including the excellent chocolate-chip pumpkin bread, at the nearby Naked Cafe (106 S. Sierra Ave., Solana Beach). Then back to the beach.

Leafy Rancho Santa Fe

In the fertile hills a few miles east of Solana Beach, you’ll find the roadside headquarters of Chino Farms (6123 Calzada del Bosque, Rancho Santa Fe), a Japanese American family operation that produces fruit and vegetables beloved by chefs such as Alice Waters and Wolfgang Puck. The farm is 45 acres. The stand (officially known as the Vegetable Shop) has been in business since 1969, and whether it’s peppers, strawberries, carrots, onions or greens, the quality is startling and priced accordingly (cash only). If you want that low-key luxury feeling for a few hours or even overnight, continue a few miles up the road to Rancho Santa Fe, one of the wealthiest and quietest enclaves in Southern California. Now check out the hacienda-style Inn at Rancho Santa Fe (5951 Linea del Cielo, Rancho Santa Fe), which dates to the 1920s. Besides 87 rooms, it offers a dining room and veranda with a popular daily brunch. Some rooms rent for as little as $152 (but haven’t had their old TVs replaced yet by flat-screen models). Some of the suites have kitchens (the better to exploit your fresh produce).

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