Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Search results for

  • Rancho Bernardo Pumpkin FarmOpen Daily:Sept. 29 through Oct. 12 from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.Oct. 13 through Oct. 31 from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.Train Ride8′ Tall Corn MazePetting ZooTractor Hay-WagonCut your own SunflowersPumpkin FarmTICKET InformationThere is no charge to walk the pumpkin patches.Hayride is $5 per personCorn Maze is $5 per personPetting Zoo is $5 per personMechanical Train is $5.00 per childCut your own sunflowers are $2 per stem (*We provide the shears)Tickets for Farm locations can be purchased at any Farm location. Tickets are not available online.All pumpkins are individually priced based on size.Ticket Requirements:Mechanical Train = 1 Ticket per childHayride = 1 Ticket per personCorn Maze = 1 Ticket per personPetting Zoo = 1 Ticket per personDIRECTIONS to Rancho Bernardo Pumpkin Farm:Take I-15Exit on West Bernardo DriveHead East to the first stop lightTurn left onto Highland Valley Rd. Go 1/4 mil to entrance.Google: 13421 Highland Valley Road Escondido, CA. 92128Free Admission and ParkingVisit: https://www.pumpkinstation.com/pumpkin-farms/rancho-bernardo-pumpkin-farm/
  • California will be the first U.S. state to direct millions of dollars from taxpayer money and tech companies to help pay for journalism and AI research under a new deal announced Wednesday.
  • In November, voters will determine the fate of 10 propositions — including whether to borrow a combined $20 billion for climate programs and school construction, whether to approve three amendments to the state constitution and what direction to take on crime, health care and taxes.
  • A telehealth company partnered with a pharmacy that lacked a required license, raising doubts about the safety and efficacy of the weight-loss medicines it mailed to patients.
  • NPR's Juana Summers talks with Deann Borshay Liem, who was born in South Korea and adopted into an American family, about the Korean government admitting adoption agencies engaged in malpractice.
  • Tech platforms have stepped back from many of the more aggressive measures they took to curb the spread of election rumors and falsehoods four years ago. But some platforms still have safeguards.
  • The nuclear industry and big tech companies think they can solve each other's problems, but critics are skeptical the marriage can last.
  • As Team U.S.A. climbs the Olympics swimming charts, searches for "why do swimmers wear parkas?" are trending on Google.
  • Many observers said Monday's ruling on Han Duck-soo doesn't signal much on the upcoming verdict on President Yoon Suk Yeol, as Han wasn't a key figure in Yoon's martial law imposition.
  • As with Europe, the Trump administration is sending conflicting signals to America's long-standing allies in Asia, with whom the U.S. has deep-rooted security agreements that date back to the 1950s.
17 of 486