
Long before any of that, the bay and its mesas were home to the Kumeyaay (Tipai-Ipai) people, who lived across this corner of the coast for thousands of years — fishing the estuaries, gathering in the canyons, and trading along paths that ran inland to the desert and south into what is now Mexico. The Kumeyaay homeland was established and complete long before a European sail appeared on the horizon, and the community remains part of the region today. San Diego's story does not begin in 1769; it begins with them.
Today San Diego trades on its climate as much as its history — 'America's Finest City,' roughly seventy degrees the year round, with the Pacific at the doorstep. Visitors and locals split their days between Balboa Park's museums and gardens, the coves and cliffs of La Jolla, the lighthouse and tide pools of Point Loma, and the long beaches of Coronado, Mission Beach, and Ocean Beach. The bay glitters, the sun drops behind Point Loma, and the same harbor that started the whole story keeps right on working into the evening.
Why People Visit San Diego
San Diego rewards visitors with a rare mix: deep early-California history, a working Navy harbor, world-class parks and museums, and miles of Pacific coast, all under a famously mild sky. People come for Balboa Park and the bay, for the beaches and the sunsets off Point Loma, and for the layered story of the city where California began. It is historic, easygoing, and unmistakably Californian.