Imperial
Beach, California, Part 2
The
Imperial Beach city seal has a nice white sailboat in the middle
but unfortunately, Imperial Beach has no wharves, docks, or boat
ramps. The only "boat' within the city limits is a sunken
submarine off the beach. The only way to launch any kind of a
boat in Imperial Beach is to push it through the sand and into
the crashing surf of the Pacific Ocean. So the only "boat"
that is actually "moored" anyplace near here is that
1918 submarine
quietly gathering a thick skin of sewage-fed mollusks right off
Imperial Beach's surf line.
Truth
would require that the Imperial Beach sailboat be replaced with
sunken World
War One submarine.
Imperial Beach is Palm
Avenue. While some might take the freeway exit seeking the glories
of another “Palm” — that of Palm Springs and
its Palm Canyon Drive where Rolex and Rolls Royce blend with well
tanned idle women lining up in front of surgical centers for a
quick nip and a tuck from their favorite plastic surgeon —
here things are really different.
While San Diego is
one of the richest places in the world, per capita income in nearby
Imperial Beach was $16,003 in the year 2000 which is $9,000 below
the official San Diego poverty line. In 2000, twice as many families
rented (6,490) here than owned (2,782).

Here we
see Imperial Beach's "beach" looking north from Imperial
Beach's Palm Avenue.