NorcalBob wrote:Some good advice. Santa Cruz has steelies about 10 minutes from campus (in season). Although we don't have quite the diverse salt water fishing scene as San Diego, our fish are bigger! Santa Cruz is also known as a "hippie flake" school and it's academic reputation is not all that great. Make a choice on what's best for your academic career (not sure I'd even go to Santa Cruz if I was planning pre-med), not fishing. Both places have great fishing, it's just different.
Just curious Bob if you own any boxing gloves or if I should bring my own when I come up there to kick your...er...I mean, to fish with you? I got my BA from Santa Cruz and was admitted to every graduate school I applied to, including Stanford (if those bastards had given me a scholarship like Michigan did I would have gone there). Hippie/flake school? Ok, it is very granola-oriented, I will give you that. However, it does not have a poor academic reputation at least from the point of view of those in academia who would be serving on graduate admissions boards. The UC system (all schools) are much better funded than any of the CSUs or state colleges, and UCSC has many, many outstanding scholars who teach there precisely because it is a very cool, surfing/redwoods/coast range/laid-back college town. A real college town, not some city where the college/university is just one more component. They have some outstanding programs in mathematics and the sciences as well as literature and the arts. I loved it there and have brought the kids there on more than one occasion hoping that they will fall in love with it like I did and want to go there (so I can visit).
Midger is correct, look at what you really think you want to study, and check out the program at both schools and see which one is the best fit. Remember that just because a school has a good reputation in general, or in one certain area, doesn't necessarily mean that they are good in all areas/programs. A school that has a great Environmental Studies department might not have a very good Art or Literature department, or vice versa.
If you are serious about college, don't choose a school based on how close it is to good fishing. That can be one of your criteria if you have two equally good candidates and are down to lifestyle choices for where to go to school, but using it as a top criteria is short-sighted. College is 4-5 years, fishing is for a lifetime. Go to the school that will prepare you best for the future so that you can find a job you enjoy in a community that you can settle in for life that has good fishing. THAT'S when it's important to put lifestyle things like 'good fishing' near the top of the list. Where would you like to live for the rest of your life? For the record, even though it isn't one of your choices, out of all the many places I have lived, the one I would like to return to (and where I will probably retire) is Boulder, CO, and they have an excellent university (UC Boulder) as well as a reputation that Bob would call a 'hippie-flake' school.
Hope that helps. Oh, by the way, I didn't fish while I was in college so I can't help you there.
GO SLUGS!