Don’t let lint and debris make your dryer vent a fire hazard. Blue Team Carpet Cleaning provides professional dryer vent cleaning in Chula Vista, keeping your home safe and your dryer running efficiently.
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Chula Vista Dryer Vent Cleaners
Blue Team Carpet Cleaning is your trusted source for thorough dryer vent cleaning in Chula Vista, San Diego County. We use specialized tools and techniques to remove lint, debris, and blockages from your dryer vent system. Our technicians understand the importance of proper ventilation in your home.
The Cleaning Process
Dryer Vent Safety in Chula Vista, CA
Dryer vent cleaning is an essential safety measure for every home. Lint buildup in your dryer vent restricts airflow and creates a fire hazard. Regular cleaning by Blue Team Carpet Cleaning helps prevent these risks. Contact us at 858-566-3082 to schedule your dryer vent cleaning today.
Fossils of aquatic life, in the form of a belemnitida from the Jurassic, have been found within the modern borders of Chula Vista. It is not until the Oligocene epoch that land life fossils have been found; although Eocene epoch fossils have been found in nearby Bonita. It is not until 10,000 years ago that human activity has been found within the modern borders of Chula Vista, primarily in Otay Valley of the San Dieguito people. The oldest site of human settlement within the modern boundaries of Chula Vista, was named Otai by the Spanish in 1769, and had been occupied as far back as 7,980 years ago. Another place where humans first settled within the modern boundaries of Chula Vista was at the Rolling Hills Site, which dates back to 7,000 years ago.
In 3000 BCE, people speaking the Yuman (Quechan) language began moving into the region from the Lower Colorado River Valley and southwestern Arizona portions of the Sonoran desert. Later the Kumeyaay tribe came to populate the land, on which the city sits today, and lived in the area for hundreds of years. The Kumeyaay built a village known as Chiap (or Chyap) which was located by mudflats at the southern end of South Bay.
José María Estudillo and the Estudillo family, a powerful Californio clan of Southern California, owned the majority of modern-day Chula Vista.In 1542 CE, a fleet of three Spanish Empire ships commanded by Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo, sailed into San Diego Harbor. Early explorations by Spanish conquistadors, such as these, led to Spanish claims of the land. The village of Chiap (known to the Spanish as La Punta) became a center of a Kumeyaay revolt against the Spanish in 1775, which was later abandoned by 1776. The historic land on which Chula Vista sits became part of the 1795 land grant known as Rancho del Rey or The King’s Ranch. The land eventually was renamed Rancho de la Nación.
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