It tis an In-n-Out Burger....
Yep, that is NY-NY --
So, what the location?
Mark
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It tis an In-n-Out Burger....
Yep, that is NY-NY --
So, what the location?
Mark
Driving through agricultural areas, I am often struck by the sort of the questions that start out "What the heck is growing there?" So, in that spirit and because I don't think that EVERYONE will know what this is immediately....
http://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog/...ark-130jpg.jpg
(Photo by Mark Sedenquist)
What is this plant?
Where do you think I took the photo?
And if you get the second part, what's the significance of this particular crop?
Mark
Central Valley, California.
Largest money/export crop in CA (not counting weed).
(California Almond Growers Exchange in Sacto used to be one of the sites I supported back in my software vendor days).
They harvest these with a machine sort of like a forklift that clamps around the trunk and shakes the bejeesus out of the tree; the ripe nuts fall onto tarps spread under the tree.
What is this, and what Cal graduate, featured in a Ken Burn's documentary, is commemorated by a section of landscape downstream from this location?
http://donandlindacasey.com/images/MysteryRapids.jpg
Photo: Don Casey
Should have held off on the clue a touch. Made it too easy (assuming I'm right)
It's the Great Falls of the Potomac. The Mather Gorge, one of many things nationally named after Stephen Mather, is just downstream.
These plants are here because the water table in the area is remarkably high and it's the water (to paraphrase the old beer commercials) that make this product so unique and interesting.... And just to clarify again -- these are not almonds (see posts above)!
Rarely have I been so sure and yet so wrong.
And yes, Great Falls of the Potomac, as seen from the Virginia side.
Back to the current puzzle.
Pistachios perhaps?
.... and just for grins; about 70 miles east of Tucson?
Don, I've been actively wrong several times on guesses made here -- so I guess you've just joined "the club."
Yes, those are pistachios and not just any pistachios....
http://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog/...o-Festival.jpg
Because of the unique qualities of some of the minerals found in the ground water in Newberry Springs, these pistachios are unique in the world, in terms of color, size and flavor....
Mark