In Lancaster County, heart of PA's Amish country.
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In Lancaster County, heart of PA's Amish country.
It is not the Kercher Cabin in Ohio, but it is in a nearby state. Look at what is around the building for a clue as to what the building is.
http://inlinethumb07.webshots.com/69...600x600Q85.jpg
Photo by: Jerry Kendrick
Jayree
...and he didn't even have to take soil samples to figure out these puzzles!
Mark
You folks are just too good! It is known as the 'Old Log Church' (see photo below) and is located on the Lincoln Highway (US Hwy 30) near Schellsburg, PA.
http://inlinethumb44.webshots.com/45...600x600Q85.jpg
Photo by: Jerry Kendrick
I'll look for a harder one!
Jayree.
Don't have time to post the trip log portion of this one; may not get to it for another day. That said, maybe somebody will get lucky by projecting the arc of our journey and a few clues. Looking for the city and the name of this street.
Shot is looking at the sunset: direction is key to this answer.
Where the hippies meet. Hurry on down.
http://www.takeyourparents.com/user_...108?1253237962
Photo: Don Casey
Wit wiz for me.
I can't give you which exact street you are looking down, but that's the area around Passyunk, Wharton, and 9th in Philly, home of Pat's and Geno's cheesesteaks. Hold the wiz!
Not 9th and Passyunk but it IS Philly; not that far south or west: the correct answer lies within this sentence. The street is (or was) semi-famous/notorious.
We tried four different makes of cheesesteaks; Geno's beat Pat's by a hair. The other two were a small place on Market close to Franklin Court, and a booth in Reading Terminal Market.
We'd eat any of them again. For comparion purposes, all were wit wiz*, onions, peppers.
* Philly-speak for "with Cheez-wiz" as the cheese option, as opposed to provolone or american.
Then it's Campo's on Market at Strawberry.
Actually, this is South Street, at around 4th.
South Street is sort of the Bohemian section of Philly; lots of funky shops and restaurants. We ate at a Moroccan restaurant just off South, and the next day Kris and I wandered South St. in the daylight while Linda hit Fabric Row on 4th south of South. We later walked up to 9th then down it through the Italian Market section of Philly, to the aforementioned intersection with Passyunk for our taste test of Pat's vs. Genos.
But more on South:
Proclaimed "the hippest street in town" in the song "South Street" by the Orlons, released in 1963 (see earlier clues).
The chorus:
"Oh baby
Meet me on South Street
Come on
Hurry On down
Why dont you
Meet me on South Street
The hippest street in town
Oh you take West Street, East Street, North Avenue
But I know South Streets the best street
To have a ball with you"
Depending on your lyric source, the first line is either "where do all the hippest meet" or "where to all the hippies meet". While I suspect the former is correct, the guide on the double-deck bus tour we took likened South Street to the Haight Ashbury, so being the good SF Native I am I went with the "hippies" version of the lyric.
Just got back; I'll post a daytime picture here sometime this weekend (I hope).