9/04/18
I drove past this between Salida and Cotopaxi on State Highway 50 in Colorado. I had to turn around and tell whoever that I stood with them totally assuming I was correct. I was and got the biggest hug of appreciation for doing so.

From my understanding, there are close to 3000 children being held around this country after being seized from their parents at the border.

Many will never see their Mom and Dad again because Republicans are totally evil.

You bastards!

7/31/11

The Best Part Of The Last Couple Days

It may not be much but I was hoping for good things here and I got lucky on both counts. Picked these up along side the road but not close. For the most part you can't grow these items here. If 10 was the best these were an 8 and there's more left

9 comments:

  1. Surprised that made it back to have its picture taken. That ear of corn's dying to be eaten raw.

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  2. That has been done before.

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  3. Well, I find the composition interesting...but, that's just me. Now I'm afraid to say they look delicious. It's best I leave it there.

    I do love that train.

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  4. OH MY GOSH!

    I did not see that and will go no further with this part of da comment.

    One of my favorite other pictures is of the same freight train going the other way. A cloud came over of course when I took these and I screwed the good chance at an Amtrak train up. It's yours.

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  5. Like Freud said, "Sometimes an ear of corn and two tomatoes are just an ear of corn and two tomatoes."

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  6. You crack me up. Seriously he said that?

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  7. It's my loose paraphrase of "Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar."

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  8. Those veggies are the specialty of farmers in my area. We usually have fresh sweet corn and tomatoes and other produce from mid-June to mid-October. I'm always surprised to hear that's not so everywhere else. You probably still have native trout though, something that's very hard to find in California.

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  9. There are plenty of "natives" around here for sure Jan. With only 54 frost free days there's just not any of these guys that are in the picture. BTW - the corn was $3.50 a bushel (that's fourteen) out of my cornfield when I count it. Tomatoes were two for a buck. That was a deal.

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