Pickles by Brian Crane for January 07, 2012

  1. Image002
    hsawlrae  almost 13 years ago

    Yup, used to be a Forest St. too.

     •  Reply
  2. Missing large
    Llewellenbruce  almost 13 years ago

    Earl is taking a break from Opal today.

     •  Reply
  3. Kittay
    naturally_easy  almost 13 years ago

    oh,oh. Then that must mean that the Planet Earth Emporium used to be….

     •  Reply
  4. Sunshine   copy
    SusanSunshine Premium Member almost 13 years ago

    Yeah, I just love developments with pretentious, hopeful names… Skyhawk Ranch, Riverview Estates, Cherryhill Manor…. most of the construction having destroyed whatever scenic features were there before.

    And even had they incorporated the natural attributes of the land, most would be more appropriately named Cow Pasture Acres or Apple Orchard Flat.

     •  Reply
  5. Photo  1
    thirdguy  almost 13 years ago

    I used to live near Suicide Ridge, I hate to think what they bulldozed there!

     •  Reply
  6. Grog poop
    GROG Premium Member almost 13 years ago

    In Pasadena, TX, they named a couple consecutive streets after fuit…like strawberry & blueberry. Strawberry fields for ever indeed.

     •  Reply
  7. 00436879
    vikipa  almost 13 years ago

    At least ya’ll have fruit and trees. I have battlefields. Bull Run Road, Shiloh Church Road. Haven’t seen a Gettysburg Avenue down here though.

     •  Reply
  8. Img 7448
    Happy, happy, happy!!! Premium Member almost 13 years ago

    i live in the middle of town. on “rolling hills drive”. you drive on it. : /

     •  Reply
  9. Missing large
    richardmay2  almost 13 years ago

    Great distress here. I grew up across the highway from a peach orchard that was bulldozed to make way for a mall at Tyson’s Corner, Virginia. Over the years, the bulldozers razed entire neighborhoods, too.

     •  Reply
  10. Missing large
    LuvThemPluggers  almost 13 years ago

    An interesting turn of events in a new housing development near us. A whole mature olive orchard was removed before the land was plowed and compacted. I didn’t see this and assumed the trees were cut and chipped. Nope, just as the home-building was nearing completion, here came big flatbed trucks with all those same trees in nursery boxes. The developer had paid a nursery to box them up and take care of them until they could plant them again. They were re-installed artfully around the perimeter of the location and near the entrance. You would think they had been there all the time. I have to say, they look great and it seems they will survive the transplant, which process took several years. No, the name of the subdivision does not have OLIVE in it, but I thought it should. The skeptic in me wondered if they got some gubmint grant for being green and saving trees.

     •  Reply
  11. Bizarre006
    716PMedGuy  almost 13 years ago

    damn developers!

     •  Reply
  12. Cat7
    rockngolfer  almost 13 years ago

    Osprey Run is nowhere near water, Panther Trace hasn’t seen a panther in 50 years, but the Down Yonder mobile home park is aptly named because it has a large percentage of Canadians that stay 6 months each year.

     •  Reply
  13. Missing large
    psychlady  almost 13 years ago

    Yeah, damn developers!

     •  Reply
  14. Face
    yatman  almost 13 years ago

    Then they “Paved paradise and put up a parking lot”.

     •  Reply
  15. Large airbrush 20240305192116
    Number Three  almost 13 years ago

    That’s a shame… Destroying land to build a shopping centre.

    xxx

     •  Reply
  16. Avatarneal2
    APersonOfInterest  almost 13 years ago

    I live on a barrier island named Wildwood … named for the thick forest that once grew here … guess how many trees grow here now?

     •  Reply
  17. Papa smurf walking smiling
    route66paul  almost 13 years ago

    How about “Aroma dr” for the main road into the subdivision built over the old BKK landfill?

     •  Reply
  18. Tourney08c
    Charles Weir  almost 13 years ago

    This reminds me of “Twin Pines/Lone Pine” Mall in “Back To The Future.”

    Lots of funny street names abound in the world. Take a look at just a few at http://www.freakstreets.com/

     •  Reply
  19. Siberian tigers 22
    Hunter7  almost 13 years ago

    That explains 7 Oaks Shopping Mall.

     •  Reply
  20. Missing large
    wjborgers  almost 13 years ago

    In city planning, the Dutch are masters. In planning new developments, they group streets around famous people like musicians, scientists, artists, so that strangers can be immediately connected to a section of the development wherethe address they seek can be easily located. All without a GPS!

     •  Reply
  21. Pib icon60
    BrookFan  almost 13 years ago

    I used to live on South Maple Avenue, it was lined with Sycamores not a maple in sight go figure.

     •  Reply
  22. Pib icon60
    BrookFan  almost 13 years ago

    In Jenny Jump State Forrest there is Shades of Death road.(Warren Co NJ)

     •  Reply
  23. Bassethound abernathy
    boldyuma  almost 13 years ago

    The street I live on is called Chenoweth..

    Named after a Ohlone Indian I suppose.

    Wonder if he’s buried in the nearby peach orchard.

     •  Reply
  24. Missing large
    hippogriff  almost 13 years ago

    Censored again! I posted an innocuous little note about how towns along the Texas & Pacific railroad have streets parallel to the tracks numbered – on both sides – thus two firsts, seconds, thirds, etc., in high numbers as much as a mile apart. Streets perpendicular are trees (whether indigenous or not). Shorter streets have actual names.

    Checking back on the unlikely event it engendered comment, I find someone, not I, deleted it.

     •  Reply
  25. Missing large
    Sillstaw  almost 13 years ago

    “The farmer had a crazy idea about breeding pine trees…”

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Pickles