Last Sunday we drove out to Westport, WA to look at the ocean, on the way back we passed a field of BRBs wrapped in white plastic... the thought "sanitized and wrapped for your protection" passed thru my mind!
It is fairly common here to leave bales in the field for months. My uncle who farmed cleaned his off the field and stacked them. I do know why why people leave them.
Like literally minutes before reading this post, I was writing about an abandoned place and used the term 99 44/100% empty when describing it. What's the odds? Now I feel like I stole it.
How sweet it is!
ReplyDeleteMaybe those are future steaks of the best kind.
ReplyDeleteLast Sunday we drove out to Westport, WA to look at the ocean, on the way back we passed a field of BRBs wrapped in white plastic... the thought "sanitized and wrapped for your protection" passed thru my mind!
ReplyDeleteLOL The farmer in me is having a fit. Why are those bales still in the field?
ReplyDeleteIt is fairly common here to leave bales in the field for months. My uncle who farmed cleaned his off the field and stacked them. I do know why why people leave them.
DeleteYay - they're back!
ReplyDeleteLike literally minutes before reading this post, I was writing about an abandoned place and used the term 99 44/100% empty when describing it. What's the odds? Now I feel like I stole it.
ReplyDelete