Could someone please tell me how to tell when a Caddy is ripe? These damn things have been in the ground for decades and keep changing colors but you can't hardly tell whether they's ripe or not.
Even from above it's hard to tell. Here in a couple months we're going to be heading out on a bit of a road trip out to New Mexico, don't think we can make that run without stopping in to see how the crops are doing at Cadillac Farm Ranch.
That is assuming I quit procrastinating with old photos of it and actually plan the damn trip. Blogifying definitely seems like more fun right now though.
These photos are from a trip in 2018 with my unindicted co-conspirator pictured above. We made it from Louisville to Santa Fe, New Mexico and back in seven days that trip so everything was done with the quickness. Still managed to lose several hours to ten Cadillacs half buried in the middle of a field outside Amarillo, Texas.
Easy to do when there's that much spray painting to do. It's BYOB but otherwise the sky's the limit. We're going for a more relaxed pace this time so I'm looking forward to seeing what we can do taking our time.
I think the spray paint is like fertilizer for cars. Pretty sure they're more paint now than machine. Maybe that's how you tell when they're ripe, when there's no more metal left.
Stonehenge has more 'theories' explaining it than you can shake a stick at, wonder what sort of creative nonsense future archaeologists will come up with to explain this Mechanical Age Stonehenge?