THE SALT MINE
High grade rock salt is literally scooped from the torrid desert here near Amboy, California. It is cleaned and shipped all over the country for commercial use. In this dry and arid region the temperature sometimes climbs to "ten feet above zero."
Provenance: Unsure.
Want a boring postcard from Michael5000? Just ask -- he's got plenty!
4 comments:
What the heck does "ten feet above zero" mean?
Dry AND arid? OOooo-eee. That's pretty waterless.
I was almost too bored to comment, but the redundancy reduncancy inspired me.
Carto: Oft have I pondered this question. My leading candidates are:
1) it's slang for 100F.
2) it's slang for 120F.
I was imagining "ten feet above zero" just meant really really hot, transcending your garden-variety mercury thermometer the way Willy Wonka's Great Glass Elevator transcends your ordinary lift. But I'm guessing 120F is the landmark temperature in this part of the country (100F would be frequent, and not exactly postcardworthy in the southwest), and one degree per inch is a pretty nifty conversion.
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