Tag: “Roadside Stand”

31 results found.

  1. Roadside Stand

    In the fall there are numerous roadside stands in Maine selling all sorts of farm fresh food.

  2. Claude, Texas

    Restaurant in Claude, Texas

  3. World's Biggest Dinosaur's

    Cabazon, California is home to "The World's Largest Dinosours." They can be found just off of California Highway 10 on the way to Palm Springs. The dinosaurs include a T-Rex ("Mr.

  4. Frankfort Ave. Wall

    According to the Encyclopedia of Louisville, Christian Heigold, a German immigrant and stonecutter, came to Louisville before 1850. He built a home near the river in an area called the Point near what's now called Butchertown.

  5. Hot Dog Johnny's

    Is Hot Dog Johnny's a classic roadside hot dog stand/restaurant along Route 46 in Buttzville (heh heh heh!), New Jersey, not far from the Delaware Water Gap.

    Route 46 was a major east-west throughfare before Interstate 80 was built, and Hot Dog Johnny's, which opened in 1944, is a thriving reminder of what roadside architecture and cuisine were like back in the day.

    Don't miss the birch beer served in frosted mugs, the french fries, and, of course, the hot dogs.

  6. T-Rex in Cabazon

    What collection of roadside attractions would be complete without an image from the land of the dinosaurs, Cabazon, California? It's a great time for the kids and amazing to the adults to see life-sized concrete dinosaurs at this famous rest stop on Interstate 10.

  7. La Crosse, Wisconsin. World's Largest Six Pack.

    La Crosse, Wisconsin. World's Largest Six Pack.

  8. Cadillac Ranch

    Cadillac Ranch is located 8 miles west of Amarillo, Texas on the well-known Route 66. It's a roadside attraction created by the group, Ant Farm, in 1974.

  9. Road side convenience

    Toilets by the side of the road, through chott el jerid, Tunisia

  10. Salinas

    Salinas, California is the land of strawberries, lettuce, Steinbeck… and giant cutout figures of fieldworkers.

    It started with roadside murals depicting baseball games, traffic accidents, and monstrous artichokes, but over the last ten years, artist John Cerney has accented the landscape of the Salinas Valley with his cutout portraits of farmers and fieldworkers. The figures are three times human size, and thus, easily visible from the comfort of your vehicle.