Sunday, April 19, 2009

Collinsville smoking wives

Collinsville smoking wives


If the “big city” life begins to get to Birmingham(Collinsville smoking wives), waiting for an entirely different world just one hour ’s drive away from the city. Every Saturday the town of Collinsville, near the fort Payne (hometown of the band Alabama and the “self; Sock Capital of the World”), holds a huge flea market called the Collinsville business days. Follow the flow of cars down the U.S. two blocks of 11 to the hill of the Coon Dog. Parking in a field for $ 1 and get ready to add another hour. First, a little history, courtesy of the event ’s Web site: On the banks of the creek in downtown Collinsville in 1902, began a tradition in this sleepy little town of only 1,800. This tradition was called at that time, “Swappers Day” of the horse, and was held every Saturday. The men brought their horses and mules to negotiate and sell. Over the years, the wives began to bring their husbands to sell their handmade items and home-baked. While this reunion exchange grew, it became too big for the city center and was put back to its current location on the day in June 1955. The market now covers 65 acres with over 1,000 vendors and 30,000 buyers who come every Saturday. Items are sold in many different ways to the bed of vendors’ carts, some in cabins or style of the yard sale. I ‘m not sure how it first happened next to this place, but I’ VE AIDS sometimes now, and it ’s always a unique experience. Each visit I see something I ‘ve never seen before. (This isn ‘t always a good thing.) To enter, you cross a bridge rachitic metal on a bed of dried-up creek, garbage-filled, passing the picnic area where the file cabinets of discarded restaurant fast food serve as banks. The market itself consists of rows of stops wood outdoors. Some of the most popular merchandise: weapons, religious phraseology shirts, lots of knives, car parts, paraphernalia confederal flag, socks, toys cheap pirated Cd and DVDs, shoes, kitchenware, antiques (real? ) arrowheads, baseball cards and other collectibles. This market gets rolling early (4: 30 am) and winds down a little after noon. I ‘m not sure what happens here on the pre-dawn hours, as I’ ve never brave a visit in the dark. There may be some great finds that can kill animals in place. The only thing I can suggest is not coming too late, or you ‘ll lack of corn dogs, sold out with the other available here as recently as fried strips of chicken on a hot biscuit or funnel large, hand-apelmaza were damaged along with the “squeeze” fresh lemonade that suspect as evidence the drink’s blend of time in the country. Boiled and roasted peanuts abound. What makes this market different from a standard flea market is the number of live animals for sale, reflecting its history of horse-trade. At the top, the kids love seeing all the animals of the field and puppies for sale. In the handicap, I ‘m pretty sure is where many of this area’ s of the pitbull cockfighting enthusiasts buy their animals. There is an entire section where all the cattle of roosters to hens to goats to small foals can be purchased. But fans of the buyer (and animals) Beware: the cages in which these animals exhibit-after-hand the samples indicated with letters that advertise the “papers” for the countless dogs for sale, for example, whether to often little rusty. Several animals are crushed together, often in small cages and don ‘t always have water available, even in the heat of summer. But if the sight of men carrying 20 pounds of onions packed off completely from live chickens or ducks doesn ‘baby; t inconvenience you, this is the place to buy some fresh poultry. (You can avoid the “livestock” area altogether-it ’s in the rear of the site, but the puppies are sold through the market.) This is a good place to buy product, but for items like strawberries that aren ‘t grown in the state, it’ s worthy of close inspection of them come from the same batches your local grocery store chain is getting, and the prices aren ‘t necessarily better here. But the abundant sweet peppers, sweet potatoes, peaches, and more locally grown food can be a treat

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