For a grab and go treat, buy a selection of sugar free ice pops. Plain frozen fruits are also good freezer staples to enjoy strawberries or peaches in any season.
The fair is an activity that can be enjoyed by kids and adults alike. Some of the special entertainment for kids includes games, pig races, a petting zoo and Kiddy Land. Most of the entertainment is free with admission, but there is an additional fee for carnival rides and Grandstand entertainment, such as the bull riding and demolition derby.
Workable? I don't know. I studied some economics in university and am a former stockbroker, but this stuff is still above my pay grade. I think ideas like this, though, are worth considering. This kind of idea seems better to me than merely stealing money from the rich with higher taxes. Give the money to the people, not the government. Plus, it's not a giveaway. The workers buy their shares.
Do you know that a monster truck driver generally sits in the center of the vehicle? They do this for weight distribution issues and visibility. All drivers sit in custom seats molded for their frame. Their heads and necks are secured in restraint devices, and they wear 5-point harness seatbelts. Just like it is for all racing circuits, safety is Monster Jam's number one priority.
I drove across the parking lot and entered a local chain grocery store. I was thinking that maybe people were anxious and stocking up on groceries. What I found was just the opposite. The store was about at its normal business level on a Tuesday morning. The bread drivers were stocking the bread, and the stock boys were stocking the shelves. On the way out I bought a $2 scratch off lottery ticket and won $5. Everything seemed normal for a Tuesday morning.
Mineral County encompasses 1,223 square miles. Its land is 82% National Forest and is managed by the US Forest Service. 3% of the land is owned by the State of Montana and 15% is privately owned. The county's rich mining history lends its name.
Traveling from Idaho to Montana, Barrette followed the St. Joe River to its headwaters in the Coeur d'Alene Mountains. As he rode along the summit trail he noticed a deep basin on the Montana side that, to his gold prospector's eye, looked promising. However winter was moving in and he needed to proceed to Frenchtown before snow fall in the high country prevented his passage.