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Find Your Favorite local Filth Festival for #EstuariesWeek!

60 thoughts on “Find Your Favorite local Filth Festival for #EstuariesWeek!

        1. Amargosa Valley is near the controversial Yucca Mountain Repository, a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) facility on federal land, designed for the storage of high-level nuclear waste.</i.

          Good thing. The last thing you need is hills full of Bundy-Mutants.

          1. My oft-referenced desert fortress/compound is near where Pahrump Valley, Stewart Valley and Amargosa Valley almost meet. It's a unique environment, and having a wildlife refuge there is something totally unexpected in the desert.

          2. I like Pyramid. Too many people at Tahoe, so the best way to enjoy Lake Tahoe is to get away from the lake, ironically.

  1. Ever fly into LAX from the west and notice the beautiful beach just before you come to the runway? Turns out some very good people have and are cleaning it up.

    http://friendsofthelaxdunes.org/

    Good for them; it must be a terrible place to work with planes flying over you so low you can check the tread depth on their landing gear.

        1. Piss Clam Stout

          I'd drink it.

          Razor or Jackknife clams be good eatin' and can even swim! We calls the | Mya or softshell clam | "Piss Clams" out here. They're all over the creeks and back bays here, it's mesohaline and the bottom's muddy. The locals harvest them with hydraulic dredges and a lot of them get turned into fried clam strips. I eat them steamed, with butter. And beer, of course.

      1. You are right, the migration thing is starting soon. There are thousands of cranes (what kind? Um, I dunno, not a great birder. My mom is disappointed) that gather around here for their migration to Africa in the winter. They are so very loud, it's hard to miss them.

  2. when I was a kid I'd have fun watching where the clams were in the sand, digging them out, watching them dig back in again when the water washed over, lather rinse repeat.

  3. We called them sand crabs? about 3 cm long at most, ellipsoidal, beige shells with orange bodies underneath?

    My dad impressed us all one day at the NJ shore by going in with one of our sand pails and catching a live jellyfish for us to marvel at.

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