The worst I heard described, but did not see, had to be Hoxie's. One reliable account said you'd drive off the highway, way down a sandy Florida road, then stop somewhere, literally in the middle of nothing. There was no top set up for shelter, nothing with walls, no running water, no donnicker, no store in sight, and no civilization. And there the show was, stranded on a patch of sand Hoxie owned, literally in the middle of nowhere, with nothing but nothing for human or animal subsistence. "With it and for it" could never apply for a show allowing conditions such as these. Hoxie was not the only show owner with squalid winterquarters, and this might invite others for comparative stories.
5 comments:
These might have been Sid Kelner's punks
Yes, at his not-so-great Quarters, up in Martinez CA.
pretty primitive
The worst I heard described, but did not see, had to be Hoxie's. One reliable account said you'd drive off the highway, way down a sandy Florida road, then stop somewhere, literally in the middle of nothing. There was no top set up for shelter, nothing with walls, no running water, no donnicker, no store in sight, and no civilization. And there the show was, stranded on a patch of sand Hoxie owned, literally in the middle of nowhere, with nothing but nothing for human or animal subsistence. "With it and for it" could never apply for a show allowing conditions such as these. Hoxie was not the only show owner with squalid winterquarters, and this might invite others for comparative stories.
Vargas found (or was relegated to) a few
really rotten hell holes a few winters
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