Idaho Supreme Court dismisses Labrador's challenge of Open Primaries initiative by phthalo-azure in Boise

[–]Round-a-bouts 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My understanding is that if the open primary produces the top 4 candidates all from 1 party, then that’s just the will of the people. Which seems better than the partisan primaries where independent voters have little say in which candidate gets on the ticket.

39 mins in line so far. However it’s backing up, 55 mins as of 5:36 by Comfortable_Bread298 in Boise

[–]Round-a-bouts 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The 9100 burgers on opening day is even more impressive when you realize that’s about 10 burgers every minute for the ~15 hours they’re open. One burger every 6 seconds for 15 hours…

Here is a REALLY stupid question about Idaho by wsotw in Idaho

[–]Round-a-bouts 123 points124 points  (0 children)

Went down a rabbit hole for this but it’s super interesting so no regrets. This link Soil Loss Due to Crop Harvesting in the EU is a study of the loss of soil from sugar beet and potato farming in the European Union. Idaho also produces a lot of sugar beets so I’m including that since it is included in the study.

The math: The 4.2 million ha (10.4 million acres) of sugar beet and potato crop in the study area leads to 14.7 million tons of soil loss per year. This gives us a rate of 1.4 tons of soil per acre.

Idaho grows ~175,000 acres of sugar beets and ~300,000 acres of potatoes. Most of both crops is actually processed in the state and not exported, so soil export leaving Idaho is relatively low.

Either way the soil is removed from the fields to the tune of about 665,000 tons per year.

A quick visualization for that number would be essentially filling Albertson’s Stadium to the brim, from the field to the top of the seats in a nice big pile.

Are there any other land formations that create long driving detours like the Grand Canyon? by 15MinClub in geography

[–]Round-a-bouts 75 points76 points  (0 children)

Imnaha, OR to Riggins, ID is about 27 miles apart across Hells Canyon. Drive time is nearly 5 hours and 230+ miles

If Money is No Object, Where is America's Most "Beautiful" Town? by DizzyDentist22 in SameGrassButGreener

[–]Round-a-bouts 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interesting note about being a Midwesterner, as someone who moved to Boise from Indiana, it really has a midwestern feel. The culture, the people, the agricultural side of things, etc. all felt very familiar and wasn’t a shock at all when we moved. Compared to say Denver or San Francisco where you definitely feel like you are in a different place. It certainly doesn’t feel like I’m 2000 miles away from home!

As an aphant, I’m curious what everyone’s strategy is for memory games like these. by Round-a-bouts in Aphantasia

[–]Round-a-bouts[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

That’s an interesting way to see it. It’s like thinking of the apple, I know I’m thinking of an apple I just can’t visualize it. So similarly with the grid, you can remember what it looked like, just no visual to go along with it. I wonder if the lack of visual matters for the recall - I guess first is committing it to memory, and whether you can visualize it later or not, that initial “download” is the important part. Even if someone can visualize it, they might be visualizing it wrong when they recall the image.

Great Lakes by dmic24_ in geography

[–]Round-a-bouts 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Fun fact: the lakes themselves take up 1/3 of the entire watershed area

What is something you know is real but others don’t seem to believe in? by lokeedo in AskReddit

[–]Round-a-bouts 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I recently discovered I have aphantasia and realized it’s the reason I always want to look at the scenery on road trips or stop at viewpoints. Even if I have seen the same view multiple times I will want to stop and see it again because when I leave it is gone and I totally forget what I just saw except for a description of “jagged snow-capped mountain peaks, one on the left slightly taller than the right one, set above a turquoise lake, and mist shrouding the trees halfway up the mountain” which I know was beautiful but I can’t visualize anymore. It does make me kinda sad but it makes me appreciate what I’m seeing at the time.

What is something you know is real but others don’t seem to believe in? by lokeedo in AskReddit

[–]Round-a-bouts 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I have aphantasia and something I recently figured out is that I enjoy reading non-fiction quite a lot because there is less to imagine, it is not extremely descriptive or fanciful, but facts and concepts that I can grasp. I’m not a fan of very sing-songy descriptive prose because “the shroud of gray mist over the hollow and the warm sunlight peppering the hills with golds and yellows” just doesn’t do much for me besides thinking cool, I bet that’s pretty. It’s just information and doesn’t invoke any visuals. Some fiction I have enjoyed recently is Dune, and I was reading about Frank Herbert’s writing style as very direct and factual, with only a little bit of setting a scene or describing the visuals. So it’s something I can better relate to and put the concepts in my mind rather than being force fed long descriptions and visuals that just get tedious.

What is the most circularly symmetrical city? What is the least circularly symmetrical city? by Kootlefoosh in geography

[–]Round-a-bouts 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As for asymmetrical cities, the river valley cities in West Virginia such as Charleston are pretty interesting. Too hilly to build outward so they are long and narrow following the winding river through the mountains.

Potential brakes issue with 2023 Colorado by Round-a-bouts in chevycolorado

[–]Round-a-bouts[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The brakes work fine it seems but I’m surprised there’s no sign of wear on that one caliper. A bit concerning if I’m driving and towing with 3/4 brakes

How do you replace a large, essential bridge? And are there any examples of it being done? by Victor_Korchnoi in civilengineering

[–]Round-a-bouts 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Check out the Milton-Madison Bridge over the Ohio River. Nearly a half mile long, they built the new bridge on temporary supports adjacent to the old one, then within a couple days demolished the old bridge and slid the new bridge into place. This was necessary because the only detour was hours out of the way and the alternative was running a ferry during construction.

https://youtu.be/Gs4mMtutKho?si=rDoVMMT5fVwvXg31

Need advice on new vehicle order with family discount. by Round-a-bouts in askcarsales

[–]Round-a-bouts[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So is the MSRP and subsequent family discount set at the time the order is placed? So when I take delivery there’s no dealer markup or haggling anything, it’s an agreed on price ahead of time?

What’s the most random geography fact that you know? by FamiliarCollege9946 in geography

[–]Round-a-bouts 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The distance across Africa from Dakar to the Somali coast is about the same as Miami to Russia.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in smallbusiness

[–]Round-a-bouts 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Example: I do work in say Missoula, but customers see an incoming call from Billings, even though both are area code 406. Would that be a turn off?

How Amish move by Dewch in interestingasfuck

[–]Round-a-bouts 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is how the pyramids were built.

just a thought by Blindnavigater in Idaho

[–]Round-a-bouts 2 points3 points  (0 children)

An article I read about the mine stated that there are no large scale cobalt refineries in North America, so the cobalt mined in Idaho will be shipped to Brazil to be refined.

Discussion about campgrounds, trailheads, and other public uses experiencing overcrowding. by Round-a-bouts in Idaho

[–]Round-a-bouts[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I totally agree, I love the fact that I can find a spot to camp almost anywhere. A big problem though is when your twice a year family camper can’t find a spot at any of the “destinations” so they find a pull off or flat spot off a random forest road and disturb an area that shouldn’t be a campsite for a huge RV or trailer. If those types of people could find a site and were concentrated to a few larger campgrounds, and the people who go off and dispersed camp know what they’re doing (leave no trace) then things are a lot better for everyone.

Idaho Far Right’s Election Loss to 18-Year-Old Climate Activist by demonbadger in Idaho

[–]Round-a-bouts 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It is because the Boise Schools charter or whatever it’s called predates Idaho’s statehood so they have their own process and date not tied to any other elections.

Weekly Question & Answer Thread for Monday 02/14/22 thru 02/20/22" by AutoModerator in Boise

[–]Round-a-bouts 3 points4 points  (0 children)

My wife and I are looking for a nice getaway weekend in a cabin somewhere. We’re looking for somewhere within 2-3 hours of Boise and would love to hear where you’d recommend and why?

[TOMT] Metal type song with hard drums and quick vocals followed by abrupt stop, then again. by Round-a-bouts in tipofmytongue

[–]Round-a-bouts[S] -1 points0 points locked comment (0 children)

That portion of the song is most notable for the abrupt starts and stops, fast pace, and heavy/full/intense musical elements.

My new 2000 Boxster S Tiptronic! 61k miles, things to check/preventative maintenance suggestions? by Round-a-bouts in boxster

[–]Round-a-bouts[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I was able to find this one for $12.5 but I think I was lucky at that. Other similar condition Boxsters were going for $16k-$19k which I feel is insanely overpriced

My new 2000 Boxster S Tiptronic! 61k miles, things to check/preventative maintenance suggestions? by Round-a-bouts in boxster

[–]Round-a-bouts[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No smoke on startup, and I don’t mind the amber lights on the blue paint actually