Barstow is "the big city" people in Trona travel hours to get to, hilariously.
Barstow is only 1.5 hours from Trona. Some days, it takes me longer than that to commute the roughly 7 miles into Boston for work.
Barstow is "the big city" people in Trona travel hours to get to, hilariously.
The existence of other places that are even more nowhere than Central California, doesn't turn nowhere into somewhere.
I will say 155 people per sq mile seems high for an area that isn't a city.
Barstow is only 1.5 hours from Trona. Some days, it takes me longer than that to commute the roughly 7 miles into Boston for work.
This is the worst bar trivia night I've ever attended.Barstow is only 1.5 hours from Trona. Some days, it takes me longer than that to commute the roughly 7 miles into Boston for work.
No. They paid their money, I ran a table for them. But I took absolutely no crap, and was ruthlessly fair and impartial in adhering to the modules. Some of them even had fun in spite of themselves, when their usual BS didn't work. Others never came back to the Con.Did you swat them on the nose with a rolled-up Chessex battlemat?
This is crazy, would have thought much lower, there’s a lot of people there, but it’s huge, and no part of it (that I’ve been to) ever felt remotely densely populated.Los Angeles is around 8,200 people per square mile.
The population density of New Jersey is between 1,200 and 1,300 people per square mile. Which seems high, but that's an average for the whole state, and he have rural parts that's just farms, and the Pine Barrens which are the largest coastal pine barrens left on the Eastern seaboard. You can absolutely drive to parts of NJ that seem barren. What you don't have, is signs on the highway that say, "Next Rest Stop 90 miles" because that would be absurd in this tiny state.
True. But another reason it seems high to me is that I'm Australian. And outside of the cities our population is... sparse.Well, the population density of Atlanta is about 3,700 people per square mile. Los Angeles is around 8,200 people per square mile. Boston is 13,800 or so. New York City is 29,300 per square mile.
Which is to say, it seems high for a place that isn't a city, because we forget how insanely high the density is in cities.
True. But another reason it seems high to me is that I'm Australian. And outside of the cities our population is... sparse.