11 favorites     24 comments    319 visits

1/80 f/5.0 10.4 mm ISO 800

SONY DSC-RX100M2

EXIF - See more details

See also...

Tolerance Tolerance


Flickr Refugees Flickr Refugees


pop-art pop-art


Heaps Heaps


See more...

Keywords

plastic
radishes


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

Photo replaced on 21 Mar 2019
319 visits

Photo by John FitzGerald

To see vast expanses of radish type Z.

Phil Sutters, Ruebenkraut, Sami Serola (inactive), Andy Rodker and 7 other people have particularly liked this photo


Comments
 John FitzGerald
John FitzGerald club has replied
Thanks, Ulrich. I agree -- there's no need for plastic, and it stops you frpm inspecting the radishes.
5 years ago.
 John FitzGerald
John FitzGerald club has replied
Thanks, TLC. Supposedly one of the reasons Tesco failed in the US was because it sold bagged vegetables. Americans don't like bagged vegetables, apparently, especially when Tesco branded itself in the States as Fresh and Easy.

I wonder about Canadian tastebuds often. Once you get beyond doughnuts and beer Canadians seem to lose any appreciation of their food.
5 years ago.
 Jean
Jean
Our local supermarket is providing paper bags and encouraging customers to give plastic packaging a miss. However from half a dozen kinds of mushrooms only one kind are loose the others all packaged. The same applies to pears,apples etc. etc.
5 years ago.
 Sarah P.
Sarah P. club
This has a Warholian feel to it. Radical, some might call it.
5 years ago.
 John FitzGerald
John FitzGerald club has replied
Paper is a good idea, Jean. More sales for the Canadian paper industry. As you know, our economy is under attack from the Trumperialists; we could use a few paper sales.

Of course, you'd think Canadian companies might use paper, eh (these radishes were bagged by a company in Burlington, Ontario)? Have American interests infiltrated the Canadian radish sector?
5 years ago.

Sign-in to write a comment.