Wife has family in Sinking Spring which is an hourish east of Reading iirc
I remember seeing all the road signs saying they were about to be oiled and chipped I think was the terms? I was like wth does that mean?
And the 6' flags by all the fire hydrants so they can find them when it snows
Mainly, so the snow plows do not run them over. (That would be messy!)
My father had flags along his driveway so he, or whoever he hired, could find it.
And you can only buy beer at the distributor. Which is like going into a rundown refrigerated warehouse that's full of beer but it's completely unorganized and half the cases aren't even open yet. If you drink Bud Light or something, that's easy to find. Anything else, Good Luck
If you're talking PA,they used to be called State Stores (a lot of people still call them that). The State was the only one allowed to sell alcohol. Changed somewhere in the 90s, I believe.
I went once with my father to one of those distributors. It was a warehouse with 2 roll-up doors opposite each other. A literal drive-thru liquor store. You'd drive into the middle of the warehouse, load up, and drive out.
Tar & chip, or chipseal .... always hated the first couple of weeks when they redid our road back home, that shit gets all over your wheels and fenders & is a PITA to get off
Even worse, it would get all gunked up into the undercarriage of the car. Assuming you ever cleaned that. Combined with salt, not real good.
PA has the worst roads in the country. Between the salting, frost heave, tar, and heavy traffic, it's a mess.
I always loved driving up I-81. As you enter PA from far-western MD, you go under a bridge (Mason-Dixon Highway or some such). Road before the bridge is in perfect shape. Road starting at the bridge is one big mass of patched potholes and cracks. Not especially rough, but the perfect introduction to P.A.
The exit from the Turnpike nearest my parents has a permanent "End Turnpike Maintenance" sign.
(It's not just the weather and traffic - it's the State.)