![]() ![]() At the address in question, a former pawnshop, I again found no food truck. It’s across from the Mexican consulate, just down the block from Ray’s Unique Bingo Supplies. But it was a beautiful day to walk my bike down rocky, sandy paths beneath a soaring hawk in search of a phantom food truck.Ī bit of sleuthing suggested an alternative site where I might find the Mystique Food Truck, an address in the old industrial neighborhood along the railroad tracks, north of downtown. Also, I can confirm that those things that look, tantalizingly like “dirt roads” in satellite images of Albuquerque’s west mesa are predictably unrideable on my road bike, which actually does pretty well on actual “dirt roads”. I got close enough to confirm that there was, in fact, no food truck. Those “dirt road”-looking lines on the satellite image above aren’t much, ruts of volcanic rock and sand providing only barely usable access to the lines running across the mesa that bring Albuquerque its electricity.īut for completeness’ sake, I rode out this morning to check. In addition, it would be hard for the food truck’s customers to get there. For one thing, it would be hard to get a food truck there. This is an unlikely place for a food truck. No food trucks to be seen, anywhere By John Fleckįor some time, Google Maps has offered a mystery – out in the West Mesa sand flats of Petroglyph National Monument, the Mystique Food Truck:
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