I've found some old family journals and I have been working on transcribing them to word documents. I found an entry from my grandpa during a road trip out west in 1934 that I really wondered about:
"At 11:00 o'clock, we neared the California line and saw the cars being stopped for inspection. We finally stopped at the Oregon side and ate 3 apples we had in the car. Our Myrtle leaves had been packed in the roll of bedding and out of sight. The inspectors stopped us, looked through the suit cases, examined the Begonia, but did not open the blankets, and we passed through the station without trouble'
They used to stop and inspect cars across state borders?? Does anyone know?
Yep agriculture checkpoints.
Do not know about searching for herbs, but CA did stop Oakies during the Dust Bowl.
they had (not sure if they still do) an agricultural check point
California still has agricultural check points, yeah. Usually if you're in a passenger vehicle they wave you on through though. I was always under the impression they only cared about commercial agriculture.
sometimes they wave us through, and sometimes they ask if we have any produce on board and where we got it. Driving back into CA each time with motor home.
The traffic was sparse. Very sparse.
To prevent invasive species and pests. Think they mostly gave up long ago, but maintaining the stations is easier than firing the unionized employees. In the 70's they made a big deal about inspecting citrus fruits. Didn't work, the bugs from Florida somehow got in anyway. And it messes up the traffic coming back from Vegas.
Yes. This went on through to 60's at least. It was to protect calif agriculture from bugs and disease.
They absolutely did. No out of state fruit could come into CA. We made sure to eat it before we got to the state border. They were protecting their fruit crops from "outside diseases".
California is the only state I remember it for, but I didn't cross other borders much in the past.
Yes they DID, and it had to do with trying to prevent non-native agriculture species from entering the state. California was primarily an agriculture state back then and they guarded their resources strictly.