On 12/18/2012 11:16 PM, zxcvbob wrote:
> George Shirley wrote:
>> After 24 years of living in Louisiana we're legally Texicans again.
>> Got our vehicle registration transferred to Texas today and also got
>> our driver's licenses and voter registration done. It's good to be
>> home again. I'm a Native Texan and Miz Anne is a born again Texan. We
>> lived most of our married life in Texas until we moved across the
>> border to Cajun Land.
>
> Feels good, don't it? :-)
>
>> It will probably be at least a year before we can can anything unless
>> we start hitting the farmer's markets and the pick-it-yourself farms
>> in the vicinity. Really going to have to put a lot of work into our
>> small backyard in order to grow veggies and/or fruit trees. No nearby
>> neighbors with overloaded fruit trees here, it's mostly all new
>> subdivisions under ten years in age.
>
> I bet you can find some pyracantha berries in your neighborhood. I hear
> they make decent jelly. (I never got around to trying it, and now I
> live up here in the frozen north -- the one good thing about that is
> free crabapples)
We used to pyracantha bushes all over the area in Orange and in Sulphur.
I had heard of jelly from them but never made any.
>
> Plant some Youngberries. They'll produce heavily in 2 years. Get your
> kids to pick them for you in exchange for jam or a pie, the thorns are
> awful.
The one I want is the Doyle blackberry, just one will produce more
berries than we could can. Look them up, I believe they will even grow
in your area.
>
>> We're slowly getting to know our neighbors, mostly young people in
>> their twenties to thirties, most with a flock of kids. Of course the
>> kids came to us first, seems they recognize grand and great grand
>> parents on sight. Since the elementary school bus stop is in front of
>> our house we get to meet a lot of them and, in the main, they're a
>> good lot of rambunctious kids. One little girl wanted me to ride her
>> tiny little push scooter but I begged off, didn't want them to see a
>> crazy old man falling off the scooter.
>
> That was probably a smart move. I fell off a bike this summer and
> messed up my knee, and it's still not quite right yet. (it's getting
> better, very slowly) I had a friend about your age fell off a bike at a
> chemical plant and broke his femur and was laid-up for about a year.
> (good thing he got worker's comp)
I'm 73 years old and have never broken a bone, yet. Have had multiple
minor breaks on my fingers due to playing a lot of baseball when I was
young.
>
> Glad you're back where you belong. And you can probably cook better
> gumbo now for having lived in LA.
>
> Bob
Nope, still cook it the way I always did. My Dad was from Louisiana and
some of his brothers married Cajuns who could cook like nobody's
business. My dirty rice, jambalaya. and my gumbos are pretty good. I
think I know this because all of those get eaten up when we have a feed.
Good to hear from you Bob, next time you come home drop me a note and
maybe we can meet somewhere.
George