Showing posts with label Good to know. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Good to know. Show all posts

Sunday, April 17, 2011

You'll find me on my "Soap Box" today!




Earth Day shouldn't be observed only one day a year!




Whether you are celebrating Earth Day today in Louisiana or on April 22nd worldwide, it should be a reminder of the responsibility we have to each other in Louisiana and throughout the world.  Earth Day is a time to consider that everything we do affects others and impacts our environment. Whether we choose to recycle an aluminum can, use less at our homes or offices or limit our driving, all of our actions have consequences. Environmental education is key to helping all of us better understand our place on Earth and the necessity of promoting good habits within our workplaces and families. It is my hope that all of us take responsibility of our actions and learn valuable information on how we can improve our lives and those around us. 




Gratefully,
Deborah...xxoo

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Keep ART in schools!



I find myself on the run again today, the weather is so nice here that the outdoors is pulling at me to get some much needed spring clean-up and sprucing up done! But came across this in the paper this week and thought it was a wonderful positive story of some very talented young people that I wanted to share.

BR students’ art takes district firsts
Advocate staff report
Published: Mar 2, 2011

Three East Baton Rouge Parish public school students won first-place awards in the 2011 Louisiana School Boards Association’s District Level Art Contest held in January. The winners go on to the state competition representing the East Baton Rouge School Board at the LSBA Convention at the Crowne Plaza Wednesday through Friday. Artwork will be displayed at the convention.

Each piece of artwork had to represent Louisiana and be created with regulation media (oil, acrylic, watercolor, pen and ink, charcoal, pastel, crayon, colored pencil, batik or stitchery).


First Place Winners:

Photo from EBR Schools
Airelle Williams-3rd grade-Parkview Elementary..."The Blue Possum".


Photo from EBR Schools
Kayla Richardson-8th Grade-Westdale Middle..."Cultural Fusion".


Photo from EBR Schools
Phillip Hahn-12th Grade-McKinley High..."Gator"


The blue color was used for the Possum and Gator as a tribute to our beloved "Blue Dog" here in Louisiana.


Some very talented young people...awesome!




Gratefully,
Deborah...xo!




Wednesday, March 2, 2011

After the dance tradition...The Praline!


This beloved Louisiana confection got it's name from the tradition of young women in New Orleans making them before going to a ball and then enjoying them with friends (and beaux) at their homes afterward.

And since I had some pecans left over from the pie and I'm a "southerner in training", I decided to try and make this very southern classic candy...


What you will need:

1  cup  firmly packed light brown sugar
1  egg white, beaten
1 1/2  cups  chopped pecans, lightly toasted


What to do:

Preheat oven to 400.

Put the pecans in a small saucepan, on low heat, warm the pecans...only takes a couple of minutes. This will provide the "toasted" effect.
Stir together brown sugar and beaten egg white, fold in chopped pecans.

Drop by heaping tablespoonfuls onto a heavy-duty aluminum foil-lined baking sheet.

Turn off oven; place baking sheet in oven, and let pralines stand 8 hours in oven.

Will make about 20 Pralines.



Doesn't get any easier than that!





Gratefully,
Deborah...xo!

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

A Happy Biking Birthday!

Amazing!


By ADAM LAU
The Advocate
Published: Feb 13, 2011  


       
Julia Hawkins, 95, leads her Birthday Bikes Mardi Gras Parade Saturday in University Acres subdivision. Julia was being honored not only because Saturday was her birthday, but also for her achievements as a gold medalist in national Senior Olympics biking competition. ‘She’s the little old lady that rides her bike every day,’ says Julia’s daughter, Margaret Matens. Fifty years ago, Julia, one of the original settlers of University Acres in Baton Rouge, initiated a project to plant flowering cherry trees throughout University Acres and up and down Highland Road. The trees, 1,000 or so of them, are blooming now.


Go Julia!



Gratefully,
Deborah...xxoo


Tuesday, February 8, 2011

"Throw me something, mister!"

Mardi Gras 2011 falls on Tuesday, March 8.  Mardi Gras, “Fat Tuesday”, is the last day of the Carnival season as it always falls the day before Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent.


Mardi Gras in New Orleans is known around the world most for the crazy party atmosphere but it also has many faces, a costumed child sitting in a homemade ladder seat yelling, "Throw me something, mister!" to passing float riders and walking krewes with their elaborate themes making their way through the French Quarter. But like most things Louisiana, what is viewed by many as "just crazy fun" is also full of rich historical tradition. 


mardi_gras_traditions.JPG

 

It all begins on Jan. 6, the Feast of the Epiphany. Also known as Kings’ Day or Twelfth Night (as in the 12 days of Christmas), in most places Jan. 6 celebrates the arrival of the three wise men at the birthplace of the Christ child.

In New Orleans, Kings’ Day simultaneously ends the Christmas season and fires the starting pistol for Carnival. This festival of fun finds its roots in various pagan celebrations of spring, some dating back 5,000 years. But it was Pope Gregory XIII who made it a Christian holiday when, in 1582, he put it on his Gregorian calendar (the 12-month one we still use today). He placed Mardi Gras (or Fat Tuesday, the final day of the Carnival season) on the day before Ash Wednesday, the first of Lent’s 40 days preceding Easter.
That way, all the debauchery would be finished when it came time to fast and pray.
Much of the first part of the Carnival season is made up of invitation-only coronation balls and supper dances hosted by private clubs known as krewes. The public portion of Carnival comes to life a couple of weeks before Mardi Gras when the krewes hit the streets, staging more than 60 parades in metropolitan New Orleans. 

Mardi Gras arrived in North America with the LeMoyne brothers, Iberville and Bienville, in the late 17th century, when King Louis XIV sent the pair to defend France’s claim to the New World territory of Louisiana. The explorers found the mouth of the Mississippi River on March 3, 1699, Mardi Gras of that year. They made camp a few miles upriver, named the spot Point d’Mardi Gras and partook in a spontaneous party. This is often referred to as North America’s first Mardi Gras. However, it is just as likely that the weary explorers were simply celebrating the fact that they were still alive.

A couple of decades later, Bienville founded New Orleans and soon Carnival celebrations were an annual event highlighted by lavish balls and masked spectacles. Some were small, private parties touting select guest lists, while others were raucous affairs open to the public. Collectively, they reflected such a propensity for frolic in the local citizenry that historian Robert Tallant wrote in his book “Mardi Gras” that “it has been said that the natives would step over a corpse on the way to a ball or the opera and think nothing of it.”
Parades officially became a part of the festivities in 1838. On Ash Wednesday of that year, The Commercial Bulletin read: “The European custom of celebrating the last day of the Carnival by a procession of masqued figures through the streets was introduced here yesterday.”

Over the next 20 years, Carnival became an increasingly rowdy event defined by drunkenness and violence. Eventually, churches and even the press began to call for its demise. In 1857, Mardi Gras found itself on the verge of death (having already been outlawed twice under Spanish and early American rule). Then along came Comus, a group whose tale actually began 27 years earlier in the wee hours of Jan. 1, 1830 as a group of young men walked home from a New Year’s Eve party in Mobile, Ala. They passed a general store featuring an outdoor display of rakes, hoes, shovels and cowbells. Making the kind of decision inebriated young men are apt to, they picked up the supplies and headed to the mayor’s house where they caused quite a stir. An obviously patient man, the mayor invited them in, sobered them up and, according to historian Buddy Stall, made the motley krewe’s leader an offer. “Next year,” hizzoner suggested, “why not organize yourselves and let everybody have fun?”

Led by Michael Kraft, the group called themselves the Cowbellion de Rakin Society. They paraded the following New Year’s Eve and were so successful that the procession became an annual event.
Now, jump ahead to 1857 when New Orleans city leaders were on the verge of canceling Mardi Gras for good. Six Cowbellions now living in the Big Easy proposed forming a new private club to present a parade based on a theme, with floats, costumed riders and flambeaux (torch carriers who lit the way) – an orderly alternative to the chaos that Carnival had become.

They chose the name Comus after the Greek god of revelry and coined the term “krewe.” City leaders agreed and Comus was credited with saving Mardi Gras. It wasn’t until after the Civil War that the second Carnival krewe made its debut in 1870. The new group chose Jan. 6 to present its parade and ball, giving themselves the name the Twelfth Night Revelers. Although they no longer parade, the Revelers ball (along with the Kings’ Day streetcar ride of the Phunny Phorty Phellows) marks the official start of the season.

During the Revelers first fete, an innovation was brought to Mardi Gras – a queen. Well, almost. After their tableau was presented, court fools carried out a giant king cake, the traditional pastry of the season, in which had been baked a golden bean. The plan was that pieces of cake would be presented to a group of young ladies and the one who found the bean would be crowned Carnival’s first queen. Beads are just one of the many traditions that make Mardi Gras memorable. However, it seems that the fools were quite drunk and instead of presenting the cake, they either dropped it on or threw it at the young women. When the flour cleared, none of the appalled females would admit to having the bean. So, the first Carnival queen – wasn’t, until the following year.  
By 1872, new troubles were brewing in the city. Postwar carpetbaggery had reached its zenith and rumblings of revolt against the city government could be heard. As Carnival approached, fears of masked reprisals surfaced. Then came the diversion city leaders needed. News arrived that Grand Duke Alexis Romanoff Alexandrovitch, brother of the heir apparent to the throne of Russia, had accepted the city’s invitation to Mardi Gras.
A plan was hatched. A new krewe of prominent citizens from both the government and its opposition would be formed and a King of all Carnival would be chosen. The group would call itself the School of Design and its ruler was to be Rex.

What no one knew was that the duke had accepted because his visit would coincide with the New Orleans opening of singer Lydia Thompson’s touring musical, in which she performed a nonsensical ballad called “If Ever I Cease to Love.” (Supposedly, she had also sung the number privately for the duke during a Big Apple rendezvous.) When news of Thompson and the duke hit the local grapevine, public interest in the visit grew enormously. Mardi Gras morning found the duke sitting in the official reviewing stand as Rex atop a bay charger led 10,000 maskers in a line more than a mile long. Among them were a number of bands, all of which broke into “If Ever I Cease to Love” as they passed the duke. Alas, the romance was ill-fated, but after 137 years, Rex remains King of Carnival and “If Ever I Cease to Love” is still the official song of the season.

The oldest parading African-American krewe is the Zulu Social Aid and Pleasure Club, which first took to the streets in 1909. Not taking themselves as seriously as the staunch white krewes, the group dressed its first king, William Story, in an old sack and a crown fashioned from a lard can. A banana stalk was his scepter. Over the years, Zulu has become a perennial favorite and the krewe’s gilded coconuts (painted gold and decorated with glitter) are one of the season’s most prized throws. By the 1950s, the truck parades, composed of floats built atop flatbed trucks (usually by families), had become well established. The late ’60s saw the advent of the “superkrewes” Endymion and Bacchus, which broke with tradition by offering open memberships, larger floats and celebrity kings.

But Carnival faced new foes in the latter half of the 20th century. A 1979 police strike caused parades to be canceled in the city, just to see a number of them pop up in the suburbs. The City Council’s anti-discrimination ordinance of 1988 called for krewes to either open their ranks or get off public streets. In response, three of the four oldest krewes – Comus (1857), Momus (1873) and Proteus (1882) – took their floats and went home. Rex remained and the other slots were filled. Proteus returned in 2000 and the following year became the first krewe to parade in the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries.
In 2002, the 9/11 tragedy led to an extension of the NFL season, meaning that the Super Bowl set to be played in New Orleans the week before Carnival began, would now take place in the middle of the festivities. With some maneuvering, a number of parades were rescheduled to accommodate the game. In 2006, with the city still reeling from Hurricane Katrina, the Carnival season was somewhat compacted but only a handful of krewes opted out of parading, most of whom returned for 2007.

This year, a sluggish economy was blamed for the loss of two parades, Gladiators in St. Bernard and Aquila in Metairie. Although, leaders of both krewes have stated their resolve to return next year. And 2009 marks the birth a new krewe. Bes will parade on Mardi Gras, following the Krewe of Grela in Gretna. It seems that in New Orleans, no matter what the obstacle, the Greatest Free Show on Earth has always found a way around it.

As Stall writes in “Buddy Stall’s New Orleans,” “It has been said that the people of New Orleans love Carnival and Mardi Gras parades to such an extreme that if a catastrophe were to occur and only two people survived, at the next Mardi Gras one of them would be in costume marching down the street, beating a drum and holding a banner, while the other would be standing on the side in costume, drinking a Dixie Beer and hollering,

“Throw me something, mister!”
 
Gratefully,
Deborah...xxoo






Friday, February 4, 2011

In honor of all my loved ones and to all who have been touched by it!


Today is World Cancer Day!


Dear Lord,
I pray for a cure for cancer
Amen


Light a candle and say a prayer for a cure in memory of your loved ones and everyone who has been struck down by cancer, who have been blessed to have fought and won and those who are still courageously fighting!



Gratefully,
Deborah...xxoo 


 

Thursday, February 3, 2011

A Special Thoughtful Thursday!...from my HEART to yours...

 

Raising Awareness for Heart Disease in Women

National Wear Red Day is tomorrow, February 4, 2011. It is the day when men and women across the country show their support for women's heart disease awareness by wearing red. Heart Disease is the #1 killer of women in America. One in four women dies from heart disease. How much do you know about women and heart disease?

 What can YOU do?

The Red Dress is the symbol for National Red Day and the Go Red for Women movement. National Wear Red Day is your opportunity to join with millions to stand up to heart disease by wearing your favorite red dress, red shoes, red shirt, tie or Red Dress Pin.



What You Can Do For Wear Red Day: 
Why not try Heart Healthy Superbowl dishes, let me know in the comments below if you try them!




Gratefully,
Deborah...xoxo


 

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Dream Comes True...in Baton Rouge!



Despite disabilities, Daniel Ballard achieves climb to top of Capitol
To climb 28 floors from the basement to the observation deck of the state Capitol would be an achievement for anyone, but for Daniel Ballard, it was a lifelong dream and somewhat of a miracle.
Ballard is developmentally disabled with physical and mental limitations. He also has severe visual problems, but he can hear.
“When Daniel was born, the doctor told us he was blind and deaf and that he would never be able even to turn over. He advised us to give him up,” said Lynda Ballard, Daniel’s mother.
Daniel Ballard is what is called a syndrome child.
“He has many exceptionalities,” Lynda Ballard said.
He was born with craniosynostosis, often called cranial stenosis, a condition that required massive cranial and facial surgery when Daniel was 2‰. The surgery was performed by a team of physicians from New York who periodically came to Children’s Hospital in New Orleans to operate on difficult cases.
“They moved all of the bones from Daniel’s cheekbones up,” Lynda Ballard said. She and her husband, Don, were told not to expect much improvement from the surgery.
But Daniel Ballard surprised everyone.
During the five weeks he remained in the hospital after the surgery, he started picking up things and throwing them and performing other motor functions he had never been able to do. At 3‰, he began to walk.
Dr. Tom Kiebach, a local orthodontist, worked to give Daniel a normal mouth.
“He says that Daniel was his lifelong challenge,” Lynda Ballard said. “Daniel wore braces for eight solid years.” He still wears a retainer.
After years of physical therapy and numerous surgeries, Daniel Ballard, now 25, has learned to speak, read, use a computer and perform physical activities.
“For him to advance so far is amazing,” his mother said. “He has exceptional language skills, and he is as sweet as can be. He has exceeded all expectations.”
Daniel Ballard attended school until 2008, when he graduated from Arlington Preparatory Academy with a Certificate of Achievement.
But without a place to go every day, he was bored.
Years ago, Don Ballard applied for Daniel to receive a New Opportunities Waiver, part of a federal program overseen by the state for individuals with developmental disabilities.
After eight years on the waiting list, Daniel Ballard was recently accepted in the program, and Rena Stewart, a respite worker through The Arc Baton Rouge, came into his life.
Stewart works with Ballard 33 hours a week.
“I take him on outings,” Stewart said.
She and Ballard together have developed a schedule of activities. Monday is library day. On Tuesdays, they see a movie. Wednesdays they take a computer class, and on Thursday, they study Spanish at the Main Branch of the East Baton Rouge Parish Library.
“But Friday is our special day,” Stewart said.
And it was on Friday, Jan. 7, that Stewart helped Ballard achieve his lifelong dream of climbing to the top of the Capitol.
“I like steps,” Ballard said. “I like to see what’s on top of things. Sometimes it’s a surprise on top.”
Ballard and his father had tried twice to walk up the steps, but only made it to the fourth floor. Stewart had Daniel Ballard training for the walk at one of BREC’s indoor tracks.
On the big day, Stewart came in to the Capitol at the front desk but was told by a receptionist that the stairs were not open to the public.
Undeterred, she moved to a sergeant-at-arms then to the chief sergeant-at-arms, Clarence Russ. He gave permission for Ballard to climb the stairway accompanied by two emergency medical technicians, Sharon Betsill and Susan Broussard, who also serve as sergeants-at-arms for the building.
The climb took a little over an hour and 15 minutes.
“Thank goodness there were water fountains,” Ballard said. “I wouldn’t have made it without water fountains.”
But made it he did. All the way to the observation deck on the 27th floor.
“I’ve worked here for six years, and I had never made it to the top,” Betsill said.
Glenda Gray, a community support specialist with The Arc, is proud of the way Stewart advocated for Ballard. “She had a couple of roadblocks, but she got to the head people,” Gray said.
Ballard has now set another goal for himself.
He has become quite proficient in Google Earth on his large-screen computer.
“He takes virtual walks,” Lynda Ballard said.
But now he wants to do a real walk on the Mississippi River levee from the beginning in Missouri to the end below New Orleans.
“We are going to walk the levee,” Stewart said with a laugh, “but not as far as Daniel wants.”


Inspiring...:)


Gratefully,
Deborah...xxoo


Thursday, January 27, 2011

Thoughtful Thursday!


Find your Joy, and share it with others!





Gratefully,
Deborah...xoxo

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Thoughtful Thursday!


Better to do something imperfectly than do nothing flawlessly!





Gratefully,
Deborah...xoxo

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Thoughtful Thursday!



Never get so busy making a living that you forget to make a life!
 






Monday, August 2, 2010

"Save Our Gulf" Initiative from Guy Harvey!.....Very Cool!

The “Save Our Gulf” Initiative

It has taken a while to execute this latest project, but I have released three new designs to raise funds for research work on marine life affected by the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Two of these custom images are appearing on t-shirts under the appropriate title of “SAVE OUR GULF”, while the third image will be released as a unique poster. Fifty percent (50%) of the sale price of these items will go toward the Guy Harvey Ocean Foundation Gulf Fund.






These items will be available through all the usual retail channels and outlets, such as Beall’s Dept Stores in Florida, Bass Pro Shops, Academy Sports + Outdoors and Hibbett Sports, as well as many independent stores around the southeastern US. Additionally, south Florida’s biggest newspaper, the Sun-Sentinel, is featuring my art – and these designs – in a special editorial on Sunday to increase awareness and encourage people to participate in this project.

While the “bottom kill” procedure is scheduled to end the leak of oil by July 30 there is still a huge volume of oil floating around the gulf, some of which will make its way into the Atlantic Ocean. We need to find out which marine creatures have been affected the most and which have survived by tolerance or evasion. We must also gather information on mortality, particularly of larval and juvenile stages of the many marine species that spend long periods near the surface. This knowledge will assist in predicting recruitment of species important in recreational and commercial fisheries for several years to come and will greatly assist us in preparing mitigating measures against any future spills.

In initiating this project, I am enabling people who want to contribute to the research effort to do so by purchasing a unique design in support of the GHOF Gulf Fund. The funds will be collected and administered by the GHOF and then distributed to organizations currently conducting marine research work in the affected area, such as the University of Florida, Mote Marine Laboratory, the University of Alabama and the CCA.

There are many other worthwhile projects happening. For example, the government of the Cayman Islands, where I live, just announced its intention to assist with hosting turtle eggs and hatchlings that are being relocated from affected beaches on the gulf coast. The Cayman Turtle Farm is the only commercial turtle farm in the world, and they have the capacity and ability to assist in this effort (their initiative is being sponsored by the Tortuga Rum Company and Cayman Airways), so agencies responsible for such action would do well in accepting such a generous offer.

I look forward to your comments and your assistance in raising funds for this worthwhile initiative. Take action now and get involved. Meanwhile fish responsibly and dive safely.

Guy Harvey

http://guyharvey.wordpress.com/2010/07/10/the-gulf-life-initiative/

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Baby Turtles released in to the Gulf....let's pray they make it!

Click here to see pics........Baby Turtles released in to Gulf

Federal biologists are releasing thousands of endangered baby sea turtles into the western Gulf of Mexico, betting that by the time the silver dollar-sized swimmers make it to the oil-fouled waters of the eastern Gulf, BP will have cleaned up its goopy mess.


The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and National Park Service are proceeding with the annual release of Kemp's ridley turtle hatchlings off Padre Island National Seashore because Texas has not been significantly impacted by the oil spill. For years, scientists have incubated and hatched the turtles to give the endangered creatures a boost.


The risks of holding turtles in captivity at a critical stage in their life cycles could be worse than the dangers of oil more than 400 miles away, the plan's supporters say.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Local Abita Brewery giving back!!

FIRST BOTTLES OF ABITA SOS PRODUCED
On Friday, July 16 the first bottles of Abita SOS, a charitable brew produced by the Abita Brewing Company, rolled off the production line at the brewery in Abita Springs. SOS – A Charitable Pilsner, will donate 75¢ for every bottle sold to a charitable fund established by Abita that will assist with the rescue and restoration of the environment, industry and individuals fighting to survive this disastrous oil spill. SOS will go on sale in the New Orleans metro area Tuesday will move across the state and nation in the weeks to come. “We feel compelled as one of Louisiana’s favorite brands to help our neighbors and coastal families as they struggle to survive,” stated David Blossman, President of Abita Brewing Company. “That is why we are committing our time, talent and resources to help our fellow citizens through this disaster.”

A Message In A Bottle
The 22-ounce brew bears hand drawn iconic images of all the aspects that make the Gulf of Mexico so unique. Illustrations like those of pelicans, fish, shrimp and fishing boats are arranged in the pattern of the timeless distress symbol: S-O-S. Marsh grass and a symbolic pair of white “shrimp boots” also are highlighted in the beautiful design. In addition, related retail merchandise (hat, tee shirt, lapel pin, decal and car magnet) are on sale at a special website created for the fund, SOS.abita.com and 100% of the net proceeds also go to the SOS Fund. Online donations can also be made directly to the fund at the site. The beer is an unfiltered Weizen Pils made with Pilsner and Wheat malts. It is hopped and dry hopped with Sterling and German Perle hops. It has a brilliant gold color, a sweet malt flavor and a pleasant bitterness and aroma. The brew is 7% alcohol by volume.

Send Your Own S.O.S.
An innovative new website has been created to support the charitable efforts of Abita and to spread the word about the Gulf Coast crisis. At SOS.abita.com consumers can discover additional ways to help the region recover from the oil spill disaster. They also have the unique opportunity to “post an SOS” of their own within an interactive on-line coastal scene that doubles as a fully integrated social media site. Consumers choose from a shrimp boat, crab, fish or pelican to represent their post and then write a short message that will be displayed along with their animated character within the interactive coastal scene. Posters can also opt to share their messages of hope, inspiration or frustration about the oil spill with their Twitter and Facebook accounts and tell the world about what is happening along the Gulf Coast.

http://sos.abita.com/ 

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Wonderful CCA luncheon at Drusilla Seafood...Tears for dessert!

JT and I attended our CCA (Coastal Conservation Association) luncheon today. We had a wonderful lunch together......pecan crusted fish, green beans with sausage and some amazing mash potatoes with cheese, bacon.....need I say more! The turnout was incredible but we already knew it would be because they had a very special guest speaker.....Billy Nungesser! Billy is a straight talking, no BS parish president in Plaquermine Parish. You may of seen him lately, tirelessly fighting with BP and gang on the oil disaster. CCA has also been very involved in developing and implementing a long term plan to make sure BP pays for what is coming years down the road. So we got through tough information, remembrance of the 11 lives lost in the blast and updates from CCA. And did I mention the introduction of an 11 yr old boy, Rory McCracken who on his own has developed his very own website to raise money to save the gulf (see link below)! Then they introduced Billy to the crowd standing on their feet with gratitude.....well if you know me, you know I cry at Hallmark commercials! It has been all over the news for over 3 months but seeing him right in front of me and the emotion on his face was just too much to take. I quickly recovered with a "little pat" and look of encouragement from JT. So even though Mr. Nungesser is the president of a parish around 70 miles away from our parish we all have him and his team to thank for all the progress so far on what will sure to be a long difficult recovery! We struggle here in Louisiana, its a double edge sword....the survival with the oil industry that has been such an important part of the economy and the need for more regulation and safety measures. The oil is capped for now but please check-out the following websites for how you can help financially or with your time to save our coast!

http://www.kidslovethegulf.org/
http://www.ccabatonrouge.org/
http://www.keepamericafishing.org/
          

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