Jambalaya, crawfish pie, filé gumbo
For tonight I'm gonna see my cher á mio
Pick guitar, fill fruit jar, and be gay-o
Son-of-a-gun, we're gonna have big fun, on the bayou!
---Hank Williams
Today Jeanne's family celebrated our arrival Cajun-style. These folks
know how to party! Starting around 2pm, family members started showing
up. As I write this, there are about 132 folks (all related) filling
the house and spilling out into the yard. Kids are running around playing
hide-and-seek, women are laughing and discussing family issues, men
are drinking and yelling, and everyone is having a great time.
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Fritz in the Kitchen
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This is what my family was like when my mom was alive. Looking at Queen
Eileen, I can see my mom... a women full of life and fire and power
who loves and cares for her clan. My mom held our family together. Since
she died, there has been a lot of blame and bad feelings thrown around.
It's sad, and it shouldn't have happened. When we're all pulled together
for family gatherings, folks no longer laugh and joke. They're reserved.
These Cajuns remind me of what we've lost.
The food down here is incredible. The combination of French-Canadian,
Creole (black), and Native American cooking has formed one of the only
truly distinctive cuisines in the U.S. We started today with oyster
po-boys (fried oyster sandwiches). Come evening, folks were dishing
up dirty rice with shrimp and sausage, amazing fried mahi-mahi, onion
rings, spaghetti and cheese, steamed crabs, and fried shrimp. There
were also several coolers filled with beer. (Folks are still working
their way through them.)
My absolute favorite food, though, were boulettes. These are balls
of shrimp, potato, onion and spices that are deep-fried until golden
brown. They're crunchy on the outside and warm and soft on the inside.
These things are incredible.
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King Roy
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Most of the food was cooked on the back patio over two large propane
burners. On and off during the afternoon it rained hard. The chefs continued
cooking in the rain. During one rain storm Fritz helped me install my
Hi-lift jack brackets onto my back bumper. We got soaking wet, but by
that point we weren't noticing. Shay's uncle Rhett told me that he 'drills
holes and mounts things for a living'. I told him it was good work if
you can get it. (He installs shades and draperies.)
During the rainstorm, Jeanne sat in her van dictating its contents
to Sybil. She was constructing the manifest to give to border crossing
guards. '300 aspirin, a GPS III+, 4 bungee cords...'. Sybil wrote each
thing on a pad as the rain fell outside.
Around
7pm, folks started singing, badly. It was time to celebrate Shay's birthday.
Shay, of course, loved this. He got loads of cash (probably enough to
let him survive for 2 months in South America.) I gave him some CDs
so he wouldn't have to listen to Jeanne's music for the entire trip
(Jimmy Buffet, Afro-Cuban All-stars, Aretha Franklin.) Jeanne's taste
in music isn't bad, but it would probably make Shay buggy after
a few months in the jungle. (Incidentally, Sybil's devil's food cake
was amazingly good.)
According
to Greg McCoy, Houma is below sea level. "This place is a bowl. If a
storm comes up, it'll just fill up." Reassuring words when lightning
and thunder and rain have been the predominant weather for the entire
day. The GPS shows an altitude of 9' above sea level, but the GPS is
in the van, about 5' over the ground.
Ron
Just the facts
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Mileage driven today:
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0
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mi
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Mileage to date:
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3420
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mi
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Distance from home:
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1900
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mi (as the crow flies)
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Distance from Ushuaia:
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5960
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mi (as the crow flies)
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Altitude:
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9
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ft
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Fuel bought today:
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0
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gallons
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Fuel cost today:
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$0,00
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