Friday, 23 March 2018

My Granddaughter...very wayward in the ways of chocolate...as is her grandfather

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ALL POINTS BULLETIN

Cake and icing addict.  Last seen looking cute somewhere in
the Central Part of the Republic of Texas.

Special warning:  Subject has a magical method of disarming the
constabulary and other adults with some kind of "cutsie-wootsie"
 appearance that makes old men and grannies think that she is totally
 innocent of numerous what she terms "misunderstandings".  All
 responses will be kept in the strictest confidence.

 The family's girl Doberman has not eaten or barked since this person
 has gone "dark"...no cell-phone, no ATM, or other communications
 are available.  Please post this BOLO  / APB as soon as possible.
(this is a total ruse and joke...The girl is my granddaughter who, lamentably is cursed with my face and general colour)

   Thank you all for tolerating my labourious humour.  We are actually totally awed by the child's comeliness and intelligence.

El Gringo Viejo
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Ignorance and Youth Speaks with Authority When Programmed by Marxists

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     This video really needs none of my embellishment.   We are being invaded - inserted with shallow-thinking zombie repeat-o-blabbers who are programmed to speak in unintelligible gibberish in terms that mean nothing or even less-than-nothing.

     El Gringo Viejo will allow the sophomoric snip make his best case, while he is violating rules of logic at every available opportunity.

Pray for the whole State of Christ's Church and for the salvation of the American experiment, and for the Republic of Texas.
El Gringo Viejo...

And, as usual, even when I forget, thank you for your time and interest...
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Wednesday, 21 March 2018

Manuel Lorenzo Justiniano de Zavala y Sáenz  - Born October 3, 1788 – Died November 15, 1836 Hero of Texas

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     Lorenzo de Zavala, pictured above, quite bluntly and fairly was a fundamental hero to and for Texas. He was born as much a Mexican as one could be in that he was born upon what would become officially Mexican soil.  During his first span of 22 - 25 years, he would see rule by vice-regency, by a presidium of The Regency of combined Mexican political and Spanish Royal political interests, and Empire ruled by an unwilling Emperor of Mexico Iturbide I, who had been something of a hero in the fight for Mexican Independence.

     He had a turbulent, dangerous, exciting, rewarding first 25 years of his life.  Along with all of that,  he mastered with eloquence his own native tongue (Spanish), French, and English he was accomplished  as a student of the Latin and classical Greek languages.   He was a good student of Roman Catholic concepts of moral guidance, and he was also a 33rd Degree, York Rite Mason (liberal theistic, non-papal guided).  Further, he was a qualified and credentialled doctor of medicine and a qualified member of the fraternity of barristers during the 1820s through the end of his life on this Earth.

     He was an eloquent speaker, a florid writer, and generally a friend of all men of good will.   He was a good anti-Imperial politician, very pro-republican and followed Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna during those turbulent years from 1822 - 1825.  Lorenzo saw Guadalupe Victoria, an erstwhile republican and true hero of the Independence Revolution (1810 - 1821), turn into a pawn of Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna.

     That man whom we must name so often concerning any and every matter from 1822 through 1856 and who retarded Mexico from gaining a reasonable place in the Hall of Great Nations, Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna came to distrust...fear...loath...be jealous of the more suave Yucatecan-born "provencial"...de Zavala.

    As a politician and despotic dictator in the making, Lopez de Santa Anna raged almost Herrod-like when he watched this upstart, with no military accolades, spin a defence of Epresario Sen~or Stephen Fuller Austin that would result in Austin's release from unjustifiable imprisonment by a Mexico City superior court.  That was in 1835.  Oddly, Austin thought there was some way Mexico could allow Texas an independent Statehood, and something of an Independent Mexico-related Commonwealth.   Coahuila State which was joined with Texas as a combined legal entity thought that they (the people of Coahuila) were being as shortchanged as Texas in terms of military allocations, public works, etc.   They were right, and relations between the two entities, (Texas and Coahuila) were actually quite good.

     Let us end this overly long preambulatory statement with the simple fact that the Texians won their contention against Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna.   He was captured, and should have been assigned to the dust-bin of history.   But, at least he was peripheralised for a period long enough for the provisional Vice-President of the Republic of Texas (de Zavala) to write a reasonable Constitution, while his very close friend Stephen F. Austin served as provisional President of the Republic of Texas.   All of this was while the "smoke of battle still blurred the future".
     From 1836 and the expulsion of Mexican Centralist forces, by surrunder and  agreement, the Centralist forces retired to the south side of the Rio Bravo (Grande).
     But,  neither Lorenzo nor Stephen would serve to see 1837.   In December of 1836, as Austin lay dying of various conditions, especially pneumonia, he rose up briefly and declared in his feverous stupour, "The Independence of Texas is Recognised!!!".  Minutes later, he was gone.
   Talk about patriotism.   He had not been informed that his closest friend had gone to be with the Angels a month and a half earlier.  He had had the same ailments and pulmonary compromises.  It was a loss to the Republic which will never be measured adequately.
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Concerning Major General Manuel Fernandez Castrillon:

     Please consider from a warrior without qualifications (your humble servant), what warriors with scars and bloody wounds said of this enemy...and gentleman, major-general in the Regular Army, and the only person who could possibly reach Antonio de Santa Anna's soul...but alas...Antonio, by that time, had no soul.  Please review this reasonable capsule of the life of a good, loyal soldier.

    Castrillón was a major general in the Mexican army, originally from either Cuba or Spain (the reviewer tends to believe he was born in Spain and arrived  in Cuba with his military family as a child ) Like Santa Anna, he was a career soldier who fought alongside Spanish and loyalist forces near the Mexican state of Veracruz. It was there he met Santa Anna.
     Santa Anna's ally through much of their working relationship, Castrillón often took exception to Santa Anna's decisions especially during the Texas Revolution. He opposed the hurried assault on the Alamo. Yet when he received his orders to lead the battle's first column of troops, he did so with expert efficiency.

   As an humane and honourable soldier, Castrillón also pleaded clemency on behalf of the seven Texian fighters who survived the Alamo siege. Castrillón's arguments for mercy were ignored, and the men were brutally executed. Castrillón again stated his protest when Santa Anna ordered the execution of the Goliad prisoners.
     Castrillón's compassion was a sign of kindness, not weakness. When the Texians roused Mexican forces from their afternoon siesta on April 21, 1836, at the Battle of San Jacinto, he was one of the few Mexican officers who stood his ground.

     His bravery was recorded in the memoirs of Texian Second  Lieutenant Walter Paye Lane:
"As we charged into them the General commanding the Tampico Battalion (their best troops) tried to rally his men, but could not. He drew himself up, faced us, and said in Spanish: "He estado en cuarenta batallas!!  Nunca he dado mi espalda a ningun enemigo!!  Y ya estoy demasiado viejo para empezar horita!!"('I have been in forty battles and never showed my back; I am too old to do it now.')
     He continues: "Gen. Rusk hallooed to his men: 'don't shoot him,' and knocked up some to their guns; but others ran around and riddled him with balls. I was sorry for him. He was an old Castilian gentleman, Gen. Castrillo (sic)."

     Honoured on both sides of the Texas Revolution — except by Santa Anna, who blamed the loss at San Jacinto in part on Castrillón — he was even buried in the family graveyard of Lorenzo de Zavala, the vice-president of Texas, at the request and agreement of Austin and de Zavala.  No one objected. 
     
     Your humble servant is quick to point out that General Castrillon had nothing to do with the failures of tactics, preparation, nor strategy at San Jacinto.  There was only one fool large enough to sacrifice such a large and effective army to a bunch of militia.  I shall leave the three guesses up to the reader to name a possible candidate.  Castrillon was a brilliant warrior, a good Catholic, and a reasonable opponent.
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    And now finally we arrive at my sadness, melacholy, and concern.   Lorenzo de Zavala was awarded a fine piece of land in the bayou country.  There was a home of sorts which was fixed up to be a nice accommodation for someone with the title of the Vice-Presidency of the Republic of Texas - Author of the Constitution!!
    As an honour to Castrillon, both Austin and de Zavala offerred their home grounds as an august and dignified burial place for the noble enemy Castrillon.  He was known, and in positive terms, to both Austin and de Zavala.  Many others among the Texian politicians and soldiers knew of his magnanimous disposition.
     It was finally determined that the honour should go to the yards and gardens of the de Zavala home...and the 1,200 acres that surrounded the swampy, mystical, yet beautiful area.  And so there-in were interred the remains of a true hero of Mexico and an enemy who would guard him forever because of his nobility.  It is / was very near the San Jacinto Battlefield.

     Or so it seemed...because sometimes, forever can be defined in very strange ways...
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     We do not wish to ruin your day.   But, after the fiasco of the 1925 removal of Lorenzo's body and supposedly the remains of old General Castrillon, and various other pertinent interments, there was a form of sedimentary chaos.   The mud of the bayou's banks was steadily sliding into the muck.  Barge traffic was causing wakes that, with each pass, seemed to take down another 1 / 16th of an inch of mud and muck.
    During the Fiasco of 1925, Lorenzo's grandson...still bearing the surname "de Zavala"...invaded the proceeding and declared that all that was being done violated Roman Catholic canon (although some Roman prelate or another was presiding over the re-interment).  The de Zavala family was heavily intermarried into the highest levels of Harris County (Houston) correct society.   All were aghast...only the Lord God Yahweh knows how many times His name was invoked during this contention.   Smelling salts must have been du jour for that grand episode in Houstonian social history....there were an estimated 25, 000 attendants at the event.
     The "likely remains" were returned to from whence they had come.  And now...there really is no perfect scientific reasoning where the cemetery was or should have been; or where the first Lorenzo de Zavala home and its second, more elaborate home along with it, have gone.


A bayou at its best...and worst


At my age, and I at my selfish concern...and considering my affection for the efforts of Lorenzo as a Texian, I find it all a matter of the darkest contemplation. 

Finally, in as few words as is possible for your humble servant.  
Thanks for your attention.  Pray for the restoration of the de Zavala legacy, the re-veneration of old man Castrillon, and for the Glory of the Republic of Texas!!
El Gringo Viejo
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Saturday, 17 March 2018

Pleasant, but Brutal

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As Winter closes in the Santa Engracia Zone of west-central Tamaulipas, it is necessary to confess that the weather was not the best example of a warm and sultry, tropical hideaway in the middle of Nowhere, Mexico.   We had a vast majority of the time between the dusking and dawning of the Sun,  over 70 calendar days that had temperatures below 45 degrees F.   The majority of those nights were actually in the 30's, and on three or four occasions we had temperatures below 32 and a couple of times, the thermometer plunged into the upper 20's.

Graupel that has encrusted an
innocent snowflake that had no
safe zone.  Sad,,,and Trump did
nothing to protect the snowflake.

​   We had five occasions with frozen precipitation which included freezing drizzle, freezing fog, freezing rain, light snow, graupel (dust and ambient particulate that collects on snowflakes - forms odd, fascinating 'snow jewellery')  intermittent periods of light but very persistent sleet...over and over and over again.

    The not-so-good story?   None of this was so extreme, Santa Engracia has seen, in its history, temperatures in single digits, and snows of four to 10 inches during the epochs.  The bad?   Several hundred of the acres have been planted in and around the Santa Engracia citrus industrial zone in this new-fangled, promising new lime line.   Much has been contracted, sight-unseen,  perhaps as much as 100,000 tonnes with anticipated delivery for early 2019.


     Pictured above - recovered plantation
 of the Hacienda de La Vega's recent planting.

    Our dear friend and neighbour at the Hacienda de La Vega (adjacent to the Quinta) had noticeable but very minor upper-leaf burn.  As I left, the day before yesterday, it was very impressive how the Limes had recovered.

    Most of our growies are doing...let us say, "okay"...but the sheen and sparkle and gusto for meeting the Spring has not shown itself as of yet.   Here and there around the ejido, and near-abouts,  there has been a serious amount of "coming out".  But it has been nothing like a normal recovery, tripping cheerfully towards the new Summer.

We are being advised something about "...maximum file size has been exceeded.  Delete some images."   Have no earthly idea what that means, but perhaps by this afternoon we shall a resolution.

More later...
DCN I
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Tuesday, 6 March 2018

Left, Right, Centre, back, front.....

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    We regret, sincerely, any real or imagined offense about my lack of entering  information concerning the important Texian date of 6 March 2018.

     We urge that the OROG community search out clips, articles, and treatises concerning Lorenzo de Zavala, Stephen Fuller Austin, and Juan Sequin.  Without these men, nothing of the concept of TEXAS would have ever seen the light of day.

Lorenzo de Zavala and Stephen Fuller Austin died very early of diseases, probably yellow fever, compounded by pneumonia.  And they died very early in Life.  Juan Nepumeceno Sequin Zaragoza lived a tortured, but always loyal life and in spite of "changing sides" and fighting as a Mexican military officer from late 1842 until the end of the declared Mexican - American War, he was always and finally recognised as a Hero of Texas.

No automatic alt text available.
The final resting place of Juan Seguin
     Walnut Creek was renamed after his return in life to the properties and position he had had before the "immigrants" overran and engaged corrupt constabulary and registrars concerning the properties of the people who had been there "before".   The name of that place?   Seguin, Texas...a beauty mark on the face of the Republic.
     The picture to the left reveals an episode of the reverence that all Texians render to this Hero of Texas who was tortured emotionally from his place on the face of the Earth, and whose personality and  sacrifices have been readily recognised, long before any hip-cultural movement.

    To-morrow, with luck, a word or two concerning Stephen F. Austin and Lorenzo de Zavala....where were they buried, by their own orders?

El Gringo Viejo
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"Secrets of the Gringo Viejo Family

Estimado Consuegro:

     Long story short, we have had a very unpredictable schedule.  Oddly, I have been named to be an election worker at one of the big precincts here in  Hidalgo County...in the western part of McAllen.  So, I shall be further out of pocket.  To-morrow, we (I) have to go to the Hidalgo County seat of Edinburg for a "training session", and then on Tuesday you will find me on some obscure site on west Vermont Street in McAllen from 06:00 through 21:00 hours  (with luck).


 This is a picture of my mother.
  My mother-in-law, my wife, and my mother were all elected most beautiful
in those days.  (late 1920s through the mid-1960s)This picture come from Edinburg, Texas in 1929.   She was a typical Southern  rural genius, read over 50,000 books
 during her time.  She kicked  Fannie Shore in the southern regions and
forced her to surmount the limp leg from the polio.
  She shepherded Dinah (Fannie) Shore, 
later to become a glittering
songstress, by pushing her into baseball, stick and wheel,
 and even football, playing against mainly boys. 


 My brothers and I took much from her looks.  She has the face of my
 middle brother, and the colour of my eldest and your humble servant.


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      In any regard, these Valencia trees, herein pictured, are only two years old and they began to produce, true enough, a minor crop, a harvest of the finest gift and holiday packer quality Valencia...two years ahead of schedule.
      The Hacendado de la Vega's efforts might pay off as I have said, early on.  Upon return to the Quinta and the Hacienda de la Vega, I shall report to you if there is a "flowering set" on these new plantings of the limes upon which  Don Rafael is counting.  Although it is a year ahead of the anticipated, the oranges on these Valencias speaks to the magical and mystical nature of the relationship between citrus and the Zone of Santa Engracia.

(up-date -  The issue of being involved with the primary vote was a disaster.  I left before 10:00 am in order to not offend further and to take care of things of greater importance.  During the first two hours, we had 8 voters, being attended by 7 poll workers.  I was astounded when it was learned that the position is now a paid position.  I refused any compensation.   Things change after twenty or so years, I guess.)

El Gringo Viejo
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David Christian Newton

QUINTA TESORO de la SIERRA MADRE

a pleasantly rustic bed and breakfast at the foot of the Sierra Madre 

Oriental, in the countryside not far from Cd. Victoria, Tamaulipas, Mexico.
Birds, butterflies, and other creatures framed by an absolutely perfect view into 

the "real Mexico".    Pleasant accommodations, good food, and good libations. A 

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956 - 205 - 2441....we'll get back to you quickly!