Monday 25 March 2019

Telling stories that need be told…Sierra del Cautivo

A good geography lesson.  One can see the new orchard stretching
towards the Sierra Madre and the ancient cypress trees "with their
feet in the water" of the Rio Corona.
The Sierra del Cautivo:  Tales from Its Past, Present, and Future
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This very orderly and very modern agricultural development is the child of the mind of our neighbour, the owner of the Hacienda de La Vega.  He took out all 200 acres of the old Valencia orange planting that had been producing for almost 85 years, three years back.  Then he planted the entire acreage in these new fangled limes that have become increasingly popular throughout the world.  Paris, London, New York, Rio de Janeiro, Tokyo, and a thousand other culinary and fancy saloon venues have steadily been increasing their orders for this new King of Sour.

    Advantage?  Florida?California?…Texas?…Arizona?...Arabia / Mesopotamia?…the Mediterranean?  Well, not so much.  As it turns out, this area from around Cd. Victoria, Tamaulipas up to Allende, Nuevo Leon and then away from the mountains twenty miles or so to the east has the most ideal conditions, placement, and access that one might imagine if he / she had the power to design a citrus, sweet or sour, industry complex.
Breaking new ground for planting the last nine
acres of the new lime trees
     Valencia oranges and two types of red grapefruit are still going to be grown and harvested in this zone.  The quality of these products has long been legendary.  The arrival of these fancy limes, however,  is going to bring a lot of work, higher-tech jobs, and general marketting and transport opportunity.

    Just during the past few months, it has been my pleasure to meet fellows who have travelled from Europe (Italy and France) in search of "Fincas" (fancy farms and/or orchards) where preliminary contracting might be a good opening for those needing supply.  There have been others from Mexico City poking around, of course, and it should not be long before American contract buyers   start making their appearance.  The orchard pictured above will be among the very first, if not the first, to produce a market-worthy harvest.

        The first photo is a good geographic study…taken about two weeks ago.  One can see the the lime trees are gaining back their green hue that had been lost a little due to a prolonged cold period and an unusually wet winter (nearly 8 inches of rain for January and February).   It shows the three tiered relationship with the Rio Corona…first the orchard, then the dense riverine forest that borders the banks of the Rio Corona. And lastly, the dominating Montezuma Cypress trees, some as much as 1,300 years old, with their "feet in the water", so to speak.
Bouganvillas on our property "down below"
between our Adobe Hut and the Rio Corona,
something like the "local official flower"

      Then someone threw in the Sierra Madre Oriental, forming the backdrop of the entire scene.   This particular segment of the Sierra Madre is known as the Sierra del Cautivo (Captive)…so named because when the first Spanish explorers came through this area a White man came down from those mountains, accompanied by a gaggle of Indians who had relatively light skin…and some with green and/or blue eyes.

      The White man declared that he was, in fact, a Spaniard, and had been taken prisoner during a battle further South in Mexico (then New Spain).  He said he had been traded up from one Indian group to another, and that he had been treated well.  He had married and had children…He also pointed out that the Indians with whom he lived called themselves Hualahuises or Warrior Peoples of the Mountains.

  He also allowed that with his basic knowledge of medicine, the people had assumed that he was a magician / medicine man, and therefore they had developed a certain reverence towards him.   He also said that he had developed considerable fluency in their language.   He declared that the people were leery of other White men, thinking that they were out to extract the gold and silver in the mountains.   To this day it is known that there are massive deposits of said metals, along with even more valuable things, like molybdenum and such.
  He also declared that his village was something like the Garden of Eden so he could not complain.  He told the reconnoitring Spanish expeditionary group that he had continuously tried to preach the Christian message to the Indians…very carefully.   That is a brief description “El Cautivo” (The Captive) and his adventures, in a land a mile and half high…and 5 leagues west (about 15 miles)  of the land in the first picture posted here.  This encounter occurred in 1544,  plus / minus.

     No settlement began in the area where the Quinta Tesoro de la Sierra Madre (our place) and the Hacienda de La Vega (our neighbour's place) and that zone just to the north of this scene until the very earliest 1700s.  In agriculture it became famous then for silage, corn, and especially peppers of many kinds, and various vegetables especially squash of various types.   Later, sugar became a major product, and with that product, of course, types of tequila, aguardiente, and mezcal. 

  And not to forget, but for many, many generations henniquin maguey was a major industry, placing this area, the Yucatan (northern part), and certain areas of the Philippine Islands  in control of the rope industry throughout the Northern Hemisphere.  Ocean ships and cowboys could not have existed without the area we are writing about here.
Misnomered frequently as "orchid tree"
the pata de vaca (cow-foot tree) is another
of the "official trees" of the Santa Engracia
catchment area.   This one lies directly in
front of our front door
     We move on to matters of less import…just rambling through our little property…taking advantage of pruning and training exercises for the various shrubs, trees, and other growies.   As most OROGs (Order of Readers of the Old Gringo) know, folks like to come out to stay a weekend, or at times stay for a longer respite.   It was, true enough, a lot busier five or six years ago, but slowly things seem to be returning to that pace, when people would pull up unannounced, and surprised that there is such a place as ours,  out in the middle of Nowhere,  Mexico.

     We forget sometimes to remind our readership that we need at least a two-week notice for those who wish to use our one little guest room w/ private bath and entrance.   With that much anticipation, we can almost always have every detail covered…like hot water, water, food, nice beds, nice towels, nice everything, and the "Guarantee".  "Well, what is the "Guarantee", Gringo Viejo?", one might reasonably ask.
     The "guarantee" dates back to that time when a lady asked, when inquiring about our facility, if we could "guarantee" that she would be absolutely bored.  She and her sister (if I remember correctly) wanted nothing more than to do some ambling around in the village, read their Agatha Christi mysteries on the corridor, watch and study the many species of birds, and have a cold Corona (or similar) while rocking in the huge cane and straw-bound "mesadoras" (rocking chairs).
An old Heliconia, a precursor of
the banana.  We have several on the
property, and they tend to bloom when
they deem it convenient.
     They seemed charmed by our dogs and cats (all very disciplined), who were adept at begging without being pushy or insistent.   The tranquility of our environs was, in fact, exactly what they were searching out.   Tranquility was helped by the presence of huge and ancient cypress trees on the adjacent clear, spring-fed river, now almost totally litter free…thanks to our majordomo Alvaro…and to a lesser extent your humble servant…in cleaning up what had been a "secret" intermittent, midnight garbage dump before we built our little adobe hut there.
     The people of the small surrounding community have become quite compliant concerning the need to maintain an uncluttered environment, and the results have been most pleasant.  The clients we have had appreciated all of that, They especially appreciate the number of species of birds that use our grounds and premises for nesting, feeding, bathing, and generally decorating the place with their songs and colours.

     Sometimes I forget how terribly pleasant the place and the surroundings are…grumbling over this thing that needs repair and that thing that has to be straightened.  But perhaps that is the nature of the Southern, Anglo-Saxon type.   For instance, we have the opportunity to cuss and moan about the fact that it's too cold…until I see the FOX News report about 43 inches of snow in eastern Colorado…in early December…when my low temperature is 56 degrees.
Hercule Poirot
 great Belgian private detective
He worked  with Agatha Christi
 during the Depression and WWII.
     Or, when the temperature soars into the high 90s in July, and the "canicula" (dog-days of Summer) is beginning to settle in, it is necessary to take a deep breath.  At that time, it is well to remember, hour by hour, the advantages provided by the fact that we are essentially on the Tropic of Cancer, and there have only been three or four freezes during the previous 125 years.   There are opportunities of a different sort, as well, if one wishes to modify his daily routine just a bit.
    For instance, getting up at 1:00 A.M. and stepping outside in our little "parking lot" in front of our long west facing corridor, and looking up at the stars is a reward unto itself.   Literally hundreds upon thousands of stars, and very frequently a stunning swath of the full sweep of the Milky Way silently puts on the greatest show off Earth.
An ornamental multi-trunk Yucca
with blossoms in a home setting 
     And, yes Virginia, we have even had to put up with those pesky things like unidentified flying objects that, at times, reward the easily convinced two or three…or fifteen or twenty…times per year during those dark…no urban night light…nights, when the orbs with peculiar paths seem to like to mill around in near-Earth locations.   We have a particularly favourite client who came to stay with us for several days…he and his very pleasant wife…about three years ago.
Henequin (sisal fibre) drying "on
the line" - the rope starts here. It
comes from the "lowly" Agave
     He, and his wife, have had experience in witnessing these things such as UFO events.  During his stay, he assisted in instructing me that our sky in the middle of NoWhere, Mexico had a great number of "flashers"…something that I had seen, but not invested in the "little grey cells" as the great detective Hercule Poirot referred to his brain.

Crown of Thorns, of which we have many
and many different variations.
    And the folks ask at times if there is a "bird count" that might be reliable.  My answer is "Yes".  There are many reference books, both paperback and hard-bound, that detail in various ways (almost all excellent) the various birds who come through our place and out by a radius of 25 miles.  We have brush, forest, large pond-lake (irrigation impoundments) arrangements that might be 1,000 acres of coverage, juniper forests on the mountains, along with tropical oak, all nature of flowering things.   Then, we also have seasonal crops in farming stretches or orchards, as well as
Wild petunias that attract bees and hummingbird by
the millions.  This is a part of our lower property we
designate as "semi-disciplined".
areas that are protected in an informal way for those who collect nature-provided yummies such as flor de yucca (very edible for Gringos, Indians, Anyone…bland but delicious).   Other folks dedicate themselves to the collection of chile del monte (small roundish chiles) and chile pequin (very small chiles) that are quite potent, loved by mockingbirds, kiskadees, orioles, and hens…and many people such as your humble servant).


     The "bird count" now numbers 525 different species at this pointand after collecting reliable in-put from various very serious to serious bird watchers and our own observations.   Suffice to say that we have easily the greatest Sulfur Butterfly migration twice per year.  And, of course, two of every three years, we are inundated with the Monarch Butterfly migration.  Both of the species essentially flood the airways to the point that I am surprised that our SKY-TV receiving antennae can function.   Of course, every time there is a bit of a dip in the Monarch migration, Al Gore Acolytes, Inc. come forth to remind everyone that Global Warming killed all the Monarchs in 1999 and it was George Bush's fault.
This is one of our many Powder Puff
 bushes.  Bees and hummingbirds are
really big fans of these particular plants.
We have four or five of these around the
house.
     The Monarch environmental matter tends to be tenuous at times, but certain actions, private and public, have been taken over the last five or six years especially, that have caused a bit of optimismreal optimism...about the continued prosperity of that flight.  We had a huge season both going down and coming forth this past yearperhaps the second largest we have seen since building our little mud house.

     We have had various of the major animals around our place, normally associated with the mountains nearby.  But, from the Rio Corona, about fifteen years ago, some folks encountered two alligators about 300 yards downstream from our place.   Mommy pumas, and one daddy (once), racoons, squirrels, coyote, fox, weasels, bobcats, and other nice and not so nice beasties have graced our humble property.

     Friendly tarantulas are less numerous now, but they still serve to eliminate roaches and other verminand we keep them at the far edge of our property.  Snakes should be a problem, but in the nearly twenty years of having our place, we have only had two bad snakes and three good snakes anywhere near our front corridor.    The dogs and
cats have always served well in this matter.

     The image to the left is a particular bulb that our Majordomo Alvaro propagated from gifts, trades, and cuttings given in trade with the people "round abouts".  The people are seriously involved in finding "new cuttings" and "new seeds" to plant in pots, beds, or into the bramble if it can provide food, spice, or flowers the console the soul. It is probably the second or third most active activity in the little community where we have our adobe home.

     One should be aware that, while the flower has a similar appearance, the plant to the left has no relation whatsoever to the plant above it.   The top one is tree-like with bark and all that stuff,  while the one below, obviously is a bulb plant that blooms for a couple of months, and then retires from public participation until another year.   I prefer the Powder Puff, but the ladies go crazy for the one on the bottom.

     We move on to the true royalty of the blooming vegetation in the Santa Engracia catchment area of the central core of Tamaulipas State of Mexico.   This is the one tree or bush that will stop the first time driver or visitor.  We have these trees in the southernmost part of the Republic of Texas, and they will put on quite a show even at that far northern extent of the domain of Flamboyan (aka - Poinsettia Tree).   This tree can bloom prodigiously early on in the Springtime, with the blooming lasting perhaps as much as three monthstruly.
    And yes, Virginiaat times there is a general "rebrote" (re-boostor second flowering), especially during a rainy spell during the normally dry Spring.   But it is all realit is why people find Mexico so fascinating and hypnotising in many cases.   Since we grew up in close proximity to this magic and were associated with people at all social levels from Mexico during our farm days, all of this was simply….normal.
This is the second blooming
of a Flamboyan tree.
     One must remember in our biographic data that my paternal grandmother (whom I never knew) lived in Mexico for several years with her father in another NoWhere, Mexico (Llano de Enmedio, Vera Cruz) back in the late 1880s and 1890s.  They were actually of the Washburn - Christian Mills of Minneapolis, Minnesota (later known as General Mills) and real, live industrialists…and quirky, eccentric and wealthy and scientific and strange.  Very generous Episcopalians from when it used to be an Orthodox, Catholic Church of England type institution…but still quirky, strange, and eccentric.

    Their dedication to crops and harvests of tropical fruits and production rubbed off on the son of that woman…and he became my father…who was a very successful in the farming business on the very edge of the Republic of Texas.   Those were interesting times…and as boring as it was, my brothers and I never lacked for something that "needed to be done" or something that had a matter of great interest for our study or distraction.   We never lacked for intellectual challenge, and we have been influenced by people who were fair, studied, and disciplined.
      We shall mosey on over the crest of the hill, now.  Since I am very important, it is necessary that I rewind the big clock in the centre of Planet Earth to make certain that the planet keeps its appointments with the chronology of reality.  Very few people are aware of this responsibility that I bear, so we beseech any and all to make certain that our secret remains within these confines or whatever confines are available to your reach at this time.

And, yes Virginia…I think and know that the people are laughing at my feeble jokes.   We need to return to the issue at hand, that being assisting the nurturing and marketting of our neighbour's coming crop of deluxe limes.   This is an interesting challenge, and one that returns me to the times as a five year old…weaving around cotton trailers and John Deere tractors coughing and blustering through thick soil in the black loam of the delta of the Rio Grande…everything that was old is new again…perhaps.   Tomorrow a bit of news about the "caravanas" of the "migrants" invading the southern borderand about why the social construct in Mexico is not "hopeless" as many think.


El Gringo Viejo
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Saturday 23 March 2019

Southern Poverty Law? Helping the oppressed…..?


(Photo by Amanda Edwards/Getty Images for Discovery Communications)
Founder, Southern Poverty Law Center, Morris Dees of “Hate in America” speaks onstage during the Discovery Communications TCA Winter 2016 at The Langham Huntington Hotel and Spa on January 7, 2016 in Pasadena, California. (Photo by Amanda Edwards/Getty Images for Discovery Communications)


(Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)
Richard Cohen, President of the Southern Poverty Law Center, speaks during a press conference November 29, 2016 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

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     Southern Poverty Law Center president Richard Cohen resigned Friday, in the latest blow to the embattled left-wing nonprofit.  Cohen’s resignation came nine days after on March 13, citing unspecified conduct issues.

     Cohen announced his resignation in a staff-wide email Friday evening, the Los Angeles Times reported.   “Whatever problems exist at the SPLC happened on my watch, so I take responsibility for them,” Cohen’s email read, according to the Times.
  Current and former SPLC employees have accused the organization of turning a blind eye to sexual harassment and racial discrimination within its own ranks. (RELATED: ‘Highly Profitable Scam’: Former SPLC Staffers Come Clean)


     Cohen took responsibility for unspecified “problems” at the SPLC in a statement released to the Montgomery Advertiser.    Cohen asked the SPLC’s board “to immediately launch a search for an interim president in order to give the organization the best chance to heal,” according to the Advertiser.

     SPLC employees were long aware of racial issues and sexual harassment within the organization, former SPLC staffer Bob Moser recounted in a scathing essay published in The New Yorker on Thursday.  Moser described the SPLC as a “highly-profitable scam” that “never lived up to the values it espoused,” despite its portrayal to gullible donors.

      “We were part of the con, and we knew it,” Moser wrote.

     The SPLC is known to label pedestrian conservative organizations as “hate groups,” and is a key resource for AmazonGoogle and other tech companies in policing “hate speech.”  The non-profit recently reported more than half a billion dollars in assets, including $121 million in off-shore funds.

Wednesday 20 March 2019

A slice of life during "those times" in The Past

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Noble person, JOSE GALLARDO MARCIAL…

     And it was a merchant and a Highway Patrolman who served as witnesses (essentially character witnesses), both Anglo/Teutonic of ancestry. Please notice that Jose Gallardo Marcial's race/ethnicity is recorded as White, which is actually more correct than other terms and faux inventions such as "Hispanic".


    Also it is interesting to take notice that the recorder in Travis County (Austin) managed to misspell Penjamo (twice), and Morelia (once). Another point that is compelling is that Jose Gallardo Marcial had a well-developed hand in terms of writing in script (cursive) form, indicating an advanced intelligence and discipline, developed at an early age.

      It shows that he probably completed primary, which in these times in Texas would be more than equivalent to High School completion.   He might even completed Mexican secondary, which would to-day, be about the same as two or four years of university in Texas.   (Yes, Virginia, seriously)
   One final thing that is of interest is the fact that his Naturalisation occurred shortly after the Roosevelt Administration had completed a Mexican and foreign nationals expulsion programme. This meant that the two aforementioned witnesses had to have substantially vigorous commitment to keep this obviously worthwhile member of the American community….in Texas (and therefore America).
      We include the above note due to the fact that Conservative / Republicans are always linked to the notion that we want to drive out people of different languages, colours, races, ethnicities, or whatever.  The fact is that we are the most accepting of having new people arrive who are actually qualified to access the ladder of success and who can fold into the peculiar American culture as positive contributors. 
     It was Roosevelt, his wife Eleanor, and the ghouls of the "New Deal" who figured out that the best way to solve the Great Depression problem was to run off all the Mexicanswhich they did.  Somewhat lamentably, about 20 per cent of all those who were run off (deported) were American citizens.   Another large body of them had been granted work permits and permanent resident-alien status.  That designation was the last step to qualifying for candidacy for citizenship once completing the civic and moral examinations required. 

    Jose Gallardo Marcial went through all of that, and succeeded in becoming an American citizen.   It took eleven years after he was accepted into the country temporarily.  He became a family man, with his wife,  Maria.   He was one of those peculiar birds who never missed a day of work.  He was active in his Church (Roman Catholic) and performed in Christmas Pageants as Joseph for many years.  He served also as sacistran for the Church.


    An oddity or co-incidence, is that my father served as head counsellor at Del Valle High School when he moved up to Austin, Texas in 1966.  Del Valle was adjacent to the recently established B-47 Air Force Base, and the school district had a large military dependent student body.   Jose Gallardo Marcial lived in Del Valle, Texas and had children who attended that high school where  my father was the senior guidance counsellor.  



Thank the Good Lord for people such as Jose Gallardo Marcial who came to Texas to make this land great.


El Gringo Viejo

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Monday 4 March 2019

Confusion, Contradiction, Disorder, and Disaster - We comment before departure to our place in NoWhere, Mexico...

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Stephen Fuller Austin

Father of Texas by default.  A Good
and Reasonable man who saved Texas.

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        Yesterday we posted a Eulogy that was actually delivered by Col. Juan Sequin when he was essentially mayor and military commandant of San Antonioalmost one year after the fall of the Alamo to the forces of Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna.   A few days less than a year before, something between 184 and 212 combatantswho all had a militarily possible chance to leave the fortress before all exits were blockeddecided incorrectly to stand up to the most powerful force on the North American Continent in combat at that time and on that date.  It was, to be blunt, a fool's gambita "glorious fool", but a fool nonetheless.  
     James Bowie knew betterbut he was in and out of delirium for his last month of life.  James Bowie's closest friend in San Antonio de Valero was a fellow by the name of Gregorio Esparza, who literally snuck into the Alamo, well into the siege, to assist his friend who he knew to be near death due to consumption, and/or cumulative coronary problems, and/or prolonged episode of recurring pneumonia due to exhaustion.  Bowie had lost his second wife and his two very young daughters by that wife (1833 - cholera).   That woman was the daughter of a very ranking politician and businessman of the Verimunde family, which was held in high regard in what was then still known as the State of Coahuila y Tejas. 
\
     These side trips into this alley-way and that path to the top of a hill can delay a person who wishes to read about the "Texian Revolution" for a millennium and a half.   There are literally thousands upon thousands of Texas Tales…many of them true…that have a long record of enthralling the masses with tales, stories, recountings, and memories about this fabled State.  But, to-day, I am here not to divulge stories and lead people around  the graveyards and smouldering buildings and homes and explain the errors in the historical markers we encounter as we drive through a State larger than either France or Germany.
     To-day's submission is a charge to the OROGs to lurch forth and learn, speculate, "try on" the times and smell the odour of burned sulphur that hangs over battles.  We urge that the OROG tries to truly sense what was going on…this time during the withdrawal of Texas from the Mexican Republic…and why it was so pitifully and miserably a suffered time in this great region.

     Then to think about it…Mexico and the United States would suffer even greater horror just a few tears of the calendar pages down the timeline.  After all was said and done with the Texian Experiment…we entered into a ridiculous war, desired by both sides, that pitted the Republic of Mexico against the United States of America, 1846 - 1848.
     Before long, a prophesy by Mexican General Mier y Teran, a lower level aristocrat, well studied, and cited for bravery in battle.  He declared after speaking with some people who had been moving into Texas,  taking advantage of the laws encouraging Anglo and American investment and legal residencies when Texas was still very much part of Mexico, "You Texans will someday seek to join the Nation which you left (the United States of Mexico) and upon doing so, you will soon wish to leave it.  Beware of that for which you might wish."

    And, certainly enough, Texas voted to leave the same nation it joined in 1846…fifteen years later.   Certainly enough, Mexico lost Texas and great extensions of essentially unoccupied land in what would become the American Southwest after that stupid war.  They thought they were going to take over everything up to and including the Missouri River.

  And then, while the Texians went to fight in 1861 against the hated Yankees and northern industrialists…the French decided to take charge of a punitive war expedition against Mexico and its bad debt and dangerous travel conditions…by installing an Austrian monarch, Maximilian von Hapsburg in 1862…whose reign lasted less than five years.   The Texians thought they were going to escape Washington D.C.'s high-handedness and capricious legal entanglement…but what we wound up with was 10 years of "Reconstruction" (Texas being the longest period of all Southern States) and we wound up with those 10 years and essentially a 50 year depression following "Reconstruction".
Spindletop - 1901

After its first 10 days of spewing mainly pure
East Texas oil, from about 600 feet below the
surface, it was calculated the spew-waste was
1,000,000 barrels.

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      That's right, Mary Lou and you too, Jasper…Texas was something between the Promised Land, the Doorway to Heaven, and just above a "third world" situation for many, many years after  "Reconstruction".
     Pockets of wealth, such as certain oil-field strikes like Spindletop outside of Beaumont, Texas and a few other places had boom-times.   Successful farming, some irrigated, cropped up here and there.  Forestry and ranching, of course were always "going on", and there was a certain level of commercial activity that made Texas and its traditions seem pleasantly prosperous.   As a child and growing up in a rural setting in Texas, I never felt hunger or deprivation of any kind.   
     We swam at the Country Club and at private homes and at the biggest and best public pool in the Southern half of Texas. Heck, we even had a television by 1957although my parents (mainly mother) would not allow us more than 60 minutes per nightincluding the news.  We liked the AM radio better anyway.
     Allow, we pray, that we return to the mission of this posting.  The time between the dawning of the 2nd day of March, 1836 and the setting of the Sun on the 6th day of March, 1836 is that period of pronounced lack of information…leading to numerous deep and wide bad decisions and overreactions and under-reactions.   Most Texians have a hard time with determining which date pertains to which event…like which came first, the chicken or the egg or the clad de pollo?    They…even the ones such as my boss…have to remember "When were they fighting the Mexicans? the Spanish? the Yankees?  It all runs together.    Who was in charge here?"   

Captain Robert Edward Lee surveys the damaged
Fortress of Liberty…The Alamo in 1854

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   That problem is a  reasonable problem.  We move quickly to challengeare YOU sure that the Declaration of Independence of the Republic of Texas against the will of the Usurper Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna occurred on the 2nd of March or was it the 6th of March…both of the year 1836?

     Or was it visa versa?   Captain Robert Edward Lee was impressed with the lack of impressiveness of "The Alamo".    He seemed to concur with the idea that the people inside,  defending the Alamo, both Latinoid and Angloid, must have been…(one searches for the kind words)…overconfident (or perhaps deranged). 

    One must understand, once again, that the Army brought to bear upon that one point on the continent of North America, by a deranged, and brilliant, General of a powerful nation's commanding general who was obviously invincible by the analysts from the point of the defence.   They should have left 10 days earlier, but they did not read their own tea-leaves…

General Jose de Urea
Brigadier, Mexican Army of Invasion

Under the Command of Gen. Antonio
Lopez de Santa Anna - 1836

We also recognise that this photo from
the 1840s reveals an image that is very
much the same as my 2nd Nephew.
They are very similar in that they are
 both iron-willed, very intelligent, and
of very similar appearance (handsome).

 My nephew's wife is actually more
 intelligent, but that will be an
 argument for another day.
  She is also better-looking and.
 an attorney of record,

 Gen. Urea and my nephew are
 both better looking than your 
humble servant, but we pray thee
 prayest naught to nary a person of
 such confidence.

(Yes, Virginia, that is the way your people
and my people spoke 200 and 300 years
 ago. It is fun to practice!")
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    They had many Spanish / Mexican allies in their ranks.  They had men who needed more training and instruction about what it means to be Texian.  They, quite frankly, needed to retreat and join with another strong man…one to and with whom, I have no particular affection nor allegiance.
     Samuel Houston…but whom else could weld together a reasonable defence and a reasonable channel towards the establishment of a land of liberty and a life of Liberty?

    The destruction and murder of the Goliad Prisoners…a matter much more complicated and convoluted than  even Texians to the Core have knowledge or understanding…raises its ugly head.  It is my opinion for instance that General Urea was, as a lowly Brigadier, searching for some way to rid his beloved Mexico of this horrid, self-consumed, nut-case…Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna, looking for some backing to dispatch said Maximum Commander to either Hell or into perpetual nothingness. He would have his chance not quite later than sooner.  My affection moves to Urea…but reality had other intentions and motives.

     It is lamentable…but much like the loss of Alexander  Hamilton to a useless piece of garbage such as Aaron Burr, Vice-President of the United States…Mexico lost this man…Jose de Urea…when he foolishly failed to declare the "Presidente y Commandante de las Fuerzas Militares de la Republica Mexicana" a failed and flawed,  immoral, and un-Mexican fraud,  Antonio de Padua Maria Serverino Lopez de Santa Anna y Perez de Lebroncreature from Hell, enemy of Mexicans and Gringos alike painted the unfortunate portrait of Mexico and Mexican leaders for the world…and worsefor the Gringos before there was such a thing as a word that described "Gringos" at that time and at that place.  Such a word became heard and recognised in the latter-most 1840 decade.  If Jose de Urea had taken the reins of power and forged an agreement with the Royalists and later... the military and the forces of representative democracy in the various State CongressesMexico would have looked more like Texas.  But he chose, "I say, old man, perhaps it is better not do so,"as the Brits would say.



    But, once againlet us charge ahead to…what about Lorenzo de Zavala?3,000,000 dollars Americanos of his personal moneyinvested in the War Against Lopez de Santa Anna.  He and the son of Moses AustinStephen Fuller Austindefeated the Powerful Nation of Mexiconot Houstonnot Somervillenot American resourcesIt was a cloudy time.



    Please dig into your own research.   We tend to find something like 2,300,000 direct and indirect followers of our remarks about the time we publish about things that carry import to the history of those times in the formative period of Texas.   There will be more, when we have time and effort stored up  about the restincredible stuff…that does not favour Fess Parker swinging Old Betsey on the parapets or scenes of cowardly Mexican running away from the wallsat the beginning of the final attack…

Please remember:
      There was only one devil in the matter of Texas establishing itself as a separate and equal State in the Mexican Republican Union…and his name was Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna.   We mustMUST…avoid referring to him as "President", or "General" or "Vice-President", or "Maximum Authority" because he sacrificed all those titles due to his avarice and lack of concern  about those soldiers who died, advancing his orders, thinking that he had any idea what century it was or what planet he was on.   (!!!)

More Later
EL GRINGO VIEJO

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Saturday 2 March 2019

Eulogy for All Times

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Col. Juan N. Seguin

Colonel Juan Nepomuceno Seguin'sAlamo Defenders' Burial Oration
delivered in San Antonio
25th February 1837

Eulogy published in the 
Telegraph and Texas Register
of Columbia (later Houston), Texas April 4, 1837
 
 
"Companions in Arms!! These remains which we have the honour of carrying
 
 on our shoulders are those of the valiant heroes who died in the Alamo.
 
  Yes, my friends, they preferred to die a thousand times rather than submit
 
 themselves to the tyrant's yoke. What a brilliant example! Deserving of being
 
 noted in the pages of history. The spirit of liberty appears to be looking out
 
 from its elevated throne with its pleasing mien,  pointing to us, and  saying: 
 
 "There are your brothers, Travis, Bowie, Crockett, and others whose valour 
 
 places them in the rank of my heroes."   Yes! Soldiers and fellow citizens, these

 are the worthy beings who, by the twists of fate, during the present campaign

 delivered their bodies to the ferocity of their enemies; who, barbarously
 
 treated as beasts, were bound by their feet and dragged to this spot, where
 
 they were reduced to ashes. The venerable remains of our worthy
 
 companions as witnesses, I invite you to declare to the entire world, "Texas
 
 shall be Free and Independent or we shall perish in glorious combat."
 
Colonel Juan N. Seguin, Commandant
San Antonio, Bexar, Texas 
Army of the Republic of Texas

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