Thursday, December 5, 2013

Christmas At Beauvoir

November 8-January 5

Enjoy carolers, crafts, Father Klaus, lighted paths, tours of the house with period decorations & over 100 lighted oak trees throughout the property. A magical train takes children through the historic grounds to meet with Santa Klaus, dressed as he was in the 1800's! Gingerbread cookies, hot chocolate, live reindeer and whimsical elves to greet visitors. Events subject to change. Don't miss this exceptional Christmas event.

Date(s): 11/08/2013 - 01/05/2014

Times: Thursday-Sunday @ 4:30pm-8:30pm

Location: Beauvoir, 2244 Beach Blvd, Biloxi

Contact: Beauvoir, Jefferson Davis Home

Phone: 228-388-4400

Admission: Admission Charged

http://www.beauvoir.org/events/Christmas_at_Beauvoir.html

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Hard Freeze Warning

TEMPERATURES ARE EXPECTED TO DROP BELOW FREEZING BETWEEN 7 AND 10 PM TONIGHT AND REMAIN BELOW FREEZING UNTIL 9 AM THANKSGIVING MORNING. THE DURATION OF TEMPERATURES 26 DEGREES OR LOWER IS EXPECTED TO BE 3 TO 7 HOURS.

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Picayune, MS

NickName: The Yune.
Picayune is the largest city in Pearl River County, Mississippi. Picayune will be added to the New Orleans Metropolitan area in 2014 Located approximately 45 miles from New Orleans, Hattiesburg, and Gulfport/Biloxi.
The Stennis Space Center is 10 miles away.

Picayune was founded in 1904, named by Eliza Jane Poitevent Nicholson, the owner and the publisher of the New Orleans Daily Picayune, a newspaper named for the Spanish Coin.

The Crosby Arboretum is located in Picayune, Mississippi, and affiliated with the Mississippi State University. It contains 64 acres sheltering over 300 species of indigenous trees and shrubs. The Arboretum is home to the Pinecote Pavilion designed by the late E. Fay Jones.
Jones was an apprentice to Frank Lloyd Wright and followed many of Wright's design principles. The pavilion is one of the architectural jewels of not only Pearl River county, but also Mississippi.

While Picayune received extensive damage from Hurricane Katrina, it was not as severe as in other nearby cities. This has caused it to become the permanent home for many who relocated from the New Orleans area and the Mississippi Gulf Coast and were seeking a safer homesite with easy commuting to those areas.

The bulk of the damage in Picayune was caused by winds from the hurricane. This resulted in widespread roof, window and fence damage. The wind also caused hundreds, if not thousands, of downed trees and power outages for up to several months.

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Cooler weather

We are in the 60's at night and in the mid to high 80s during the day. The humidity is lower too. Very nice weather!

Sunday, September 8, 2013

City of Wiggins

Wiggins is a city in Stone County, Mississippi. The population was 4,390 in 2010.

Wiggins is named after Wiggins Hatten, the father of Madison Hatten, one of the area's original homesteaders.
It was incorporated in 1904, and the 1910 census reported 980 residents. In the early 1900s, Wiggins prospered along with the booming timber industry. Wiggins was once headquarters of the Finkbine Lumber Company.

On January 21, 1910, between the hours of 11 am and 1 pm, more than half of the Wiggins business district was destroyed by fire.

The fire started from unknown origin in the Hammock Building, a lodging house, and spread rapidly because of strong winds from the northwest. With no city fire department or waterworks, the residents of Wiggins resorted to bucket brigades and dynamite to stop the fire, which was confined to the east side of the Gulf and Ship Island Railroad.

The fire consumed 41 business establishments, including the Gulf and Ship Island Railroad depot. Only two or three residential dwellings were destroyed, because most homes were built away from the business district.

Wiggins has long been known for its pickle production, and at one time boasted of being home to the world's largest pickle processing facility.
However, the pickle processing facility is now closed, and although the timber industry has declined since the boom years, it still sustains many businesses in Wiggins.

After the 1910 fire and until the 1960s, the center of commerce for Wiggins developed on both sides of Pine Street, that sloped downhill and eastward, perpendicular to U.S. Route 49 and Railroad Street (First Street), over a distance of one city block.

Small shops were built mainly of brick and were mostly contiguous to each other. Over the years, the shops were occupied by numerous businesses that included drug stores, law offices, a grocery store, a shoe store etc.

In the late 1960s, U.S. Route 49 bypassed the downtown area, and many businesses moved from Pine Hill to other locations within the City.

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Mississippi hunters catch record-breaking 'gator

It’s only been three days since the start of Mississippi’s alligator hunting season, yet a pair of parties have already submitted two record-breaking ‘gators, state wildlife officials announced Monday.

Dustin Brockman of Vicksburg, Miss., ventured with his brother and friend into the Mississippi River by motorboat early Saturday night and emerged with a 727-pound record breaker that was 13 feet, 4.5 inches long.

The previous weight record was 697.5 pounds, according to Ricky Flynt, program coordinator with the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Parks.

“We chased him for about two hours,” Brockman said. “Then we got a shot on him.” Brockman said that it took two hours after hooking the alligator using a crossbow before they could shoot it with a shotgun. ,br>It took four hours more to get it into the boat, but Brockman said it was too heavy to do with just the three of them, so they just waited in the middle of the river for the sun to rise.

“We killed the alligator at 4 a.m.,” he said. “We waited until 6:30 (a.m.) before I called three or four more guys to help us load it into the boat.” And just one hour prior to Brockman’s epic catch, a hunting party led by Beth Trammell of Madison, Miss., hooked a 13-foot, 5.5-inch alligator near Redwood.

The Trammell party, which included six people, broke the previous weight record with their 723.5-pound catch and held the markbefore Brockman broke it 60 minutes later.

“It took about four hours to get it in the boat,” said Trammell. “We had to flag another boat down to help us out it was so big.” Trammell said that when they had the hefty alligator hooked, their poles were bent like “candy canes.”

Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Parks Dustin Bockman of Vicksburg, Miss., and his team pose with the alligator they caught near the Big Black River in Claiborne County. The alligator is 13-feet and 4.5 inches in length and weighs 727 pounds.

The current length record, which has yet to be broken, is 13 feet, 6.5 inches. That alligator was captured on the Pascagoula River in 2008, according to the Mississippi Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks department.

Monday, August 19, 2013

Clean up after flooding rain

The cleanup is now underway in many parts of Gulfport. This after at least five inches of rain in just one hour Sunday afternoon left much of the city in a soggy mess.

During the height of the storm, people who live on 33rd Avenue felt like prisoners. Sheila Boddie is one of these people.

"It was very high. It has everyone trapped in their homes, they couldn't get out of the driveways. They couldn't get down the street," Boddie explained.

Signs of the flooding can still be seen, from waterlogged yards to clogged drainage ditches. For one family on 53rd Avenue, Sunday was moving day. Nyeshia Winters recalled the moment.

"It was so bad. It was coming into our driveway and into our front door. We had to pile up all of our furniture and put it in the back room because it was like coming in our front door. It was just so bad yesterday," Winters said.

David Aycock's home barely stayed dry.

"We've had a lot of development out here. They've been filling in what used to be retention lakes and it's put a lot of stress and backed up a lot of water into the homes out here. We've had flooding issues in the past. We were nearly flooded again yesterday," Aycock said.

Several cars at a church on 28th street suddenly transformed into boats. Bridget Fells owned one of these vehicles and it may have been a total loss.

"According to the wrecker guy, they're going to probably total it because the water was up to the console in the car. It's very frustrating," Fells said.

While most homes in the downtown area escaped flooding, that was not the case along Highway 49 between 17th and 19th Streets. Several businesses flooded, including Cardinal Flowers. The flooding did not leave them with a very rosy feeling.

"Right now, we're finding more than usual structural damage because the water stayed in so long," Brewer explained. "It didn't come in and go out like it normally does so the water settled here for a while. So a lot of the wood and the cabinets and stuff like that are starting to go pretty bad right now," said William Brewer, owner of Cardinal Flowers.

Pretty bad would be an understatement. In addition to the flooding in Gulfport, other areas on the coast had problems because of the torrential rain. A few people had to be evacuated from homes in Moss Point, and there was street flooding in Biloxi, Ocean Springs, and Pascagoula.

Of course, during storm, much of Highway 90 along the beach in Harrison County was underwater.

www.wlox.com

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Low in the Gulf of Mexico

Where will the Low go and will it get stronger to become a TS or Hurricane?

Friday, August 9, 2013

Rainbow

The kids got a wet back to school yesterday and we have quick moving storms moving through today. But inbetween storms the sun comes out and we had a rainbow this morning.
It is so humid out there, the air is like soup.

Sunday, August 4, 2013

South MS -The Shed- reality show debuts on Monday

OCEAN SPRINGS, MS (WLOX) -

People across the country will be able to tune in and watch the lives of one of South Mississippi's most popular families--the Orrisons.

Viewers will see what goes on at their wildly popular Shed BBQ and Blues Joint.

This is their thirteenth year in business and the family said they are excited about this new venture. The reality show called "The Shed" will feature the entire Orrison family, the down home barbecue and several colorful employees.

The reality show debuts on the Food Network Monday at 9 p.m. central time. The premier party for the show will be held at the Shed's Ocean Springs location Monday night at 7.

Patrice Clark talked with Shed co-founder Brad Orrison on Sunday about the reality show and what it means for his family and South Mississippi.

Watch her story later on WLOX News and WLOX.com.

Friday, August 2, 2013

HotHotHot

We have had a hot two weeks with no relief. The little rain we had did not cool off anything. It is very humid too.

Dog days of August are here!

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Fizz on the water?

I came across this on Youtube.

Monday, July 29, 2013

Chunky River

The Chunky River is a short tributary of the Chickasawhay River in east-central Mississippi.

Via the Chickasawhay, it is part of the watershed of the Pascagoula River, which flows into the Gulf of Mexico.

The river is formed between the towns of Hickory and Chunky in southwestern Newton County.

Chunky River Raft Race

The United States Board on Geographic Names settled on "Chunky River" as the stream's name in 1963,it has also been known as:
Chanki River
Chunkey Creek
Chunkey River
Chunky Creek
Ectchangui River
Tchanke River

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chunky_River

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

City of Pascagoula, South MS

Pascagoula is a city in Jackson County, Mississippi.

The name Pascagoula, which means "bread eaters," is taken from a group of Native Americans found in villages along the Pascagoula River some distance above its mouth.

Hernando De Soto seems to have made first contact with them in the 1540s, though little is known of that encounter.
Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville, founder of the colony of Louisiana, left a more detailed account from an expedition of this region in 1700.

The first detailed account comes from Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville, younger brother of Iberville, whom the Pascagoula visited at Fort Maurepas in present-day Ocean Springs, shortly after it was settled and while the older brother was away in France.

There are few details that are certain about these peoples, except that their language seemed not to have shared an etymological root with the larger native groups to the north, the Choctaw particularly.

Instead, their language seems more akin to that of the Biloxi or Natchez people, both of whom have been linked in this way to the Sioux, Crow, and Ho-Chunk.

The territory of the Biloxi peoples seems to have ranged from the areas of what are now called Biloxi Bay to Bayou La Batre (Alabama) and twenty-five miles up the Pascagoula River, and then the Pascagoula people's territory seems to have ranged between some distance north of there to the confluence of the Leaf and Chickasawhay rivers.

The first settlers of Pascagoula were Jean Baptiste Baudreau Dit Graveline, Joseph Simon De La Pointe and his aunt, the Madame Chaumont.

A view of a section of the Ingalls Shipbuilding Company showing various United States Navy ships under construction in Pascagoula

Local legend says the Pascagoula tribe chanted and waded hand-in-hand into the Pascagoula River, drowning together rather than become enslaved and killed to an enemy tribe, the Biloxi. Thus, the legend of the "Singing River" was born. It is said that on still summer and autumn evenings, the sad song of the Pascagoulas can still be heard near the river.

Pascagoula gained notoriety on October 11, 1973 when two local fishermen, Charles Hickson and Calvin Parker, claimed to have been abducted by aliens from a Pascagoula pier. The media frenzy that followed touched off national interest in UFOs and extraterrestrials unparalleled since the Roswell incident. In 1983, Hickson wrote a book about his ordeal entitled UFO Contact In Pascagoula.

Pascagoula also gained national attention in the 1980s, when novelty singer/songwriter Ray Stevens featured the town in his hit, "Mississippi Squirrel Revival." Stevens admits, though, that the song could have been set in any Southern town but the name Pascagoula easily rhymed with the word, hallelujah, which is heard frequently in the song.

Pascagoula Website

Saturday, July 13, 2013

Summer pattern

The TS broke apart and what's left of it is heading up the east coast and no real danger to anyone, thankgoodness.

We are in our summer pattern, sunny hot and humid in the during the day and a possible storm in the afternoon.

Today we went to the Menge Flea market.

Flea Market

We all got a few things, but it was very hot and humid and a shower and change of clothes happened as soon as I got home.

That's a cute milk glass candy bowl, one of a few milk glass items I bought there in my last two visits.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

A little more west..

It looks like Chantal is tracking a little more west than was previously shown.

But Florida is still a target only the west side of Florida now.

I don't like all those other squiggly lines in the Gulf but tomorrow we should have a better bead on the track.

We are in our typical summer weather, hot-humid with a chance of rain.

Monday, July 8, 2013

TS Chantal

Tropical Storm Chantal (shahn-TAHL') is racing toward the Lesser Antilles after forming in the Atlantic.

The storm's maximum sustained winds early Monday are near 40 mph (65 kph) with some strengthening expected over the next two days.

A tropical storm warning has been issued for Barbados, Dominica, St. Lucia, Martinique and Guadeloupe. A tropical storm watch is in effect for St. Vincent.

Chantal is centered about 630 miles (1,010 kilometers) east-southeast of Barbados and is moving west near 26 mph (43 kph).

Right now it looks like Chantal might skirt the east side of Florida.

Read more here: http://www.sunherald.com/2013/07/07/4781440/erick-downgraded-to-tropical-storm.html#storylink=cpy

Thursday, July 4, 2013

Happy Fourth of July

It looks like it will be a wet one in South Mississippi

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Jubillee fish kill

HARRISON COUNTY, MS (WLOX) -

Researchers now know what caused a widespread fish kill along the beaches of South Mississippi Monday. Thousands of dead fish started washing ashore in Harrison County, Hancock County, and Cat Island in the early morning hours.

The Department of Marine Resources says one reason is low oxygen levels, due to the warm water. Several samples also pointed to Red Tide algae blooms in the Mississippi Sound that can deplete the oxygen and clog the gills of fish.

Many families took advantage of the event, calling it a "July Jubilee." They didn't seem to mind the dead fish and sting rays floating in the water and lying on the beach.

Hundreds of people were lured to the shores of Harrison County, after learning about an abundance of available seafood. There were a lot of flounder, white trout, speckled trout and ground mullet that you could catch with your bare hands.

"They're just floating on the surface," said Jordan Mathews of Biloxi. "I was watching the news this morning. I saw there was a Jubilee and some of my friends were out here gigging flounders, so I came out here to see what it was all about."

"What it appears to be is a Jubilee, or Red Tide. When the oxygen level is low in the water, the fish would come up next to the shoreline to try to get air," explained Chuck Loftis, Harrison County Sand Beach Director.

And that meant plenty of seafood up for grabs. The most popular was jumbo shrimp. David Morgan brought his grandson along for the fish free-for-all.

"They're just laying on the bottom. They're fresh dead. It's like a shopping spree at the seafood market. You just pick them up," said Morgan.

DMR officials are advising people that if you pick up fish in the water and they're still alive, they should be safe to eat. However, if you see ones that have washed ashore, don't pick them up or eat them.

Read the rest of the story here...http://www.wlox.com/story/22730148/thousands-of-dead-fish-wash-up-on-biloxis-shoreline

Sunday, June 30, 2013

EDD's Drive in - Pascagoula

I don't think it's been a drive in, in years. There is a parking lot and you pull up and stand in line to give your order which is not fun in South Mississippi's heat and humidity. But they have a loyal fan base.

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Judge blocks Mississippi open-carry gun law.

JACKSON -- A state judge has blocked Mississippi's open-carry gun law from taking effect next week, writing in a Friday ruling the law was vague and an injunction was needed to prevent irreparable harm.

Hinds County Circuit Judge Winston Kidd scheduled a hearing for July 8 to consider more arguments about whether to extend the injunction.

Hinds County District Attorney Robert Shuler Smith had requested the law be blocked, and Kidd granted the temporary injunction during an emergency hearing.

House Bill 2 clarifies that people in Mississippi don't need any kind of state-issued permit to carry a gun that's not concealed.

Read more here: http://www.sunherald.com/2013/06/28/4766090/mississippis-new-gun-law-creates.html#storylink=cpy

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Blueberries

We are in a hot and humid, breezy cycle with a chance of rain, everyday. The highs have been in the low 90's.

But the last rain we had last week.

It's really great weather for the outdoors if you are in the shade.

We went to a local farm and picked two bags of Blueberries.

There is nothing like fresh blueberries off the vine.

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Guns out in the Open.

In less than a month, Mississippians will be able to openly carry a gun in public places in our state.

Law enforcement agencies are busy training their officers on what they can and can't do under the new law.

Talk about HOT

It has been very hot this week. Today if it doesn't go into the 100s, it will feel like it. The humidity is drenching.

We had rain 3 days last week but only a slight chance of rain tomorrow. These are days to stay inside or swing on a porch outside with a glass of sweet tea.

Here is a neighbor tending his corn before the temperature shoots up.

Since TS Andrea, everything has been quiet which is normal for June. Lets hope it stays that way the rest of season :D

Friday, June 7, 2013

Andrea

The hot and humid weather is here with a chance of rain for the next few days.

TS Andrea formed in the Gulf of Mexico and went east into Florida and up the east coast.

It was a fast moving storm and its many tornado's did not cause a great deal of damage.

thankgoodness.

Saturday, May 25, 2013

2013 Hurricane Season

NOAA forecasters predict that 13 to 20 named tropical storms with winds of at least 35 miles per hour (56 kilometers per hour) will form between June 1 and November 30. Seven to 11 of those could evolve into hurricanes with winds of at least 74 miles per hour (119 kilometers per hour).

And three to six of those hurricanes could intensify into major storms with winds exceeding 110 miles per hour (177 kilometers per hour), NOAA officials said.

An average hurricane season sees about 12 named storms and six hurricanes, with only one or two becoming major storms.

Building a Better Forecast

Even as NOAA forecasters are predicting a busy hurricane season, they also think that significant improvements in forecasting technology will allow them to provide better warnings to coastal residents during the summer and fall.

Read the whole article here:
National Geographic News

Monday, May 20, 2013

Its Humid

Yep, the humid weather is back and will stay until November. Yesterday a Rat snake was on the front porch, they are not poisonous but they are scary looking. Rat Snake

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Baby Mockingbird

The 3 babies are getting big and I bet they will be pushed out of the nest soon. This is one of the babies.

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Mockingbirds

Mockingbirds built a nest on the roof of the backyard patio.

It was rough going for them, the nest fell twice. Now the babies are getting big and should be leaving the nest soon.

The Northern Mockingbird is the only mockingbird commonly found in North America. This bird is mainly a permanent resident, but northern birds may move south during harsh weather. This species has rarely been observed in Europe.

Size & Shape
A medium-sized songbird, a bit more slender than a thrush and with a longer tail. Mockingbirds have small heads, a long, thin bill with a hint of a downward curve, and long legs. Their wings are short, rounded, and broad, making the tail seem particularly long in flight.

Color Pattern
Mockingbirds are overall gray-brown, paler on the breast and belly, with two white wingbars on each wing. A white patch in each wing is often visible on perched birds, and in flight these become large white flashes. The white outer tail feathers are also flashy in flight.

Behavior
The Northern Mockingbird enjoys making its presence known. It usually sits conspicuously on high vegetation, fences, eaves, or telephone wires, or runs and hops along the ground. Found alone or in pairs throughout the year, mockingbirds aggressively chase off intruders on their territory.

Habitat
Look for Northern Mockingbirds in towns, suburbs, backyards, parks, forest edges, and open land at low elevations.

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Attracting Tourists

In this time of economic struggles, Mississippi is looking at outside-the-box ways of bringing more revenue into the state. This weekend the Mary C. O'Keefe Cultural Center is putting on a two day art retreat with the help of a grant from the Mississippi Development Authority.

Pat Odom is hoping to help people discover their artistic passion with her stenciling class. The Art By the Sea retreat also offers an opportunity for participants to try out everything from jewelry making. to working with fused glass so people can see what they're good at.

"It's very eclectic and people like that simply because some students are going to excel in one media where not in another," said Odom. "They're going to be well rounded when they leave because there are so many exciting things going on."

The Mary C. O'Keefe received an MDA Creative Economy grant to put on the retreat.

Retreat Director Anita Nobles-Arguelles said, "I think it's important for MDA and other organizations to look at other possible revenues in the state of Mississippi. Supporting the creative economy feeds the state in two different ways. It feeds our artists and the communities that support the artist by providing a revenue stream for them. It also draws tourism into the state and sets some of our towns up as art communities which means people travel here to take classes and learn new techniques."

"Our first one is kind of a local regional attack but on subsequent Art By The Sea Retreats, we hope to be looking at more of a national audience," said Nobles-Arguelles. "There are tribes that travel all over the country that do these types of retreats. That feeds our tourism, hotels, feeds our restaurants and puts Ocean Springs on the map as an extension of our art community."

Participants enjoyed the chance to explore so many art forms in one backdrop.

"Things I would have never picked up on my own and are just a tiny bit too esoteric to get out of a book or a magazine," said Pat Sharpe, participant.

..read more at www.WLOX.com

Saturday, April 13, 2013

Black Spring Break

Law enforcement officers are closely monitoring the traffic along Highway 90 in Biloxi and Gulfport. On Friday, they made final preparations for the arrival of what could be tens of thousands of Spring Break visitors. Extra sets of eyes will be watching the activities from the ground and in the air.

Biloxi Police officers and Harrison County deputies spent Friday setting up a command center on the south side of Edgewater Mall. A dozen ATVs are in place and supplies continued to arrive.

"We're just to going to keep an eye on things and we have all the equipment in place to respond for traffic needs and crowd issues and whatever else may happen," said Jim Adamo with the Biloxi Police Department.

Inside the mobile command center, officers will use some high-tech gadgets to get a bird's eye view of spring break activities this weekend. Six cameras are mounted on the unit, including two that can go 56-feet in the air.

"They do a 360 degree and I can zoom in and read the tag numbers," explained Walter Pitts with the Harrison County Sheriff's Department.

A helicopter camera can feed live video from 13-miles away. There's also a radio system, dispatch center, video conferencing room, and an outdoor work station.

This year, there's a new addition to the mobile fleet: his and hers portable bathrooms. The unit will come in handy, because extra Biloxi officers will be on duty, along with 60 Harrison County sheriff's deputies. They plan to enforce parking, traffic, and other safety rules.

"Five or 10 cars stopping for five or ten seconds causes a lot of traffic delays. So the first thing we would do is close off the turnaround points to make sure people move constantly east and west," said Adamo.

Police expect heavy traffic to be concentrated between DeBuys Road and Rodenburg Avenue.

"It's going to be play it by ear, monitor the activity, and respond accordingly. We want to make sure that everybody is safe," said Adamo.

The officers are prepared to work longer hours if needed. And they expect to be on duty through Sunday afternoon.

WLOX.com - The News for South Mississippi

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Storm Line

Storm line

A storm moved through with strong winds, lightening and tornadoes.

Temperatures will cool off which is good because it was very humid the last few days.

Friday, April 5, 2013

Wind!

On April 3rd we had front move through. They said it would be windy but I don't think they even expected the wind we had. It was very windy for over an hour. I think we got into the 60mph winds. It knocked our patio chair around. Trees went down and some lost electricity.

Boats were damaged and any activities that used canopies were destroyed.
Sand was all over Hwy 90.

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Frost- One more time?

Yes, the weather turned cold again. The plants had to come in and the windows put back on the greenhouse. Is this the cold weather's last hurrah?

They say it will slow warm up the rest of the week and Easter Sunday will be warm with a chance of rain. The flowering Peach tree looks gorgeous.

I like this weather because soon it will be unbearably hot...

Friday, March 22, 2013

American Lifestyle magazine

“The Mississippi Gulf Coast has a unique flavor and charm.

Southern hospitality is for real, and it abounds.

“I can unequivocally state that the Mississippi Gulf Coast
is the nation’s best golf-and-casino gaming destination, bar none.

If it isn’t, I’ve not seen a better one.”

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Great weather

If it stayed like this all year, it would be paradise!

In the 40s and 50s at night and high 60s low 70s during the day, with a breeze.

Not much humidity which is a killer.

Another beautiful sunset.

And if I still lived in New York, this is what I would see. Picture from my niece in Upstate, NY.


She is hoping this is her last snow fall, of a very snow year.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

St. Patrick's Day

A Beautiful St.Patrick's Day Sunrise in South Mississippi.

It looks like our cold weather may be gone.

The next 10 days look like 50-60s at night and 60-70's during the day.

Time to get the garden planted.

Friday, March 15, 2013

Still cold

We still have chilly nights in the 30s. It warms up to the 60s but it feels colder because of the breeze we have for the last few days. I am not complaining. Before you know it, it will be unbearably hot and humid. I would rather be chilly.

Near the Gulf of Mexico we have train tracks. During bad storms that is usually the dividing line. "Everyone south of tracks must evacuate". I find it strange that both of our fire departments are south of the tracks. So is our main part of the town that holds the Court house etc.

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Long Beach, MS man's Obit goes viral

It is obvious this man handed down his sense of humor to his children. What a wonderful way to honor the man they loved and respected.

Harry Stamp

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Spring?

We have been in the high 60's and low 70's the last few days. Here a Mockingbird bird is building a nest under the patio roof. Is Spring in the air? Hopefully there will be no more freeze and people can start planting their gardens outside.

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Repairs to Jefferson Davis' home ready for Civil War anniversary

BILOXI -- The last vestiges of Hurricane Katrina were removed from Beauvoir after the gift shop moved from its temporary quarters in a FEMA trailer into the nearly complete presidential library Wednesday.

The last home of Jefferson Davis and its accompanying presidential library were heavily damaged by the 2005 hurricane.

Work began Monday to transfer stock and other items from the trailer into the gift shop in the library.

The 24,000-square-foot building still has some work to be done on it and planned galleries in the upper floor, as well as the library, are not yet ready for the public.

But the main entrance to Beauvoir will be ready for the site's participation in the 150th anniversary of the Civil War on March 16.

Read more here: http://www.sunherald.com/2013/03/06/4511463/moving-day-at-beauvoir.html#storylink=cpy

Friday, February 22, 2013

Wild pigs a problem in South Mississippi

State lawmakers hope legislation would help fight flourishing herds.

Feral pigs are smelly, aggressive and threatening. And their numbers are growing in South Mississippi.

Boars and sows are coming into urban neighborhoods, causing damage in cities and increasing erosion the banks of the Pascagoula River, the last large free-flowing river in the lower 48 states.

Five years ago, the U.S. Department of Agriculture would get a call a week, but now it gets almost a call a day, said Scott Alls, a district supervisor for nuisance animals.

"Pigs are the big topic nowadays with all the damage they do," Alls said. "They're not native. Kind of like Cogongrass, they take over."

Rep. Richard Bennett, R-Long Beach, has helped introduce a bill in the state Legislature to add feral hogs to the state beaver control program. And Sen. Michael Watson, R-Pascagoula, noted on Facebook he hopes such legislation would help the problem along the Pascagoula River.

In groups, the animals destroy habitat and can uproot hundreds of acres of sensitive bottomland as they forage for roots and grubs.

Mark LaSalle, director of the Pascagoula River Audubon Center in Moss Point, said the pigs tear up the river's banks as well, escalating erosion.

City pigs

"But we've had pig damage reported in the city limits of Gulfport, in the city of Gautier," Alls said Thursday. "We've had them in Bay St. Louis. At the Hollywood Casino, we've had pig issues there. Stennis Space Center has a pig problem. Diamondhead is having issues with pigs right now."

He said the pigs in Diamondhead have been coming into yards, tearing into lawns searching for grubs. They are also damaging ditches and rights of way, he said.

"It's widespread," he said, citing cases in Petal and Purvis.

"It's not unique to South Mississippi, it's statewide," he said, adding there also has been national attention given to pig issues.

Twenty years ago, feral pigs were in about 10 states, he said. Now they are in 40.

Open season

Property owners are allowed to shoot them on their properties. Public land is a little tricky. Hunters can shoot them during any hunting season with whatever weapon is legal for the animal that is in season. For example, they could use a .22-caliber during squirrel season.

And on the 13,500 acres of the Ward Bayou Wildlife Management Area east of Vancleave along the Pascagoula River in 2012, managers calculated hunters killed 350 to 400 or more feral pigs during the six months of the various hunting seasons.

McCoy's Swamp Tours on the Pascagoula River often spots wild hogs along the river's banks. The animals can swim and they like the soft, moist ground of the bottomland hardwood forests in the river basin.

These feral pigs reproduce often, beginning at a young age. Wildlife experts estimate they would have to kill or capture 80 percent of the pigs a year to keep the population from growing.

Shrewd, mean adversary

And they're smart. If they've been trapped by a corral, for example, and get away, they learn from the experience and avoid corrals in the future. They also avoid coming out in the day during hunting seasons.

LaSalle said he encountered a large hog last summer while working on warbler boxes on Ward Bayou near Vancleave.

"Walking along the banks of the bayou, we noticed signs of a hog," he said. "It looks like someone has plowed the ground, like a herd of cattle has come through. And you see droppings as well.

"It was late, about 6 p.m. I surprised one. It was asleep, maybe 50 feet away," he said. "I'm on the bank, and here's the hog. He woke up, snorted and I snorted back at him and he went one way and I went another."

He said he was lucky he didn't have to "go swimming" to avoid it.

"Luckily, it was only one," he said. "I advise people to 'get yourself a stick and go in the opposite direction,' because those things are mean."

Read more here:
http://www.sunherald.com/2013/02/21/4483275/wild-pigs-a-growing-problem-in.html#storylink=cpy

Monday, February 18, 2013

Mississippi officially ratifies amendment abolishing slavery

It's already embarrassing that Mississippi didn't ratify the 13th Amendment (the one that, you know, abolishes slavery) until 1995.

It's even more embarrassing that the Magnolia State didn't officially ratify the amendment until now, almost 150 years after Congress voted for it.

Back in '95 the state never properly notified the U.S. Archivist about the ratification, so it was never official.

This apparent clerical blunder wasn't spotted until Dr. Ranjan Batra, an associate professor at the University of Mississippi Medical Center, saw "Lincoln" and wondered what happened when the states voted on ratification.

The right paperwork was filed and on February 7, 2013 Mississippi officially ratified the 13th Amendment.

"It was long overdue," admitted Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann.
No kidding.

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Chilly in the South

It is chilly, sunny and breezy in South Mississippi and its going to be like this for the next couple of days. We have not had the good hard freeze yet, the last one was a few years ago. The sunsets have been beautiful.

Monday, February 11, 2013

Tornado

HATTIESBURG -- A tornado passed through the heart of Hattiesburg on Sunday as part of a wave of severe storms that caused injuries and significant damage in the area, including the University of Southern Mississippi campus.

Greg Flynn of the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency said Forrest County officials estimate that the tornado damaged several hundred homes.

Forrest County Sheriff Billy McGee says 10 or 15 people were injured by the tornado -- but none of the injuries was serious.

"Most of our injuries have been walking wounded," he said.

McGee says rescue workers were going house-to-house to check on people and make sure nobody was trapped.

Pictures posted on Facebook by WDAM in Hattiesburg showed rows of trees flattened in the Oak Grove area and damage to commercial buildings. Residents have reported the high school stadium heavily damaged.

The storm passed along Hardy Street, one of the city's main roadways.

"We had a tornado touch down. We have a lot of damage," said Kyle Hopkins, operations director for Forrest County emergency operations.

The university released a statement saying several buildings had been damaged but that no injuries were reported. Campus police have declared a state of emergency and asked anyone not on campus to stay away.

Cody Shook, 30, was in Petal on his way home to a pregnant girlfriend near Interstate 59 in Hattiesburg when he and a friend experienced the tornado, he told the Sun Herald Sunday night.

"I was thinking it was nothing serious. We'd had a couple of scares before," Shook said. "Then we encountered it on 4th Street. Literally the stop sign was ripped from the ground concrete and all, about 100 yards in front of us. "My friend was driving. We pulled into the first driveway we could," Shook said.

They watched the storm peel roofs from houses and snap what he estimated to be 80-year-old oak trees in front of them.

"Pieces of houses were flying around," he said. "It was very scary. It caused two grown men to hug after that and say I'm glad we're alright."

It skipped his home, but damaged homes two streets over on Berkshire Street, not far from Hardy Street, he said.

Jason Leviere, owner of Click Boutique, told the Sun Herald late Sunday that he had been shopping in west Hattiesburg at the Turtle Creek Mall when the sirens went off. At first he thought it might have been a drill because of the high wind and heavy rain. He returned home in downtown and experienced the tornado there. He said it sounded very much like a train. But his home and business appeared to be undamaged.

"It all happened pretty fast," he said. "It came out of nowhere."

He said a network of business owners were calling each other trying to assess the situation. Through that he learned that a neighborhood behind the Crescent City Grill on Hardy Street was damaged.

He said the first damage he heard about was in the Oak Grove community west of Hattiesburg and in the Lake Serene subdivision, then he believes the tornado moved along U.S. 98 toward the Hattiesburg business district, a high traffic area on Sundays, he said.

"It jumped the Caliente Grille and hit the USM campus," he said. "The university is just a mess.

"After USM, it headed downtown and hit two blocks from us," he said. At the corner of West 4th and Main streets, it destroyed a gas station.

"So there's a lot of gas fumes outside right now," he said at about 8:30 p.m. "They're asking people not to light candles, to please use flashlights.

"I'm at my business right now, because there are a lot of people walking the streets and there are police cars circling with spotlights," he said. "I think they're afraid of looting.

"I have to say, it's amazing already to see everyone come together as a community," he said. "The phone chain starts, everyone's checking on each other and springing into action."

Harrison and Jackson counties, as well as Stone, Wayne, Perry and George counties were under a tornado watch for much of the afternoon and evening on Sunday.

Flynn says the same twister apparently hit Marion and Lamar counties but did much less damage. He says storm damage also was reported in Lawrence County and a tornado touchdown in Wayne County, near Waynesboro.

Flynn says initial reports are that nearly 20 homes were hit hard in Marion County and several in Lamar County.He says thunderstorms stayed over the area, adding water damage to the wind damage.

Marion County emergency director Aaron Greer reported three injuries in the community of Pickwick, about seven miles south of Columbia. He said one person was taken to a hospital by ambulance, another by Triple-A, and the third person was not treated.

Greer says one mobile home was destroyed, three other structures have major damage and two or three have minor damage.

National Weather Service meteorologist Joanne Culin says there also have been reports of injuries in Marion County.

Mississippi's mobile command center has been sent to Hattiesburg, and all of MEMA's area coordinators from north of Interstate 20 have been sent to the counties with damage.

Gov. Phil Bryant said he planned to visit the storm-damaged areas today. Bryant declared a state of emergency later Sunday evening.

The National Weather Service says bad weather is likely to stretch into Fat Tuesday for southeast Louisiana. Jefferson Parish has canceled a Monday night parade.

Staff writer Karen Nelson contributed to this report.

Read more here: http://www.sunherald.com/2013/02/10/4460169/tornado-hits-heart-of-hattiesburg.html#storylink=cpy

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Rainy few days.

We had some rain last week. One night it rained pretty heavy. A few days later most of the drains on the side of the road were still pretty full and moving fast.
Today is nice but we are expecting 4 days of rain starting tomorrow. It will be a wet Mardi gras Monday and Tuesday.

Sunday, February 3, 2013

WWII vet gets Mardi Gras birthday tribute in Long Beach

LONG BEACH -- Retired Army Staff Sergeant Charles B. Kelly celebrated his 93rd birthday with all the pomp and circumstance a native-born war hero could ask for Saturday at the head of the Long Beach Carnival Association's Mardi Gras parade. Kelly served in World War II in Gen. George Patton's 7th Armored Division, known as the Lucky 7th Armored. Kelly was in the Battle of St. Vith, which was part of the Battle of the Bulge, in the Ruhr Valley, Germany.

"He is an amazing hero," said Bob Lankford, who provided a Willys military jeep to convey Kelly in the parade. "He was in the most crucial campaign of World War II under the greatest general we've ever had."

Kelly is a lifelong resident of Long Beach and has been married to his wife, Lois Kelly, for 69 years. State Rep. Richard Bennett stopped by to visit with Kelly just before the parade started to wish him a happy birthday and thank him for his service. Bennett said it was his intention to introduce a proclamation in the Mississippi House recognizing Kelly's contributions.

Kelly was escorted by the Keesler Air Force Base Honor Guard and the Pass Christian and Bay St. Louis high schools' Air Force Jr. ROTC Honor Guard. He rode with his Pass Christian High ROTC sponsors, 1st Lt. Jacob Huffman and Maj. Darryl Doukas.

"We are honored to pay tribute to such a deserving World War II hero veteran in our City's Mardi Gras parade," Mayor Billie Skellie said in a statement.

Read more here: http://www.sunherald.com/2013/02/02/4444652/wwii-vet-gets-mardi-gras-birthday.html#storylink=cpy

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Mississippi marijuana growing operation

BILOXI, Mississippi --
Authorities have raided four homes along the Mississippi Gulf Coast and have dismantled what they described as very elaborate marijuana growing operations. Harrison County Sheriff Melvin Brisolara said they are connected.

"They are all intertwined together, all these cases. It's a group of individuals, there are still more involved, but this associates back to the arrests in the cases we had back in October of last year," Brisolara said.

Authorities said the drug trafficking organization operated out of Mississippi, Louisiana and Florida.

Brisolara said a traffic stop tipped off authorities. The Drug Enforcement Agency called the sheriff's department after confiscating 44 pounds of marijuana from two cars in Alabama last week.

"One of them did live in the residence on Beatline Road in Long Beach," Brisolara said. "Once we got that information, we did research. And upon completing the investigation, we found out about the other locations."

Inside the houses, authorities found thousands of dollars of plant growing equipment. Equipment was the only thing taken from a house in Ocean Springs. But at the Long Beach, investigators found at least 108 pot plants. They confiscated 168 plants in Pass Christian and 120 in Biloxi.

"I don't think any home had anybody actually living in them," Brisolara said about the homes. "We don't know how close these individuals were working but we know they were all involved with each other."

Five people have been arrested -- William L. Gainza-Zaldivar of Long Beach; Yordan Gonzales-Mendoza and Reinier Gonzalez Guerra, both of Gonzales, La., Olfidio Morera Munoz and Reinier Brito Aguiar, both of Miami.

Gainza-Zaldivar was driving the vehicle stopped on Interstate 10 in Alabama.

Brisolara said each of the five has been accused in an arrest warrant of cultivation of marijuana and possession with the intent to distribute marijuana. They will be charged once they are extradited from Alabama to Mississippi.

In addition, authorities are searching for three others, identified as Luis Cubillas-Fernandez, Carlos Rojas and Argelio Rojas on related charges. No hometowns are available.

Story posted here: http://blog.gulflive.com/mississippi-press-news/2013/01/authorities_uncover_elaborate.html

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

The subject is Shrimp

By ROB HOTAKAINEN — McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON -- They survived hurricanes and oil spills, but Gulf Coast shrimp processors say there's no way they can battle foreign governments to stay in business.

While Americans gobble up imported shrimp as never before, processors from Florida to Texas say they can't compete with billions in subsidies that are propping up shrimpers in places such as China and Thailand while driving down the price for American consumers.

"You can buy shrimp cheaper than you can buy bologna right now …. We just don't have the kind of money and backbone to stay in business competing against these countries," said Richard Gollott Sr., a co-owner of Golden Gulf Coast Packing Co. in Biloxi.

With imports now accounting for more than 90 percent of the U.S. shrimp market, processors say it's time to fight back: They want the federal govern

ment to put new tariffs on imported shrimp, making it more expensive to sell in the United States.

"This is just survival. We're trying to survive, and that's what this is all about," Gollott said.

As two federal agencies prepare to begin considering the tariffs case this week, opponents say it would be misguided for Washington to intervene.

"Instead of seeing our friends in the Gulf industry innovate and try to improve their practices in the marketplace, they're just trying to regulate the competition out of the business," said Travis Larkin, the president of Seafood Exchange, a seafood importing company in Raleigh, N.C. "If you look at the big picture of it, it just doesn't make any sense."

Processors such as Gollott, part of a group called The Coalition of Gulf Shrimp Industries, predict that they'll win. They say that foreign governments in the seven biggest importing countries have engaged in unfair trade by giving more than $13.5 billion in subsidies to their shrimp industries since 2009.

The processors say the case bears close watching, with Gulf shrimp sales amounting to hundreds of millions a year and their industry employing thousands.

"The public ought to care, because what's happening with the shrimp industry is symptomatic of what's happening to many industries, maybe most industries in this country," said David Veal, the group's executive director and a former professor of agricultural engineering at Mississippi State University.

Way of life

Gollott, 68, said he'd been in the shrimp business since he was 13, following his grandfather and father. He has more than 60 boats, one of the largest shrimp fleets in Mississippi, though that's half his former fleet. Last year, he said, his company only broke even, and more jobs disappeared.

"There's no such thing as free trade," said Gollott, who has more than 50 employees. "Somebody's paying a price: An American worker somewhere is paying the price for free trade. It's about the dollar, and we are just little people in the middle who are getting squeezed."

Jonathan McLendon, vice president of Biloxi Freezing and Processing Inc., said some Gulf shrimpers weren't making enough to cover fuel costs for their boats.

"When the boats are not making money, they're closing up, and without the boats the processors are going downhill," said McLendon, whose company employs more than 75 people. "And it's not only the jobs. This is generations of a way of life on the Gulf Coast that they're putting into jeopardy."

The coalition is challenging seven countries that exported $4.3 billion worth of shrimp to the United States in 2011, accounting for 85 percent of all imports and more than three-fourths of the U.S. market: China, Thailand, Ecuador, India, Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam.

The group, which represents processors in Mississippi, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Alabama and Texas, said it had documented more than 100 programs that provided benefits to shrimp producers in those countries, including grants, low-interest loans, tax breaks, even shrimp feed.

Industry takes a hit

Among the examples cited: Thailand buys shrimp from farmers and sells it to processors at low prices; India provides subsidies to reduce ocean freight costs; China has provided financing to build the world's largest shrimp-processing and export plant; Malaysia is spending millions to build shrimp farms and processing plants aimed at exporting more shrimp.

On top of that, Veal said, the countries pay lower wages.

Veal, of Biloxi, said as recently as 30 years ago, U.S. processors accounted for 80 percent of all shrimp sold in the country.

But the Gulf shrimp industry has been particularly hit hard in the past decade, he said, enduring at least a 50 percent reduction in the number of shrimp vessels, Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and the largest oil spill in the nation's history five years later. He said the industry was still contending with false fears that Gulf shrimp weren't safe to eat as a result of the spill.

The Commerce Department and the International Trade Commission are looking into the case. On Thursday, the Commerce Department will decide whether there are sufficient grounds to proceed with an investigation. On Friday, the International Trade Commission will have its first staff hearing to begin examining data. It could take a year or longer to resolve the case.

The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative said it didn't comment on pending cases.

But Nkenge Harmon, the deputy assistant U.S. trade representative for public and media affairs, said President Barack Obama's administration "has demonstrated that we will make our trading partners play by the rules."

'Imports have stepped up'

McLendon said the Gulf Coast processors were battling countries that were in much the same position as the United States not so long ago.

"They're becoming industrialized, they're putting people to work and the middle class is developing," he said. "So they're putting these stimulus programs together to not only put people to work but also to feed this newly developing middle class. And that's fine and dandy if they keep the product in their own country."

Shrimp is the most popular seafood in the U.S., with each American eating an average of 4.2 pounds per year, according to industry statistics.

Larkin, who in a previous job in the 1990s handled shrimp procurement for such restaurants as Red Lobster and Olive Garden, said the domestic industry -- even in the best of times -- no longer could provide enough shrimp for the vast U.S. market.

Imported shrimp has become a much bigger business than the domestic industry, Larkin said, providing thousands of jobs in the United States for truckers and longshoremen, on steamship lines and at ports, warehouses and supermarkets.

Overall, imported seafood accounts for roughly 454,000 jobs in the U.S., according to the National Fisheries Institute.

"Imports have stepped in to fulfill a market demand," Larkin said. "The product is available all year around, the quality is consistent and the production is predictable ... This is a market-driven commodity."

Gollott said prices had fallen sharply, noting that a pound of medium-sized shrimp, which sold for $4 in the mid-1980s, now goes for as little as $3, a drop of 25 percent.

McLendon, 34, said prices for some types of shrimp were even much higher than that in the 1980s.

"During Hurricane Katrina, our whole building was destroyed, and I actually found some financial statements and tickets from the late 1980s. They were paying as much as $11 a pound for some shrimp," he said.

Read more here:
http://www.sunherald.com/2013/01/15/4408675/us-south-mississippi-shrimp-processors.html#storylink=cpy

Saturday, January 12, 2013

Clouds and more clouds

It was cloudy all of last week and we are supposed to be cloudy most of next week. I don't mind since I like cloudy weather, but not storms. Yesterday and today it has been in the 70s, talk about spring in January!

Friday, January 11, 2013

Pass Christian Soap Co., Oak Crest Mansion merge

PASS CHRISTIAN -- A partnership between Pass Christian Soap Company and Oak Crest Mansion Inn is intended to blend the elegance of the mansion with the luxury of the soaps and bath products to create an experience for guests.

"We're actually going to merge our partnerships," said Paula Lindsay, who started Pass Christian Soap Company in her kitchen in 2001.

Chase and Erin Moseley operate Oak Crest on Menge Avenue in Pineville, outside Pass Christian.

Lindsay said she will renovate and enlarge the carriage house on the property with the same plantation look. A spa will be created where Pass Christian Soap Company products will be used and Oak Crest will get its own label of products to provide those staying in the guest rooms.

"I'm so excited to finally find a home for us that meets the needs that we have," Lindsay said. "What a beautiful place to go to work."

Her business was destroyed during Hurricane Katrina and she had to move out of Pass Christian, to Alabama and later to the outlets in Gulfport, to produce her soaps. She now sells her products online, at locations nationwide and at a retail store she will continue to operate in downtown Pass Christian.

"We're just trying to expand so we have space to bring in people," she said.

Lindsay said she has planned to provide tours since she and her mother started the company. "We want to share with everybody the craft of soap making."

She plans to show young children how to make Silly Soap that lets children play with the soap like modeling clay and then bathe with the soap.

"It's our newest product," she said. "It's massively popular right now."

Teens will be able to learn about the chemical reactions that occur while making soap, she said, and women can book a soap making party and enjoy hors d'oeuvres at the mansion.

She has already begun booking tours and Lindsay said, "My goal is to be open before June."

It could be that when she opens there's going to be a wedding between the two companies. "I can't wait for this," Lindsay said.

Read more here: http://www.sunherald.com/2013/01/10/4399751/pass-christian-soap-co-and-oak.html#storylink=cpy