Cameron parish has no cases, for now... seems the place to beDComeaux wrote:Rick wrote:Dave, I thought of you and your season while eating boiled crabs some of the kids caught at Grand Bayou yesterday.
I've been craving those. I need a weekend or two at the camp as soon as this virus thing subsides. I miss it.
What an unreal situation we're in. Every day brings with it a new adventure, and I've never used so much hand sanitizer in my life. We're considered essential so I've never stopped working. We've implemented shift work to decrease the worker numbers to the mandated (10) per shift here in the yard and are monitoring employees health daily. They've been good at reporting possible contacts with sick people away from work and are quarantined. We have crews that travel and they are diligent in there efforts to stay virus free.
The wife was sent home a couple of weeks ago along with a few others from her job. The oil industry seems to be on the verge of collapse and is affecting many I know. We're just now (this week) seeing the halt of new projects due to the virus and some have stopped all work a week ago to avoid state to state travel. I'm praying for a soon ending to this madness.
Rick wrote:Largest parish with fewest people? But I'm fairly sure they had a case early on, according to Chereaux's Creole daughter.
Well just went to Kelly’s Mart in Grand Chenier and there is someone from New Orleans in there down here fishing. What don’t people under stand about STAY the F/:;: Home Order, the parish needs to stop people who are not essential from coming in here fishing and crabbing (whole families) from out of the parish coming into our stores trying to spread the virus to us that don’t have it. Ron Johnson , Scott A. Trahan, Cameron Oep sorry y’all the only 3 I tagged but y’all the only ones on my friends list that can do something. A lot of other people are saying the same thing but want stir the pot but I just don’t care what pot I stir, but my wife works in two of our stores down here in Creole and I have a 7 year old at home, and a 79 year old father in law that we trying to keep home and us get his stuff for him trying not to infect him, need to shut down Rockerfeller also that would help a lot , and forgot to say if one of the workers from any of our stores come down with the virus then everyone one at the store is quarantine and the store is closed down and us locally has to go somewhere else to get our grocery, can good, can of biscuits, bacon, gal of milk, bacon, bread, etc wake up Cameron Parish
Rick wrote:Meanwhile, the store owner and employees may be thankful for enough business to stay in business and feed their families.
Lots of rocks and hard places just now...
Rick wrote:Meanwhile, the store owner and employees may be thankful for enough business to stay in business and feed their families.
Lots of rocks and hard places just now...
DComeaux wrote:Rick wrote:Meanwhile, the store owner and employees may be thankful for enough business to stay in business and feed their families.
Lots of rocks and hard places just now...
I get that, but the risk of transmission is increasing down there.
This is from a fishing report FB page, that I wish would go away.
Person asking about numbers using the refuge----, even on weekdays?
Someone answers -- nobody’s working right now, so it’s the same every day. Hundreds of people. Sunday’s are usually slower than Saturday. This past Sunday, you could not turn around on Price Lake Rd if you went to the tower. From there to the back was full including the road. You had to back up to the next bridge about a mile down to turn around. People were everywhere on top of each other. I didn’t go today to see, but my neighbor went & he said today was as bad or worse. East end at Joseph Harbor is the same.
Following response --- Too many people and boats, plus people swimming in the damn water
Rick wrote:The above is all I got on the blizzard losses.
But my favorite of Paul Link's notes read: "...to a fancy-looking golf course/boy scout lake complex! It pains me to think of how wild and smart these birds are down here to have them loafing on a perfectly manicured golf course in IL."
SpinnerMan wrote:Rick wrote:The above is all I got on the blizzard losses.
But my favorite of Paul Link's notes read: "...to a fancy-looking golf course/boy scout lake complex! It pains me to think of how wild and smart these birds are down here to have them loafing on a perfectly manicured golf course in IL."
I never understood why people equate geese on golf courses as not being smart. If you are a goose, where would you be? Out in the rice fields or in the park in the center of town? Where might you get shot and where will you not? In the rice field some dumbass is going to shoot at you. In the park, all you have to do is hiss at the dumbass and he steers clear.
Rick wrote:SpinnerMan wrote:Rick wrote:The above is all I got on the blizzard losses.
But my favorite of Paul Link's notes read: "...to a fancy-looking golf course/boy scout lake complex! It pains me to think of how wild and smart these birds are down here to have them loafing on a perfectly manicured golf course in IL."
I never understood why people equate geese on golf courses as not being smart. If you are a goose, where would you be? Out in the rice fields or in the park in the center of town? Where might you get shot and where will you not? In the rice field some dumbass is going to shoot at you. In the park, all you have to do is hiss at the dumbass and he steers clear.
I'm sure he was just enjoying the irony of that location's optics, rather than intending the observation as you apparently took it. Rare to spend much time at all with Paul without hearing the latest examples he's seen of the birds' remarkable capabilities.
Deltaman wrote:Do you see many of the Eurasian Collared Doves in your LA boot heel?
The tiny Inca Dove is covered in tan scaly-looking feathers and blends right in with its suburban desert habitats. That is, until it bursts into flight, making a dry rattling whir with its wings while flashing chestnut underwings and white in its tail.
Rick wrote:Have it in my head that a pup named Blue ate the last dove I shot, which would have made it 2005, so it's a non-issue to me. I'll hike a mile and swelter in the September afternoon sun to watch a blue-wing work, but wouldn't cross the street on a cool morning to shoot a dove. Not that I won't help eat someone else's, just not much of a shooter.
Ducaholic wrote:Rick wrote:Have it in my head that a pup named Blue ate the last dove I shot, which would have made it 2005, so it's a non-issue to me. I'll hike a mile and swelter in the September afternoon sun to watch a blue-wing work, but wouldn't cross the street on a cool morning to shoot a dove. Not that I won't help eat someone else's, just not much of a shooter.
Thankfully it opens in the morning these days so by 9:00 I'm done and my back yard is my dove field.
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