Blogging from Slidell, Louisiana about loving life on the Gulf Coast despite BP and Katrina
Tuesday, September 18, 2007
Good News for a change
Katrina evacuee makes good
Daisy Angelety has made a life for herself in Gwinnett
County in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. She fled the storm
with nothing but now says she has everything.
She makes candy, cookies, cakes and pies and sells them at
the Suwanee Farmer's Market every Saturday.
Her goods are so popular, she's looking for a
place where she can set
up shop after the market ends next month.
Rebirth in Olde Towne
What was once the business of Slidell Cleaners
will soon become an art center.
After flooding in May 8, 1995, and recovering, 10 years later
Katrina came along and flooded them with 10 feet of water.
Now they will transform the destroyed business into the Olde
Towne Art Center, an art gallery to provide a place for an
artists' co-op to learn, to teach, and to sell what they create.
Follow-up plans will involve creating spaces upstairs for
artists to rent as studios and provide large class teaching
space.
The Olde Towne Art Center should be completed by the
beginning of November, 2007
Monday, September 17, 2007
Enlightening Fun
There's a "Who Dat" Quiz on NOLA dot com that will make you laugh
and teaches locals and outsiders alike the facts about the people
and geography of this area.
I got a 92, not bad for a transplanted yankee.
here's the link. Have fun
and teaches locals and outsiders alike the facts about the people
and geography of this area.
I got a 92, not bad for a transplanted yankee.
here's the link. Have fun
Thursday, September 13, 2007
You have to be here
In a tree in Lake Catherine, July 2007
click on photos for full-size versions
Too many times you just can't appreciate the scope of something unless you see it first hand. The Gulf Coast Post K is like that. Our daily intake of the headlines gives us just a tiny piece of the tragedies that befall our fellow man, a snippet of the breadth of the disaster.
Recently, a group of people gathered in Waveland to commemorate the second anniversary of Katrina's landfall there. Lawyer Trisha Miller from Indiana writes
at IndyStar dot com
For the anniversary, we gather on Katrina's vacant shores to bear witness to a continuing storm. A choir from Washington State leads us in "Amazing Grace." A Buddhist monk recites a meditation. A Catholic priest and female rabbi offer passages from Scripture, searching for words of hope among the wreckage.
The thousands upon thousands of volunteers across the country - no, the WORLD - who have ventured here to help clean up and rebuild have our endless appreciation. A catastrophe this size is not easily cleaned up, as evidenced the the ever present piles of debris that still dot the landscape.
Or the hundreds of thousands of dead trees - dead from saltwater intrusion - still standing as reminders of the strength of Mother Nature
Ms Miller continutes:
The promise of renewal is fading with each passing anniversary. As a nation, we must lend a voice and a hand to help end the suffering among families who survived the hurricane but cannot find a path homeward.
It is unconscionable that a teenage boy in Pascagoula must crawl into his front door because the Federal Emergency Management Agency did not issue his family a handicapped-accessible trailer. Or that a mother in D'Iberville, whose home was reduced to rubble in the storm, cannot rebuild or reunite her family until she resolves a dispute with FEMA over her right to emergency assistance. Or that the lethargic pace of state recovery assistance means that an eligible Mississippi homeowner may lose his home through foreclosure while awaiting a homeowner assistance grant.
These are but a few examples of a continuing storm that has besieged the Gulf Coast. The road home rests with all of us.
It's not that people are looking for a hand out. They're looking for a hand up.
Thank you, Ms Miller.
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
PKD
Depression is still running rampant in the Gulf Coast area
two years post Katrina as evidenced by this post over at metblogs.
The causes of PKD are numerous.
Daily murders
Self proclaimed " intellects " making themselves feel taller by dissing the city using unfounded facts and close-minded opinions
The local paper that can't seem to focus on the important things
Wacked out "leaders"
Politicians using this area to win hearts and votes
when we all know that whomever gets elected will probably put the restoration of this area down low on their list of priorities.
The Road Home
Dealing with cold-hearted insurance companies
The dark hearts of some people whose opinions of this area really hurt despite the fact that they are uneducated.
Things that haven't changed in two years
Ernie the attorney describes the fight to stay sane:
So every day I wake up, move slowly away from my bed and try to find the right frame of mind. Some days I catch the wave just right, and everything is pretty good. Some days I have trouble getting any kind of balance. But every day I try to start out by breathing slowly and peacefully. You'd think that, by now, it'd be easy but it's not. It's hard and it's boring and I hate it because my mind wanders and I can't keep my focus no matter how hard I try
two years post Katrina as evidenced by this post over at metblogs.
The causes of PKD are numerous.
Daily murders
Self proclaimed " intellects " making themselves feel taller by dissing the city using unfounded facts and close-minded opinions
The local paper that can't seem to focus on the important things
Wacked out "leaders"
Politicians using this area to win hearts and votes
when we all know that whomever gets elected will probably put the restoration of this area down low on their list of priorities.
The Road Home
Dealing with cold-hearted insurance companies
The dark hearts of some people whose opinions of this area really hurt despite the fact that they are uneducated.
Things that haven't changed in two years
Ernie the attorney describes the fight to stay sane:
So every day I wake up, move slowly away from my bed and try to find the right frame of mind. Some days I catch the wave just right, and everything is pretty good. Some days I have trouble getting any kind of balance. But every day I try to start out by breathing slowly and peacefully. You'd think that, by now, it'd be easy but it's not. It's hard and it's boring and I hate it because my mind wanders and I can't keep my focus no matter how hard I try
Monday, September 10, 2007
Took the words right out of my mouth
On the outcome of the St. Rita's case, EJ echoes my thoughts....
I'm not happy or sad for the Manganos or for those who died and their families or for you and me, because this disaster and our actions during those tense, horrific days, like so much in life, can't be shoved into the black-or-white, right-vs.-wrong, guilty-or-innocent mentality that pervades our answer-seeking, justice-must-be-done culture. Many tragedies do not happen because people are greedy or evil or reckless but because tragedies happen. Shortsightedness, foolheartedness, and poor judgment are human nature; and they may be to blame, but do they a criminal make?
I'm not happy or sad for the Manganos or for those who died and their families or for you and me, because this disaster and our actions during those tense, horrific days, like so much in life, can't be shoved into the black-or-white, right-vs.-wrong, guilty-or-innocent mentality that pervades our answer-seeking, justice-must-be-done culture. Many tragedies do not happen because people are greedy or evil or reckless but because tragedies happen. Shortsightedness, foolheartedness, and poor judgment are human nature; and they may be to blame, but do they a criminal make?
Tuesday, September 04, 2007
Life Since Katrina
The NY Times look at recovery from the storm after two years.
Features residents of New Orleans East, Lakeview, Gentilly, Garden District, West Bank and the French Quarter.
A must see
An emotionally stirring video from the Times Picayune featuring the paper's photographers' memories of working the aftermath of Katrina.
some quotes from the photographers
This can't be America....
Early on it became clear that this would be a political mess....
I can't do this another day, I've go to find a way out.
The trauma of the event - particualrly flying over the city - really got to me
The storm has taken a toll on everyone, we're still processing what it has done to us...it's a long road.
I listen to a police scanner all day and all I hear is "29s 29s 29s" - suicide - all day long...it's like an epidemic, but it's a quiet one...Katrina is still churning out her victims, 2 years later.
Sunday, September 02, 2007
Pass it on to others
Multimedia artist John Scott passed away at the age of 67 from pulmonary fibrosis .

A MacArthur fellow and a professor at Xavier University, his work was exhibited widely and he created large-scale public sculptures in Boston, Philadelphia, Kansas City, Atlanta, New Orleans and other cities.

Mr. Scott drove to Houston at 3:30 a.m. the day Katrina hit. His eight public-art works that dot the city, including a large, kinetic steel piece on the river survived the storm. "It has survived five or six hurricanes already," Mr. Scott said. "And it still looks the way it did when I made it." However, in a brazen act of post Katrina thievery we've all come to know, in December of 2006 thieves broke into an art studio in New Orleans and -- using a bolt cutter, hacksaw and hammer -- dismantled several of Mr. Scott's bronze sculptures, hauling the metal away.
The studio that Scott shared with artist Ron Bechet for 12 years was blasted by Katrina’s winds. Five feet of water flooded the ground floor studio, damaging innumerable works of art and ruining much of the heavy machinery used to make it.
A New Orleans native, Scott was born on a farm in Gentilly; his father was chauffeur to the owners, who used the farm to supply meat and produce for their restaurant, Kolb’s . When Scott was 7, his family moved to the Lower 9th Ward. His love of art may have started when his mother taught him to embroider. He graduated from Booker T. Washington High School in 1958 and began formal art studies.
Mr Scott was an unselfish artist and teacher. As a teacher, he only wanted for students to follow his tradition, of excellence.”
“He had a very famous admonition that all of us remember,” Xavier President Norman Francis said. “He didn’t want thanks. Just pass it on. Pass it on to others.”
A MacArthur fellow and a professor at Xavier University, his work was exhibited widely and he created large-scale public sculptures in Boston, Philadelphia, Kansas City, Atlanta, New Orleans and other cities.
Mr. Scott drove to Houston at 3:30 a.m. the day Katrina hit. His eight public-art works that dot the city, including a large, kinetic steel piece on the river survived the storm. "It has survived five or six hurricanes already," Mr. Scott said. "And it still looks the way it did when I made it." However, in a brazen act of post Katrina thievery we've all come to know, in December of 2006 thieves broke into an art studio in New Orleans and -- using a bolt cutter, hacksaw and hammer -- dismantled several of Mr. Scott's bronze sculptures, hauling the metal away.
The studio that Scott shared with artist Ron Bechet for 12 years was blasted by Katrina’s winds. Five feet of water flooded the ground floor studio, damaging innumerable works of art and ruining much of the heavy machinery used to make it.
A New Orleans native, Scott was born on a farm in Gentilly; his father was chauffeur to the owners, who used the farm to supply meat and produce for their restaurant, Kolb’s . When Scott was 7, his family moved to the Lower 9th Ward. His love of art may have started when his mother taught him to embroider. He graduated from Booker T. Washington High School in 1958 and began formal art studies.
Mr Scott was an unselfish artist and teacher. As a teacher, he only wanted for students to follow his tradition, of excellence.”
“He had a very famous admonition that all of us remember,” Xavier President Norman Francis said. “He didn’t want thanks. Just pass it on. Pass it on to others.”
Friday, August 31, 2007
Post Apocalypse
Clay over at NOLA-dishu dicusses post-K New Orleans:
To say Katrina was a traumatic experience is an understatement. Katrina, from the perspective of New Orleanians, might as well be the apocalypse. Present day New Orleans resembles a post-apocalyptic society..............A post-apocalyptic society is a civilization that experiences .... a cataclysmic event that pushes its society to the brink of death, but the civilization survives and is changed by the experience.
To say Katrina was a traumatic experience is an understatement. Katrina, from the perspective of New Orleanians, might as well be the apocalypse. Present day New Orleans resembles a post-apocalyptic society..............A post-apocalyptic society is a civilization that experiences .... a cataclysmic event that pushes its society to the brink of death, but the civilization survives and is changed by the experience.
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