Osprey
Ultra Nomad
   
Posts: 3694
Registered: 5-23-2004
Location: Baja Ca. Sur
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Don't Ask Me
Don’t Ask Me
I think I owe my good luck with the big palapa on the lee side of my house to Mike O’dell of La Trinidad RV Park here in La Ribera. Mike did my
remodel work about 15 years ago and recommended a local palapero who built one so sturdy it has withstood all the hurricanes that touched here for
those years.
The six big posts that support the thing are sturdy local Palo Amarillo right out of our own Laguna mountains. Somebody asked me what the scientific
name or common name was and I had to look it up. I’m sorry to report it is Mexican Barberry, Phyllostylon brasiniensis, baitoa, Bois blanc, Cara,
Tibama, Ceron, Jatia, Pan branco, Sabonero, and San Domingo boxwood.
Whatever you call it, those sticks will be here years after any trace of this old homestead has disappeared.
Names are troublesome around here. I’m not familiar with plant professors like Norman Roberts or Ira Wiggins but Steve Chism of Buena Vista is. He and
I and a guy named Jimmy Smith over there started quite a ruckus about what you call Frangipani or Plumeria. The plant is a very big deal in Hawaii
because they use it to make leis, garlands but the plant’s origin is probably Central American and moved from East to West way back when.
We found so many different names that Steve wrote a great little story about it – we gathered the words from books, the internet and anybody with ears
and a mouth we could get answers from. The Mexicans were mostly Cholleros from around these parts but their ancestors must be part Juntaros or
Californios who spoke Nahuan, Tzotzil, Coro, Pericue, etc.
Here’s Steve’s list: cacadechuctil, cascalochuctil, cazaloctuctu, katatasucti, cacaloxoctift, cacalosudile, jacolosuctile, sacaiosud casalosucho,
sacalazuchd, cajalazcil and cacaiosucho.
So if you stop by, catch me on the patio, looking out to sea and enjoying the music and the pretty white flowers on the big green plants just ask me
about the fishing.
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woody with a view
PITA Nomad
     
Posts: 15939
Registered: 11-8-2004
Location: Looking at the Coronado Islands
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Mood: Everchangin'
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and if the rubber band pulls me back towards the border before i can get there this summer will you still tell me about the fishing?
from your patio?
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Paulina
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Posts: 3812
Registered: 8-31-2002
Location: BCN
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That was a really nice post, Osprey. I liked that. I would like to have that visit under your palapa too.
Thanks for the smile I'm wearing.
P>*)))>{
\"Well behaved women rarely make history.\" Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
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Ken Bondy
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Posts: 3326
Registered: 12-13-2002
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Mood: Mellow
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Gracias Jorge, buen dicho mas una vez
carpe diem!
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Barbarosa
Nomad

Posts: 188
Registered: 1-12-2011
Location: Jackson, CA
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Mood: "On th' road again..."
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It *is* a small world after all, esp. in Baja
Quote: | Originally posted by Osprey
Don’t Ask Me
I think I owe my good luck with the big palapa on the lee side of my house to Mike O’dell of La Trinidad RV Park here in La Ribera.
<snipped a whole bunch>
Names are troublesome around here. I’m not familiar with plant professors like Norman Roberts or Ira Wiggins but Steve Chism of Buena Vista is. He and
I and a guy named Jimmy Smith over there started quite a ruckus about what you call Frangipani or Plumeria.
We found so many different names that Steve wrote a great little story about it
So if you stop by, catch me on the patio, looking out to sea and enjoying the music and the pretty white flowers on the big green plants just ask me
about the fishing. |
Well Wholey moley! Steve? Met him down there a few years ago. He used to hang up here in Jackson a *bunch* of years ago and we know a bunch of the
same peepholes. (Ask him about Neil Stark!) Any story told by Steve is sure to be a GREAT story.
And Jimmy Smith Jr. (R.I.P.)... What a marvelous piece of work! Serendipitously, I sat down at a table with him at that outdoor cafe just off the
hiway in Los Barriles a few years ago -- Plaza del Pueblo, right? -- and managed to "waste" <SEG> an entire afternoon with him. Can't think of
any time better spent. Wouldn't trade it for *anything*.
Here's a good link:
http://hubpages.com/hub/Grinning-Gargoyle--We-Aint-Forgot-Ya
And if all y'all don't have his book, you should! (Funny aside: If you find it on Amazon, there's folks who think it's worth $160. That's because
they don't know the price on the cover is pesos.) Got to hear a bunch of those stories told firsthand.
Too bad I didn't catch you on the way thru in February. Would have taken you up on that offer. My wife and I did stop by for a great time, catching
up with our very dear friends of many years, JoAnn and Russ Hyslop.
Barbarosa
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