Archive for November, 2008

On January 2008, I’m planning on saving enough money to move to Newark, NJ. From Augusta,GA?

Sunday, November 30th, 2008
Augusta
Randy S asked:


I will need $127 to go Newark, NJ on the bus and I don’t want to stay in the hotels way out on the highway going closer to the Newark Airport. So I will probably need to stay a hotel in maybe East Orange, NJ called the Villager Lodge. How much does that cost to stay there anyway? Plus, I’m looking for an apartment that costs $500-$700 in Newark, NJ 1 BR

PESOLA

Is there affordable housing in Augusta, GA for a person in a wheelchair?

Sunday, November 30th, 2008
Augusta
jenni_ajaz asked:


I need a blessing now. I would like to relocate near my children and can’t seem to find a place to live. My income is very low and I have alot of medical thing ahead of me. I need a miracle in Augusta, GA.

POPPLETON

America’s Ancient, Historical Hickory Trees

Thursday, November 27th, 2008
Augusta
Pat Malcolm asked:


In 1792, William Bartram reported in his book, Travels, the discovery of a native shagbark hickory nut that he called ‘Juglans exaltata.’ Today, shagbark hickory is called ‘Carya ovata.’ Bartram reported that this shagbark hickory grove was cultivated in groves by the Indians west of Augusta, Ga.

Bartram documented that he saw 100 bushels of shagbark hickory nuts that were stored at just a single Indian family home. The nuts were pounded into a mash, and then boiled in water, where a white, oily liquid separated called ‘hickory milk.’ The liquid was described to be as sweet and rich as a fresh cream and was an active ingredient used by the Indians in cooking corn bread and hominy grits.

There remains some question whether or not the Indians near Augusta on the Altamaha River hickory groves as described by Bartram were actually planted as orchard trees or just harvested at a naturally located site. Many such productive groves occur along tidal creeks in Coastal Georgia, a few are left intact by land developers for the recreational value of the trees and the food value of the nuts that are gathered at one such Episcopal camp near Brunswick, Ga. along a tidal basin aquifer ‘Honeycreek,’ a tributary of the Satilla River.

The hickory cream that was recovered by the Indians for cooking purposes was also described by Indians from the Algonquian tribe in Virginia who called this cream “pawcohiccora,” thus the word ‘hickory’ was adapted, modified, and abbreviated by the English colonists.

The shelled nuts of hickory are greatly sought after and appreciated for the unique flavor, not only by birds and animals, but by cooks and gourmet nut fanciers as well. The shagbark hickory nut, when added to chocolate fudge, leaves a pleasurable, indelible memory to all who are lucky enough to have experienced this delicious encounter.

A group of entrepreneurs out West offer shagbark syrup made from a top secret recipe that is made from a white inner bark extract of the juice obtained in the spring from shagbark hickory trees. The extract is obtained by pressure cooking and straining the juices from the pulverized and shredded bark. The demand is so great for this bottled hickory flavoring, that it has never satisfied the market to chefs throughout the United States. Julia Child reports that one of her favorite gourmet preparations includes mixing the bark extract with bourbon as a marinade for ribs.

Every backyard chef with a grill appreciates the fine flavoring that hickory tree wood smoke transfers into meat, fish, and many other food items. Early colonists used hickory tree wood smoke to flavor, cure, and preserve meats in the famous smokehouses of Virginia.

In the natural state of hardwood forests, hickory trees have hybridized easily and readily within species to produce numerous variations and combinations of characteristics that possess the traditional vigor displayed in scientific intercrosses of species by academic professionals.

The difficulties that have delayed commercial orchard development basically lies in the extreme difficulty in successfully grafting 130 cultivar selections for nursery distributors.

Some hickory nuts have smooth, thin shells that can be easily cracked by squeezing two together in the hand, but other hickory nut shells are so thick and hard that they must be cracked by several vigorous hits from a heavy hammer.

Since hickory nuts are difficult to shell out into large pieces, it is beneficial to soak the nuts in water overnight before cracking. The shelled nuts then should be dried and placed in a cool, dark location until they are to be used in recipes.

Even though some cultivars can produce kernels up to 47% by weight, most nuts only shell out about 30% kernel. There is a great variability in hickory flavor from one cultivar to the next, however, they all have a high unsaturated fat content with strong medical antioxidant properties that transmits that characteristic spicy, sweet, buttery taste from the kernels.

A mature shagbark hickory tree is unmistakable in its shaggy, unkempt trunk appearance and its bright green, shiny leaves constantly moving in the breeze at the globular treetop. Young trees have a shiny, smooth bark that only begin to shred hair-like at an age of about 25 years.

Shagbark hickory trees are easy to transplant until about 4-5 feet tall, when a long taproot begins to anchor the tree to the ground with very few lateral roots. Because of these sturdy, deep growing taproots, and dense wood, the trees are among the best lawn specimens to plant in hurricane locations, since they appear invulnerable to wind damage with very straight trunks.

Several observations have been made on natural state hybridization between shagbark hickory ‘Carya ovata,’ and pecan trees, ‘Carya illinoinensis.’ The resulting nuts seem to have flavor and nut characteristics somewhere in between the two species and are being planted by nut hobbyists and some have found a place within some commercial pecan orchards to insure pollination of this genetic marvel named, ‘Hican.’

The many uses of shagbark hickory trees include fuel, wood, and furniture products and as a supplement to charcoal cooking as a smoking agent for taste and preservation of meats. Because of the dense wood, hickory is used in tool handles such as hammers and axes, as well as chairs, ladders, golf clubs, baseball bats, and skis.



GRACES

Tornadoes? Scared! How bad do they get in Augusta?

Thursday, November 27th, 2008
Augusta
jacksmom asked:


Anybody know how bad the tornadoes get around here (Augusta GA)? I’ve heard that they’re not very big and I’ll be okay, but I live in some pathetic apartments. And I have to go see my husband on the Army post, but I’m nervous about driving because I heard there’s been tornadoes around the US today (Alabama, Missouri, Kansas…) and I heard that I’m in the Severe Tornado Warning forecast area.

Help???
Yeah. I’ve been here through at least 25 tornado advisories, and never seen a twister, but they still catch me off guard. This one seemed a bit more serious than the others.

MOOERS

Single mother with 3 children moving from Illinois to Augusta Georgia?

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008
Augusta
reese asked:


looking for information on good schools, low crime rate, good jobs, good neighborhoods, good churches, activities for children. I am very family oriented. Looking for a change and opportunities for me and my children, they are teenagers.

NEIS

What Makes a Great Golf Course?

Monday, November 24th, 2008
Augusta
mulliganplus asked:


akes a great golf course?

The world is full of good, average and even poor layouts over which to test ourselves, but few manage the accolade of ‘great’ which, in our view, means the sort of course you would try and play before you die, no matter the cost.

It’s a relevant question for two reasons.

First, because there are no written or objective criteria to define greatness. And second, because Kingsbarns, just outside St Andrews, has won so much in terms of accolades and recognition since it opened in 2000 that it has already earned the description ‘great’.

But while the criteria for such a label do not appear in a rule book anywhere, perhaps here at Mulligan we should consider our own terms.

 

First, a course must be memorable – no blandness in this list. If you have played a layout just once, and have difficulty recalling the difference between the 1st and 18th, or cannot instantly bring to mind the best holes, it’s not good enough.

 

Second, it should offer a proper golfing challenge, but that does not mean simply that it is tough – the Blue Monster at Doral is fiendishly difficult, but it’s not great. Pine Valley is both.

 

Third, it should be subtle, and require careful thought or a few visits to properly appreciate the test it represents, and probably the best example of a subtle test is the Old Course at St Andrews.

 



Fourth
comes aesthetic splendour, although as with all things, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. To some, the rugged, wild landscape of Royal Dornoch or Carne is unattractive but to golfers, they represent the Mona Lisa.

 

Finally is the almost indefinable element of mood, or atmosphere or ambience or whatever other label you may want to apply. Some places spend millions of pounds and employ the best golfing brains in the world yet somehow disappoint, while others have that ‘wow’ factor almost permeating the soil, or so it seems.

 Such a place is Kingsbarns. Although golf has been played over this stretch of Fife coastline since 1793, virtually nothing of the original course remained until co-owner Mark Parsinen and architect Kyle Phillips, moved 300,000 cubic metres of earth to create today’s course. In the process they uncovered a burn that no-one knew about (and which plays a significant part in the golfer’s approach to the 18th) but more remarkably, the Kingsbarns they created looks as if it has been there since time began.

Every single hole has a view of the sea, on more than half of them it is conspicuously in your eyeline as you play, and several run parallel to the shoreline but probably the most impressive thing is that Kingsbarns is, like Augusta National, equally enjoyable for high handicappers as for Tour pros. At 6,652 yards (par 72) from the visitors green tees it is not overlong and, like many other good tracks, it starts relatively gently before asking its more searching questions.

 

It is also, we are delighted to say, a fan of the good, short par four, which is in danger of becoming a neglected part of the golf architect’s armoury. This is exemplified at the 6th, which is only 287 yards but which, like all good shorter holes, offers you a choice and a decision. Knock a long iron or hybrid straight at the two bunkers and you’ll finish short of them with a relatively straightforward wedge to the green, which you cannot see, and which runs downhill, away from you. Take a big stick, aim to the right and carry the bunkers, however, and you will land on a narrow strip of fairway that feeds down to the putting surface, with a chance of eagle and likely birdie. But go a bit strong and you’ll be on a bank of heavy grass; underhit and you’ll be in sand – a classic risk/reward strategic hole.

 

Later in the round comes a quartet of holes 12-15, that stands comparison with anything in the world, and that includes Augusta National’s famed Amen Corner. It includes a stunning par five dogleg right-to-left that hugs the shoreline and is reminiscent of the 19th at Pebble Beach; a short but challenging par three that nestles against a dramatic rocky outcrop, a short par four that seems a pushover but flatters to deceive, and another par three, the green of which seems to be almost in the ocean.



The first time he set eyes on the place, Sir Michael Bonallack, former secretary of the R&A and British Amateur champion five times, said: ‘Kingsbarns might well be one of the last true seaside links sites capable of development in Scotland. Mere words cannot convey just how extraordinary the place is. It must be seen to be believed. And once seen it will never be forgotten.’ He is not a man given to hyperbole.

 

Kingsbarns has its share of bunkers but not too many, it deliberately has no gorse, because it is almost impossible to extract a golf ball from it, and no forced, heroic carries. Mark Parsinen studied several of Scotland’s greatest courses before settling down with Kyle Phillips to design his own layout and concluded that, above all, golfers should walk off the 18th with a smile on their face, not looking as if they had just gone 10 rounds with Lennox Lewis.

 

To further this philosophy he took the Augusta National approach which, in its simplest terms, means that getting from tee to green is relatively easy, but if you want to score, you have to be in the right part of the green. The putting surfaces are very large and are filled with subtle (and sometimes very obvious) undulations, which mean that a straight putt is a rarity and the first part of your game that has to be in good working order is your putting stroke. The greens are also in superb condition all year round – largely thanks to the course’s policy of closing at the end of November every year and re-opening at the end of March.

 

Kingsbarns does not have the rough, craggy, Neanderthal look of a Doonbeg or Royal County Down, with massive dunes and hillocks to negotiate, rather it is a gentler, softer landscape where it becomes easy to feel at one with your surroundings and where, as PG Wodehouse once wrote of another course: ‘The whole of nature seems to cry “Fore!”’ It is built by golfers for golfers, and nowhere is this more apparent than the understated clubhouse, which is everything a 19th hole should be – comfortable, companionable and welcoming. Oh, and none of your fancy nouveau cuisine, here you get the sort of grub that you need after a round of golf – solid burgers and chips the size of your thumb.

 

Kingsbarns is expensive – 2008 green fees are £130 in April and May, and £170 between June and November – but worth it, and if you get the chance, you should mug your granny to get there.

 

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TRUMBLE

What is the Treaty of Augusta?

Saturday, November 22nd, 2008
Augusta
Chatty asked:


Please, thanks.

SCHUCHARD

What is the history for Hillcrest Memorial Park Cemetery in Augusta, GA?

Saturday, November 22nd, 2008
Augusta
Razbeary asked:


Are there apartment buildings built on top of ancient burial grounds?

CELLA

NS Street Running in Augusta AWESOME HORN! 1/5/08 pt1.

Saturday, November 22nd, 2008
rsideballa75 asked:


PART 1: This SB Norfolk Southern Train had to wait for two CSX trains and finally got clearance to head to the Yard. Here we see how awesome street running trains in Augusta really are!

COURTOIS

With Flags Still Flying

Friday, November 21st, 2008
Augusta
JoAnn Miller asked:


e of Maine have long been known for their generous support of the defenders of this Country, both the men and women who serve in the military and the heroic first responders at home. Many groups were formed after the attacks on 9-11 and even seven years later they continue their support often at great personal expense and sacrifice. The anniversary of 9-11 offers a chance for them to come together in a common cause.

Flags still flying

Spirited 9-11 Tribute

A gathering of Patriots

7 years & still Standing

With Great Love & Deep Gratitude

The State of Maine has long been known for a high degree of patriotism. Turnouts to honor patriots from Civil War hero Joshua Chamberlain to modern day heroes always draw substantial turnouts. 9-11 remembrances are no exception. From State House in Augusta where the Governor, State senators and representatives gather on the steps of the Capital to observances held by veteran?s groups around the State Mainers step forward. One of the outstanding observances is to be found in Freeport where the American spirit will soar.

The Freeport Flag Ladies, who have been holding American flags on Main Street in Freeport every Tuesday morning since 9-11-2001, will be joined by people from around the State and visitors from across the Country. They will gather to honor those who perished on 9-11, the men and women who are serving our Country in the military, and police, fire and rescue workers

School children, veterans, soldier?s families and patriotic citizens will line the street with flags waving. Amidst early morning traffic will be an open parade. Cheers and applause will resound as brightly decorated vehicles, Patriot Guard, and Rolling Thunder and other motorcyclists with flags flying roll through. Fire, police and rescue trucks will join the parade being cheered by the onlookers and antique cars will add to the colorful mix.

At 8:45 traffic will stop and silence will descend as heads are bowed in remembrance of the lives lost in the Towers, the Pentagon and the fields of Pennsylvania.

This will be the 7th Anniversary of the 9-11 Tribute held by the Flag Ladies. Many of those in attendance have come every year since the 1st Tribute was held in 2002.

In addition to holding the flags each Tuesday morning through snow, sleet, wind and rain they travel to Bangor International Airport, which is a two hour drive from Freeport, to join with the Maine Troop Greeters meeting flights heading to Iraq and Afghanistan. The Troop Greeters have been meeting flights in Bangor since Desert Storm.

Sporting their signature flag shirts the Flag Ladies wait with smiles and handshakes as the soldiers enter the terminal.

In the next hour and a half they take over 300 pictures of the soldiers as they talk to their families on a cell phone, have a snack, talk to friends or sleep stretched out on the floor. Each soldier whose picture is taken is given a small gift with a website link on it. The families can go to the site and download this last picture of them still on American soil. It is a relief to the families to see their loved one with a smile and relaxed among their buddies.

The Flag Ladies can often be seen struggling up the hill pushing a dolly loaded with packages headed to Iraq and Afghanistan. On a recent trip to the Post Office they were mired in a pot hole and a passing motorist was kind enough to help them on their way. They are filled with tasty treats, games, magazines, and toys ? anything that might bring a smile to the face of a soldier. Other packages head to field hospitals with shorts and flip-flops for wounded soldiers that are ambulatory, and neck pillows to provide a little comfort for soldiers being transported to Germany and then home to the United States. At the request of the soldiers many packages are shipped to Afghanistan filled with hats, mittens, shoes and coats to help the children survive the bitter Afghan winters. Our soldiers have built many new schools for the Afghan children but wrote to say that many of the children have no school supplies and that a pencil is considered a treasure so still more packages go out heavily laden with pencils, pens, crayons, erasers, pencil sharpeners and paper. The gratitude of the children has saved many a soldier?s life as they often know where an IED is buried or an ambush set up.

The American Legion, VFW and Am-Vets cannot be outdone in community support. They raise money to support scholarships, Special Olympics, children?s camps and countless worthy causes.

The veterans are held in high esteem. The Flag Ladies will come to any of their events to help or show support. When the annual reunion of the Shipmates of the USS Boston was held in Portland they were invited to address the gathering. Many of the veterans were from the Vietnam war and had never been properly thanked and welcomed home. There were tears in many eyes as Elaine Greene welcomed them home and the Flag Ladies presented each of them with the card that is given to each of the soldiers that they meet who are deploying today. They speak to various veteran’s groups and help them with fund raising. In return they have received the Americanism Award from the Maine American Legion and were nominated for the prestigious Silver Helmet Award by the Am-Vets. Many of the veterans from posts not doing a 9-11 remembrance will again travel long distances to come stand with the Freeport Flag Ladies on this 7th anniversary.



BALDREE