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Saturday, August 20, 2011

DAY 216: LAUREL- SOSO - TAYLORSVILLE - MIZE, MISSISSIPPI

I have just spent over 5 hours creating today's Blog...about to Publish it when

my keyboard - with humidity sticking keys, D E S T R O Y E D all my work.

Will start over again, but must get some sleep first...is now 3:45 am...been at it since 10:30pm

Darn and double darn

1 comment:

Bob said...

Hi Bruce,

The vines that you see eating up the south is kudzu.
I looked it up on wiki for you:

Kudzu ( /ˈkʊdzuː/; Pueraria lobata, and possibly other species in the genus Pueraria; see taxonomy section below) is a plant in the genus Pueraria in the pea family Fabaceae, subfamily Faboideae. It is a climbing, coiling, and trailing vine native to southern Japan and southeast China. Its name comes from the Japanese name for the plant, Kuzu (クズ or 葛?).

Kudzu is called gé gēn (Chinese: 葛根) in China, where it is cooked and eaten,[1] but has earned such nicknames in the US Southeast as the "foot-a-night vine", "mile-a-minute vine",[1] and "the vine that ate the South".[2] due to its out-of-control growth in the Southeastern United States. In Vietnam, it is called sắn dây.[3]