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MARGARET FONTENOT MERRILL

Margaret Fontenot Merrill died Saturday, Dec. 25, 2021, at the age of 71. She was a native of Eunice and a resident of Morgan City.
Survivors include her husband of 15 years, Bryce Merrill of Morgan City; her daughter, Susie Ward of Patterson; her son, Jeremiah James Baker of Houma; and her sister, Betty Miller of Morgan City.
She was preceded in death by her parents, Sidney and Susie Fontenot; her brothers, Lester Fontenot and Sherman Fontenot; and sisters, Joycelyn Fontenot, Mary Henry, and Geneva Fontenot.
A memorial service will be held at a later date.

TERESA HAYDEL THOMAS

A Mass of Christian Burial will be held on Thursday, December 30, 2021 at 10:30 a.m. at Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Church Point for Teresa Haydel Thomas, 95, who passed away on Sunday, December 26, 2021 at 3:15 p.m. at Southwind Senior Living in Crowley.
Fr. Brian Harrington, Pastor of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church, will be officiating for the services. Burial will be held in the Franklin Cemetery in Franklin, Louisiana.
The family has re-quested the visitation to be held on Thursday, December 30, 2021 at 7:30 a.m. until time of services (10:30 a.m.) in the Duhon Funeral Home Chapel in Church Point. A Rosary will be recited on Thursday at 9:30 a.m. in the Funeral Home Chapel in Church Point.
Survivors include one son, Gabe and wife, D’Lane Wimberley Thomas of Church Point; one grandson, Colt Thomas of Church Point.
Mrs. Thomas was born and raised in Franklin, Louisiana. She spent most of her adult life in Orlando, Florida with her husband, Earnest “Tommy” Thomas and son, Gabe. She was a devout Catholic whose faith was known to all whom knew her. She enjoyed spending time with family and friends. She was preceded in death by her husband, Earnest L. Thomas; her parents, Gabriel Haydel Jr. and Adele Pitre Haydel; one sister, Joy Haydel.

Brick sales for the Pocket Park

Phase II Brick Sales for the Historic Downtown Franklin Pocket Park have been moving steady but will end immediately after the Holidays. This will allow these bricks to be ready for install in the spring of 2022. Be a part of the Living Time Capsule and make sure you and your families legacy has a permanent mark on Franklin. If you would like to purchase a brick please pick up a form at the Historic Downtown Franklin Pocket Park Deadline to purchase bricks for Phase II is immediately after New Year's.

City of Franklin celebrates New Year’s Eve by lowering iconic Lampposts 7 Stories

The City of Franklin will for the second time on New Year’s Eve lower one of its iconic Victorian Lamppost seven stories from the St. Mary Parish Courthouse to bring in 2022. This festive, family friendly celebration will begin at 6 p.m. in the St. Mary Parish Courthouse Square and will include food, music and fun to ring in the New Year in Historic Downtown Franklin. Great musical line up for this event will kick off at 6 p.m. with LowDown playing classic rock and pop covers until 7 p.m.; D.J. Red will take over from 8 p.m. to 8:45 p.m. to get the crowd dancing and geared up for the headliner electric dance band Krossfyre taking the stage at 9 p.m. until 11 p.m. At 11 p.m. the party is cranked up until the lowering of the Lamppost when C.J. Clements and D.J. Red collaborate to bring the very last “Anything Goes” “Polyester Power Hour” of 2021 in Acadiana! Bring your lawn chairs, dancing shoes and great holiday spirit to Downtown Franklin to witness the Revitalization Movement in person. Feel the energy! Food trucks and food vendors will be stationed throughout the Courthouse Square. Join us in Historic Downtown Franklin where Mayor Eugene Foulcard states….”It’s All Here Under The Lampposts”!
If you would like to register for a food booth from 6 p.m. - Midnight. Please contact Tammy Rogers at City Hall (337) 828-6350. Must have a City of Franklin Occupational License; Mobile Food Trucks must have Certification from Department of Health and Hospitals. Be safe wear a mask!

Sons of Serendip will perform Jan. 6 in Morgan City

Vocal/instrumental quartet and "America’s Got Talent" Season 9 finalists Sons of Serendip will perform Jan. 6 in Morgan City as part of the Morgan City Live Community Concert Association season.
The concert will be at 7 p.m. at Morgan City Municipal Auditorium Single concert tickets are $25 for adults and $5 for students K-12.
Season tickets are now on sale for the 2021-2022 concert season. All tickets, subscription or single concert, are available online at www.morgancitylive.com or at the door.
Sons of Serendip are an extraordinary quartet featuring harp, piano, cello and vocals, according to promoters Live On State.
“Their ethereal and emotionally stirring orchestral acoustic interpretations of pop music, arranged with unique instrumentals, captured the hearts of fans, judges, and audiences all around the world,” according to promotional material for the group.
“The Billboard charting quartet is gaining popularity by offering fresh interpretations of popular music with unique instrumentation."
Morgan City Live Community Concert Association of Morgan City Inc., formed in 1947, continues to bring world-class entertainment to the Tri-City area of Morgan City, Berwick and Patterson, as well as the rest of St. Mary Parish and surrounding parishes .

Gulf Coast residents see weather events intensify

As Hurricane Ida rapidly grew in strength, crabbers Stacia Johnson and Justin Smith were left with just three days to relocate their $100,000 supply of crab traps.
Knowing the traps could be severely damaged or stolen if left on land, the siblings dropped their traps in the Biloxi Marsh, said a prayer and evacuated to Arkansas. Days later, unsure how many traps would be left, they found that not only were all of the traps intact, but they were also filled to the brim with crabs.
Johnson called the event a miracle in a string of unfortunate events due to the worsening effects of climate change. Rising water temperatures, disappearing islands and rapidly changing salinity levels have severely altered their fishing routes and the migration patterns of the crustaceans they catch. These changes have significantly hindered their success as commercial fishers.
The Johnson-Smith family is not alone. As ocean temperatures rise, hurricane seasons become longer and more intense, and residents across the state are being forced to face the existential threats of the climate crisis.
Since the catastrophic damage from Hurricane Katrina in 2005, people across South Louisiana have faced greater anxiety about what could happen next. And the damage from Hurricanes Ida and Laura has turned that anxiety into dread, once again prompting families who have lived here for generations to reconsider calling Louisiana home.
Dr. George Xue, a marine science professor at LSU, said the Gulf of Mexico is a great conductor of energy for “monster storms,” or hurricanes that reach categories four or five.
Xue said that with rising sea levels and warmer ocean temperatures due to climate change, Louisiana will begin to see more hurricanes that will gain power fast and become even more unpredictable than the five major ones that hit the Gulf region over the last five years.
“There will be no safe harbor from major hurricanes in the northern Gulf,” Xue said.
A new survey, led by LSU geology professors, of 2,780 scientists studying climate change shows that 91% of them believe that the Earth is warming because of human-related greenhouse gas emissions. Although this number has risen by 10 percentage points since 2009, according to the Pew Research Center, fewer than half of Americans believe that humans are causing climate change.
And while two-thirds of Baton Rouge residents surveyed by a local foundation agreed recently that the weather is becoming more extreme, they were split along partisan lines about whether climate change was the cause.
To Stay or Leave?
Dr. Michael Castine and his wife Brigette have lived in Baton Rouge for 22 years, and Michael was born and raised in New Orleans. Due to hurricanes, freezes and floods in recent years, the Castines have begun preparations to move to Texas in the coming years.
“It is going to be too much for us to take care of,” Dr. Castine, who is 55, said. “After the freeze, we had major stuff we had to do, and after the flood we had major stuff to do. There is just constant upkeep.”
This exodus out of state is uncommon in Louisiana. The Castines said that with large families and a predominant Catholic culture, many people tend to stay and work and live where they grew up in. Out of Dr. Castine’s entire family, he was the only one to leave New Orleans.
“People from New Orleans in particular might go temporarily but will always return,” Brigette said. “I didn’t understand how after Katrina people would want to move back, but they did. They could not wait to go back and rebuild.”
Beth and Todd Lacoste expressed a similar sentiment.
Beth, a nurse, and Todd, an attorney, have lived in New Orleans their entire lives, and before Katrina, they were reluctant to evacuate for storms. Katrina forced them to move away for four months with their three children, and after returning home, they had to cook dinner in a microwave in the laundry room while they rebuilt the ground floor.
Now they are quick to evacuate if there is any chance a storm will hit New Orleans, but they also are adamant they would never move given their family ties and identity of being from New Orleans.
“I hope we’re a family of faith, and that will help us through anything,” Todd Lacoste said.
Some people new to the state also have experienced the hardships.
McNeese State University soccer player Alexis Miller and Michael Terblanche, who was then a golfer at McNeese, were displaced from Lake Charles for months after Hurricane Laura made landfall in 2020. Both returned to find damaged apartments, buildings and athletic facilities.
“Driving into Lake Charles was almost like driving into a warzone, to be honest,” Terblanche said. “Trees that you’d seen and gotten used to driving around were not there anymore. Houses were torn to shreds.”
Terblanche, who is from South Africa, had never experienced a natural disaster like that. He said that the kindness he experienced from Louisianians after the storm was incredible, but when McNeese canceled its golf program, he transferred to the University of Missouri. He said that the constant fear of losing a home was too much for him to consider returning to Louisiana after college.
Hurricane Laura displaced Miller for six months. She described a chaotic housing market when she returned from her parents’ home in North Carolina, and a race against the clock for her and her neighbors to find a home repaired enough to live in as prices skyrocketed.
She slept on a teammate’s couch while she waited, which she said was “perhaps the hardest part, mentally.” Miller stayed at McNeese, but “now with every weather event, I’m convinced it’s coming here,” she said with lament.
Climate Change and the Fishing Industry
Stacia Johnson, 54, has lived on Lake Pontchartrain in Slidell since she was a child, and a typical day revolves around her 18-foot crab boat. Johnson accompanied her father on fishing trips, and now she and her son Mark speed around the marshes dropping and pulling crab traps. They separate males, females, hard-shell crabs and softshells. The catching process for softshells is intricate; they are attracted to a specific water temperature and salinity. Once they are caught, they need to be kept on ice to prevent them from regenerating their shells.
“The soft crabs have taken a significant toll because of the water temperature,” Johnson said. “The water temperature is 7- to 8 degrees warmer than five years ago. “Five years ago I would shed 15- to 20 dozen a day. Last year, I did not shed 20 dozen all season.”
Deoxidized water has also affected her business. As water temperatures rise, oxygen levels decrease. This leads to massive amounts of sea creatures suffocating.
“We’ll be running 37 mph on the boat and come into huge 3-mile stretches of dead fish,” said Johnson.
Her brother, Justin Smith, spends his days on a 38-by-16-foot shrimp boat. Barry Labruzzo, Smith’s longtime friend and coworker, and his one-eyed pit bull named Duke, venture out with Smith on fishing trips, which can last up to five days.
Their boat, named Madison Alexis after two of Labruzzo’s daughters, houses bunk beds, a kitchen and a shower underneath a remarkably complex system of ropes, nets and pulleys that they use to haul in sharks, shrimp, crabs and a plethora of other sea creatures that the bayou has to offer.
Since the BP Deepwater Horizons oil spill in 2010, burnt crab shells, two-headed shrimp, fish with no eyes and animals with tumors have become much more common, and researchers and fishers alike attribute these deformities to the dispersant chemicals released to combat the oil spill.
For Hurricane Ida, Labruzzo and Smith tied the boat to a tree to keep it upright against the wind gusts and pounding waves. And they were yet again forced to acknowledge the devastating power that the weather, including the almost-daily summer thunderstorms that blast wind and waves at their boat on each fishing trip, have over their livelihoods.
“You gotta have a high tolerance to be out here,” Labruzzo said. “When it comes to the weather, a lot of people would be bothered. You just gotta deal with it.”
Still, these fishers have no qualms about trying to maintain their livelihoods despite climate change.
Labruzzo’s 14-year-old daughter Morgan often goes out with him on fishing trips. She is already skilled at constructing crawfish traps, and she can climb and operate the various rope and pulley systems that appear foreign and nonsensical to the inexperienced shrimper. She plans on following her father into the fishing industry, creating another multi-generational fishing family in southeast Louisiana.
And just as her father taught her, Johnson has taught the next two generations of her family how to fish as well.
“Fishing is our way of life, and despite the challenges,” she said, “I can’t expect my family to change what’s been in our blood for years.”

Around Town for Dec. 29

Happy birthday Leslie Middleton, and happy birthday Thursday to Melanie Ruffin and Doris Folse from family, friends and Ira.

Service clubs pitch in for community improvements

Community service is the focus of a project of the Kiwanis Club of East St. Mary and the Morgan City Rotary Club as the clubs collaborated recently during Celebrate Community Day.
The initiative allows local clubs from the four major volunteer service organizations — Kiwanis, Lions, Optimist and Rotary International — to a focus on community service during the month of October.
In fact, leaders from the international organizations have collaborated during the past 18 months to share ideas for future projects. This first public effort encourages clubs to reach out to one another to work together on projects that improve and benefit local communities.
The Kiwanis Club of East St. Mary worked with the Morgan City Rotary Club to repair and clean up the Trail-head Park Playground located at the entrance of Lakeside Subdivision, said Steven Minvielle, Kiwanis Club of East St. Mary president. “We have so many common goals and objectives and this is one way to join together to work on a project that will have a measurable impact on our community.”
Cherie H. Laiche, assistant governor, District 6200, Region 5, of the Morgan City Rotary Club, said partnering to work on a joint project was a great idea. “Now more than ever, collaboration is needed,” said Laiche, noting that resources can be scarce in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.
“The pandemic has stretched many communities, particularly smaller cities and towns, to the limit,” said Debbie Stevens, lieutenant governor Division 17, Kiwanis LA-MS-West TN District. “A joint project allows us to pool resources, join hands and work together to alleviate the stress on local agencies and help get community members some of the things they need.”
The joint project also allows community members who are serving in different clubs to learn more about each other, their organizations and their combined efforts to help children and adults who are challenged by environmental or financial difficulties.
The two clubs would like to the thank Tiger Island and the City of Morgan City in helping with some of the sup-plies needed to complete the project. They would also like to thank Pastor Justin Lee with the New Life Church for allowing them to use the church’s water supply.

Jim Bradshaw: Steamboat ride to the Atchafalaya offered adventure

In the middle 1800s the main route from New Orleans to Bayou Teche, Bayou Courtableau and other points in south Louisiana took steamboats up the Mississippi River to Plaquemine in Iberville Parish, where the boat made a sometimes-treacherous turn into Bayou Plaquemine and followed its winding, stump-filled course to the Atchafalaya.
The trip took a traveler through a wilderness that was both rugged and beautiful, and was filled enough with a sense of adventure that one diarist suggested that, “If you reach Plaquemines in safety, and the boat does not blow up between that and New Orleans, you may consider that luck and Providence have smiled on you in a very peculiar manner.”
And that was before the boat got to the worst part.
An unidentified traveler on the steamer R. C. Oglesby wrote in November 1849, that “few can imagine from mere description the remarkable character of the route” down the Atchafalaya to Berwick Bay.
“One might pass over it a thousand times, and still find much to interest him,” the traveler recorded.
“The banks of the Atchafalaya are low, and the forests on either side are seldom broken by glades. Occasionally a log cabin is seen in a small opening, surrounded by tall trees, and occasionally wood piles on the banks invite the attention of steamboats.
"Once in a while a stubborn snag shows its bruised head above the water, inviting steamboats to keep a proper distance.”
At Grand River, “the willows on each bank nearly reached the boat” as it “raked one shore and ran but a short distance from the other.”
It was dark when they ran down Bayou Sorrell, “the banks of which at some places are clothed with a forest as dark and dense as those of Brazil.”
“The night shut in and the stars above and torch lights on our bows revealed to us the wild scenery around. On the low banks on each side stood heavy cypress and other forest trees whose extended boughs were clothed with hanging moss, their tall trunks stood as silent as night sentinels, and beyond them an impenetrable darkness obscured the night.
“Gloom and silence reigned around, broken only by our wild torchlights, and the puffing and hideous [whistle] of the steamboat, which made the forest ring as it rushed into its dark retreats. The still waters and the calm sky contrasted strongly with the dismal forest, the torch and shrill whistle. All together the scene was wild and dismal, but full of interest.”
The writer was apparently being facetious when he described the trip through Lake Chicot as “particularly delightful.”
“If you pass through this lake in the night, and the boat contains a heavy cargo of sugar and molasses, your poor craft will labor and groan as though it were running the gauntlet between death and destruction,” he wrote.
“The boat thumps against a snag as though in a mad fit she were attempting to bash her own brains out — and then shortly after strikes a log which rakes the whole length of the keel, and soon a stump of a cypress knee gives her a solid thump in the side and tells her to stand over.
"Thus, your steamer, amidst stumps, logs and snags clambers over the lake.”
Two other boats, the Meteor and Banner had both run aground in the lake, and, the writer said, “had it not been for the Vesta that took a portion of our cargo … there would have been three boats and three cargoes of sugar and molasses stuck in the lake at once, and as the water was falling … on account of the north winds we should have been obliged to remain there until a change of winds, or a rise in the Mississippi might come to our rescue.”
The writer thought there had to be a better way to get to and from New Orleans.
“It would be a blessing … if a Chinese wall could be built across Grand Lake, and an everlasting dam could be thrown across Plaquemine. Our citizens would then be compelled to build a railroad to the Mississippi which would obviate all of those difficulties on our present communication with New Orleans,” he wrote.
That was mostly wishful thinking. It would be more than 30 years before the railroad reached from New Orleans to Berwick Bay.
You can contact Jim Bradshaw at jimbradshaw4321@gmail.com or P.O. Box 1121, Washington LA 70589.

Get It Growing: Design, plant foundation beds

A foundation planting is the placement of plants in beds that frame the home — typically, along the front and back of the house and sometimes along each side. By creating beds along the walls or foundation of the house, you create a nice visual flow into the landscape to create curb appeal.
When designing the beds, be sure the highest point is closest to the house and slopes downward 6 inches for every 10 feet away from the house. That way, when it rains, water will drain into the lawn and toward street drains.
Landscape beds should be 6- to 9-feet wide from the home to the farthest edge of the bed to provide ample space for plants to grow without crowding the house. It is important to create beds large enough to leave some space next to the house so that roots from trees and larger shrubs will not interfere with any utilities, plumbing, air conditioning units, the foundation of the home or the roofline.
When planting, be sure to consider the mature size of the plants going in. Large shrubs should be planted 5 to 6 feet away from the house, while smaller ones should be planted at least 3 to 4 feet away. Another important tip is to keep mulch, especially wood mulches, 1 foot away from the foundation of the home to help prevent termite infestations. Fill that area with rock or crushed granite for a tidy look.
In general, shrubs make up the majority of the foundation planting. Add a tree or two, and the remainder of the mix should be annual and perennial bedding plants. Create a good balance of deciduous and evergreen materials. Keep in mind that if you use all deciduous selections, your landscape will look bare in the wintertime.
If you love flowers, consider the bloom time of each plant so the landscape will have a focal interest each season. There are plenty of plants to choose from that bloom in each season. Improved cultivars of many plant species that only bloomed in spring now have more than one bloom time, such as Encore azaleas and repeat-blooming roses.
A good rule of thumb is to make half of your plant selections evergreen, with one fourth flowering shrubs and trees and the other one fourth annual and perennial bedding plants. Be sure to include spring, summer, fall and winter blooming selections.
Avoid choosing plants that will grow and block windows. Choose shrubs with a maximum height of 2 to 4 feet to help prevent blocking the view of the windows. For the front of the home, choose dwarf evergreen blooming selections such ShiShi Gashira camellias, drift roses, Mrs. Schiller’s Delight viburnum, dwarf varieties of encore azaleas, dwarf gardenia, glossy abelia, dwarf bottlebrush and improved varieties of Indian hawthorns.
Some great dwarf evergreen shrubs that do not bloom are Little Giant dwarf arborvitae, littleleaf boxwood, dwarf yaupon, dwarf junipers and dwarf distylium varieties Vintage Jade and Cinnamon Girl.
Tall flowering shrubs such as Japanese magnolias and camellias can be excellent choices for beds on either side of the house at the corners of the beds.
If you want your landscape to have a formal look, create symmetry at the focal point of the home: the front door. Use potted plants of equal size to the left and right of the front door to draw attention to the entrance of the home. Try ferns or create topiaries from hollies or boxwoods.
Landscapes help make your house a home, create curb appeal and add value to your home. If you keep wildlife in mind, you can also make selections that attract more than one type of visitor to your home.

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Franklin Banner-Tribune
P.O. Box 566, Franklin, LA 70538
Phone: 337-828-3706
Fax: 337-828-2874

Morgan City Review
1014 Front Street, Morgan City, LA 70380
Phone: 985-384-8370
Fax: 985-384-4255