Joseph and moderators,
I’m not sure where to post my poem in the new site. Would it be possible for me to submit it here and have one of you put it in the correct folder or file. I was thinking of submitting it to Somos Primos or your podcast, but I’m not sure how to go about doing so. Please advise….. yolanda medina perez
Joseph Puentes wrote:
yes when and if the need comes about for us to upgrade to the next
DreamHost service plan I’ll accept donations. Right now I’ve got it
covered. Here are our figures:
used:
Totals: 784.548 MB
Available is 1/2 of 22900MB since I’ve got my NuestraFamiliaUnida
podcast on it as well. So 1/2 is 11450MB and we haven’t reached 1000MB
yet. So we can grow roughly 10 times larger than we are now before I
start sweating like I was on the Yahoo group.
Arturo Am I correctly estimating this?
joseph
Margarita Vallazza wrote:
>Dear Joseph,
>Can we kick in with a contribution to you for sharing the cost of the
>package? Marge:)
>
>On Apr 12, 2006, at 1:35 AM, Joseph Puentes wrote:
>
>
>
>>Ed,
>>
>>with the new site we have vastly more file space than in my miserly
>>Yahoo days. Yahoo was limiting us in more than one way. We have more
>>space and now we seem to be visible now that we’re outside the Yahoo
>>curtain. Lately we’ve seen an increase of interest in joining Nuestros
>>Ranchos at least 50-100% more than what was seen while a Yahoo group.
>>
>>upload away Ed,
>>
>>When I get to 60% of my capacity of the new site I’ll let everyone
>>know.
>>In fact I’m purchasing the minimum package now with the hosting company
>>(Dreamhost) so the next step up would be a dream for us to reach
>>because
>>that would mean we would have a tremendous input of great material to
>>assist us in our research.
>>
>>Everyone Upload away. Show us pictures. Teach us lessons. Tell us your
>>Oral History. Give us your Recipes. Share with us your Cuentos/Stories.
>>Sing us your Songs. Recite to us your Poems.
>>
>>joseph
>>
>>ps: we can all be thankful to Arturo for his wonderful Webmaster
>>Wisardry for this new found freedom.
>>
>>pps: contact Ken Alva about La Noria de San Pantaleon.
>>
>>
>>
>>Edward Serros wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>>I am interested in communicating with anyone with knowledge of La
>>>Noria de San Pantaleon and its people.
>>>
>>>Furthermore I have pictures of this “pueblo fantasma” that I took one
>>>year ago. If anyone is interested I can upload a few pictures if it
>>>is OK with Joseph. It is a true ghost town with a very old cemetary
>>>right next to it.
>>>
>>>Ed Serros
Joseph and moderators,
I’m not sure where to post my poem in the new site. Would it be possible for me to submit it here and have one of you put it in the correct folder or file. I was thinking of submitting it to Somos Primos or your podcast, but I’m not sure how to go about doing so. Please advise….. yolanda medina perez
Joseph Puentes wrote:
yes when and if the need comes about for us to upgrade to the next
DreamHost service plan I’ll accept donations. Right now I’ve got it
covered. Here are our figures:
used:
Totals: 784.548 MB
Available is 1/2 of 22900MB since I’ve got my NuestraFamiliaUnida
podcast on it as well. So 1/2 is 11450MB and we haven’t reached 1000MB
yet. So we can grow roughly 10 times larger than we are now before I
start sweating like I was on the Yahoo group.
Arturo Am I correctly estimating this?
joseph
Margarita Vallazza wrote:
>Dear Joseph,
>Can we kick in with a contribution to you for sharing the cost of the
>package? Marge:)
>
>On Apr 12, 2006, at 1:35 AM, Joseph Puentes wrote:
>
>
>
>>Ed,
>>
>>with the new site we have vastly more file space than in my miserly
>>Yahoo days. Yahoo was limiting us in more than one way. We have more
>>space and now we seem to be visible now that we’re outside the Yahoo
>>curtain. Lately we’ve seen an increase of interest in joining Nuestros
>>Ranchos at least 50-100% more than what was seen while a Yahoo group.
>>
>>upload away Ed,
>>
>>When I get to 60% of my capacity of the new site I’ll let everyone
>>know.
>>In fact I’m purchasing the minimum package now with the hosting company
>>(Dreamhost) so the next step up would be a dream for us to reach
>>because
>>that would mean we would have a tremendous input of great material to
>>assist us in our research.
>>
>>Everyone Upload away. Show us pictures. Teach us lessons. Tell us your
>>Oral History. Give us your Recipes. Share with us your Cuentos/Stories.
>>Sing us your Songs. Recite to us your Poems.
>>
>>joseph
>>
>>ps: we can all be thankful to Arturo for his wonderful Webmaster
>>Wisardry for this new found freedom.
>>
>>pps: contact Ken Alva about La Noria de San Pantaleon.
>>
>>
>>
>>Edward Serros wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>>I am interested in communicating with anyone with knowledge of La
>>>Noria de San Pantaleon and its people.
>>>
>>>Furthermore I have pictures of this “pueblo fantasma” that I took one
>>>year ago. If anyone is interested I can upload a few pictures if it
>>>is OK with Joseph. It is a true ghost town with a very old cemetary
>>>right next to it.
>>>
>>>Ed Serros
Please send it to both. Somos Primos will get your poem much more
exposure, but I want to read it too.
make a word file and put in ??? (send it to me and we’ll figure out
where it will go)
# Member Genealogy Files
# Reference Materials
# Books and Articles
eventually we’ll probably have more catagories. Maybe one that called:
Oral Histories/Poems/Stories
maybe another called Recipes/Misc.
What other catagories do we need?
joseph
Yolanda Bobby Perez wrote:
>Joseph and moderators,
> I’m not sure where to post my poem in the new site. Would it be possible for me to submit it here and have one of you put it in the correct folder or file. I was thinking of submitting it to Somos Primos or your podcast, but I’m not sure how to go about doing so. Please advise….. yolanda medina perez
>
>Joseph Puentes wrote:
> yes when and if the need comes about for us to upgrade to the next
>DreamHost service plan I’ll accept donations. Right now I’ve got it
>covered. Here are our figures:
>
>used:
>Totals: 784.548 MB
>
>
>Available is 1/2 of 22900MB since I’ve got my NuestraFamiliaUnida
>podcast on it as well. So 1/2 is 11450MB and we haven’t reached 1000MB
>yet. So we can grow roughly 10 times larger than we are now before I
>start sweating like I was on the Yahoo group.
>
>Arturo Am I correctly estimating this?
>
>joseph
>
>
>
>
>Margarita Vallazza wrote:
>
>
>
>>Dear Joseph,
>>Can we kick in with a contribution to you for sharing the cost of the
>>package? Marge:)
>>
>>On Apr 12, 2006, at 1:35 AM, Joseph Puentes wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>>Ed,
>>>
>>>with the new site we have vastly more file space than in my miserly
>>>Yahoo days. Yahoo was limiting us in more than one way. We have more
>>>space and now we seem to be visible now that we’re outside the Yahoo
>>>curtain. Lately we’ve seen an increase of interest in joining Nuestros
>>>Ranchos at least 50-100% more than what was seen while a Yahoo group.
>>>
>>>upload away Ed,
>>>
>>>When I get to 60% of my capacity of the new site I’ll let everyone
>>>know.
>>>In fact I’m purchasing the minimum package now with the hosting company
>>>(Dreamhost) so the next step up would be a dream for us to reach
>>>because
>>>that would mean we would have a tremendous input of great material to
>>>assist us in our research.
>>>
>>>Everyone Upload away. Show us pictures. Teach us lessons. Tell us your
>>>Oral History. Give us your Recipes. Share with us your Cuentos/Stories.
>>>Sing us your Songs. Recite to us your Poems.
>>>
>>>joseph
>>>
>>>ps: we can all be thankful to Arturo for his wonderful Webmaster
>>>Wisardry for this new found freedom.
>>>
>>>pps: contact Ken Alva about La Noria de San Pantaleon.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>Edward Serros wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>I am interested in communicating with anyone with knowledge of La
>>>>Noria de San Pantaleon and its people.
>>>>
>>>>Furthermore I have pictures of this “pueblo fantasma” that I took one
>>>>year ago. If anyone is interested I can upload a few pictures if it
>>>>is OK with Joseph. It is a true ghost town with a very old cemetary
>>>>right next to it.
>>>>
>>>>Ed Serros
>>>>– — — — — — — — — — — — —
>>>>Nuestros Ranchos Research Mailing List
>>>>
>>>>To post, send email to:
>>>>research@nuestrosranchos.org
>>>>
>>>>To change your subscription, log on to:
>>>> http://www.nuestrosranchos.org
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
Please send it to both. Somos Primos will get your poem much more
exposure, but I want to read it too.
make a word file and put in ??? (send it to me and we’ll figure out
where it will go)
# Member Genealogy Files
# Reference Materials
# Books and Articles
eventually we’ll probably have more catagories. Maybe one that called:
Oral Histories/Poems/Stories
maybe another called Recipes/Misc.
What other catagories do we need?
joseph
Yolanda Bobby Perez wrote:
>Joseph and moderators,
> I’m not sure where to post my poem in the new site. Would it be possible for me to submit it here and have one of you put it in the correct folder or file. I was thinking of submitting it to Somos Primos or your podcast, but I’m not sure how to go about doing so. Please advise….. yolanda medina perez
>
>Joseph Puentes wrote:
> yes when and if the need comes about for us to upgrade to the next
>DreamHost service plan I’ll accept donations. Right now I’ve got it
>covered. Here are our figures:
>
>used:
>Totals: 784.548 MB
>
>
>Available is 1/2 of 22900MB since I’ve got my NuestraFamiliaUnida
>podcast on it as well. So 1/2 is 11450MB and we haven’t reached 1000MB
>yet. So we can grow roughly 10 times larger than we are now before I
>start sweating like I was on the Yahoo group.
>
>Arturo Am I correctly estimating this?
>
>joseph
>
>
>
>
>Margarita Vallazza wrote:
>
>
>
>>Dear Joseph,
>>Can we kick in with a contribution to you for sharing the cost of the
>>package? Marge:)
>>
>>On Apr 12, 2006, at 1:35 AM, Joseph Puentes wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>>Ed,
>>>
>>>with the new site we have vastly more file space than in my miserly
>>>Yahoo days. Yahoo was limiting us in more than one way. We have more
>>>space and now we seem to be visible now that we’re outside the Yahoo
>>>curtain. Lately we’ve seen an increase of interest in joining Nuestros
>>>Ranchos at least 50-100% more than what was seen while a Yahoo group.
>>>
>>>upload away Ed,
>>>
>>>When I get to 60% of my capacity of the new site I’ll let everyone
>>>know.
>>>In fact I’m purchasing the minimum package now with the hosting company
>>>(Dreamhost) so the next step up would be a dream for us to reach
>>>because
>>>that would mean we would have a tremendous input of great material to
>>>assist us in our research.
>>>
>>>Everyone Upload away. Show us pictures. Teach us lessons. Tell us your
>>>Oral History. Give us your Recipes. Share with us your Cuentos/Stories.
>>>Sing us your Songs. Recite to us your Poems.
>>>
>>>joseph
>>>
>>>ps: we can all be thankful to Arturo for his wonderful Webmaster
>>>Wisardry for this new found freedom.
>>>
>>>pps: contact Ken Alva about La Noria de San Pantaleon.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>Edward Serros wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>I am interested in communicating with anyone with knowledge of La
>>>>Noria de San Pantaleon and its people.
>>>>
>>>>Furthermore I have pictures of this “pueblo fantasma” that I took one
>>>>year ago. If anyone is interested I can upload a few pictures if it
>>>>is OK with Joseph. It is a true ghost town with a very old cemetary
>>>>right next to it.
>>>>
>>>>Ed Serros
>>>>– — — — — — — — — — — — —
>>>>Nuestros Ranchos Research Mailing List
>>>>
>>>>To post, send email to:
>>>>research@nuestrosranchos.org
>>>>
>>>>To change your subscription, log on to:
>>>> http://www.nuestrosranchos.org
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
I have uploaded pictures of La Noria de San Panteleon, a place that is eerie but at the same time very peaceful and natural. When I was there I looked at the walls that were old and cracked; the next moment I could almost feel the activity and the life of the town spring from those same walls.
I have pictures of Sombrerete also. If someone has an interest in seeing this town which was used in many westerns years ago, I will upload them. It is truly a mining town. The Conde Don Fernando de la Campa y Cos, who was from the Valparaiso and Zacatecas, Zacatecas area, is buried here. The haciendas that stretch from Valaparaiso to Fresnillo and Zacatecas were built by de la Campa and his descendants. These haciendas today are simply shells of their former glory and mark the end of the personal wealth created by the silver mines of Zacatecas.
Ed
I have uploaded pictures of La Noria de San Panteleon, a place that is eerie but at the same time very peaceful and natural. When I was there I looked at the walls that were old and cracked; the next moment I could almost feel the activity and the life of the town spring from those same walls.
I have pictures of Sombrerete also. If someone has an interest in seeing this town which was used in many westerns years ago, I will upload them. It is truly a mining town. The Conde Don Fernando de la Campa y Cos, who was from the Valparaiso and Zacatecas, Zacatecas area, is buried here. The haciendas that stretch from Valaparaiso to Fresnillo and Zacatecas were built by de la Campa and his descendants. These haciendas today are simply shells of their former glory and mark the end of the personal wealth created by the silver mines of Zacatecas.
Ed
Ed,
I would like for you to post pictures of Sombrerete.
I don’t know if “comments” added to the pictures get automatically
delivered to the person who posts the pictures but I’ve added some
questions about the mine picture and the “grave” picture you uploaded.
Thanks for adding that. Well since they don’t go out to the group here
they are?
[[[[[[
Yes I know you made mention of Silver in your email, but is there still
mineable Silver there? I would have thought that would have long since
been mined out. Goes to show you how much Silver was there and still is
there.
joseph
]]]]]]]]]]]]]]
=====================
[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[
Who was that big one? Is it Don Fernando de la Campa y Cos’. Is your
G-Grandfather’s one of those visible?
I was told that most of the markers especially going back to the 1800’s
would have long rotted away because they would have simply been wooden
markers. Did you see any evidence of ancient wooden markers that were in
a nearly complete state of root, but still visible?
Those other markers just look like plumbing pipe shaped into crosses. Is
that what they are made of?
tell us more of this page.
joseph
]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]
Edward Serros wrote:
>I have uploaded pictures of La Noria de San Panteleon, a place that is eerie but at the same time very peaceful and natural. When I was there I looked at the walls that were old and cracked; the next moment I could almost feel the activity and the life of the town spring from those same walls.
>
>I have pictures of Sombrerete also. If someone has an interest in seeing this town which was used in many westerns years ago, I will upload them. It is truly a mining town. The Conde Don Fernando de la Campa y Cos, who was from the Valparaiso and Zacatecas, Zacatecas area, is buried here. The haciendas that stretch from Valaparaiso to Fresnillo and Zacatecas were built by de la Campa and his descendants. These haciendas today are simply shells of their former glory and mark the end of the personal wealth created by the silver mines of Zacatecas.
>
>Ed
Ed,
I would like for you to post pictures of Sombrerete.
I don’t know if “comments” added to the pictures get automatically
delivered to the person who posts the pictures but I’ve added some
questions about the mine picture and the “grave” picture you uploaded.
Thanks for adding that. Well since they don’t go out to the group here
they are?
[[[[[[
Yes I know you made mention of Silver in your email, but is there still
mineable Silver there? I would have thought that would have long since
been mined out. Goes to show you how much Silver was there and still is
there.
joseph
]]]]]]]]]]]]]]
=====================
[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[
Who was that big one? Is it Don Fernando de la Campa y Cos’. Is your
G-Grandfather’s one of those visible?
I was told that most of the markers especially going back to the 1800’s
would have long rotted away because they would have simply been wooden
markers. Did you see any evidence of ancient wooden markers that were in
a nearly complete state of root, but still visible?
Those other markers just look like plumbing pipe shaped into crosses. Is
that what they are made of?
tell us more of this page.
joseph
]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]
Edward Serros wrote:
>I have uploaded pictures of La Noria de San Panteleon, a place that is eerie but at the same time very peaceful and natural. When I was there I looked at the walls that were old and cracked; the next moment I could almost feel the activity and the life of the town spring from those same walls.
>
>I have pictures of Sombrerete also. If someone has an interest in seeing this town which was used in many westerns years ago, I will upload them. It is truly a mining town. The Conde Don Fernando de la Campa y Cos, who was from the Valparaiso and Zacatecas, Zacatecas area, is buried here. The haciendas that stretch from Valaparaiso to Fresnillo and Zacatecas were built by de la Campa and his descendants. These haciendas today are simply shells of their former glory and mark the end of the personal wealth created by the silver mines of Zacatecas.
>
>Ed
Joseph,
Thank you for uploading the 4 Zacatecas maps depicting La Noria de San
Pantaleon, El Durazno and San Antonio de Belen.
However, I couldn’t find them. Are they in the Zacatecas Folder in the
Albums / Maps section?
Thanks,
Ken
Joseph,
Thank you for uploading the 4 Zacatecas maps depicting La Noria de San
Pantaleon, El Durazno and San Antonio de Belen.
However, I couldn’t find them. Are they in the Zacatecas Folder in the
Albums / Maps section?
Thanks,
Ken
Ken:
The Maps are in the Albums section. I have changed the album name to make it a bit more descriptive, i.e. Noria de San Pantaleon maps,
You can access them at the following URL:
http://www.nuestrosranchos.org/node/14185
Ken:
The Maps are in the Albums section. I have changed the album name to make it a bit more descriptive, i.e. Noria de San Pantaleon maps,
You can access them at the following URL:
http://www.nuestrosranchos.org/node/14185
Who lives there now? What kind of economy is there? My goodness, how sad to see this place. You’re right in that the vistas there are lovely but how sad that there appears to be very little life in that place. Marge V.:)
Who lives there now? What kind of economy is there? My goodness, how sad to see this place. You’re right in that the vistas there are lovely but how sad that there appears to be very little life in that place. Marge V.:)
I have uploaded pictures of Sombrerete in the album section. I have also added one more picture to the La Noria album. This last picture is one of old miners, circa 1900.
Joseph, I have made additional comments on the cemetary pictures of La Noria. There are a few people who still live there but I could not figure out where since it appeared to be a ghost town. If they lived there, I wonder if they had any water or electricity.
I can upload pictures of Zacatecas, Zacatecas if any one is interested.
Ed
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