Boredom never set in. She raised her six children while maintaining a family business of real estate and rentals. She painted far into the early morning hours after a long day behind the counter at Montgomery Ward. At age 51, she undertook and earned a Science degree from Pan American University in Edinburg. She and her husband travel the world studying cultures, collecting fine art, photographing wildlife, bird-watching. They began early this year to celebrate their golden anniversary. Staying busy keeps the couple young, and retirement is viewed as something for old people, something far...
Boredom never set in. She raised her six children while maintaining a family business of real estate and rentals. She painted far into the early morni...
Boredom never set in. She raised her six children while maintaining a family business of real estate and rentals. She painted far into the early morning hours after a long day behind the counter at Montgomery Ward. At age 51, she undertook and earned a Science degree from Pan American University in Edinburg. She and her husband travel the world studying cultures, collecting fine art, photographing wildlife, bird-watching. They began early this year to celebrate their golden anniversary. Staying busy keeps the couple young, and retirement is viewed as something for old people, something far...
Boredom never set in. She raised her six children while maintaining a family business of real estate and rentals. She painted far into the early morni...
Stories depict a way-of-life of the Hispanic culture of South Texas where superstition still rules the lives of many. La Llorona scans the waters of the Rio Grande looking for her children; little Duendes create a ruckus to gain attention; the Grim Reaper skulks about the corridors of the big house biding its time; ghosts guarding treasure inhabit back yards and the brushlands along the Rio Grande; Sasquatch sloshes along on the shores of South Padre in freezing weather on an Easter weekend, and snakes love mothers' milk and menstrual blood. Experience with ghosts or other supernatural...
Stories depict a way-of-life of the Hispanic culture of South Texas where superstition still rules the lives of many. La Llorona scans the waters of t...
Stories depict a way-of-life of the Hispanic culture of South Texas where superstition still rules the lives of many. La Llorona scans the waters of the Rio Grande looking for her children; little Duendes create a ruckus to gain attention; the Grim Reaper skulks about the corridors of the big house biding its time; ghosts guarding treasure inhabit back yards and the brushlands along the Rio Grande; Sasquatch sloshes along on the shores of South Padre in freezing weather on an Easter weekend, and snakes love mothers' milk and menstrual blood. Experience with ghosts or other supernatural...
Stories depict a way-of-life of the Hispanic culture of South Texas where superstition still rules the lives of many. La Llorona scans the waters of t...
In 1981, a religious fervor was generated in. the Catholic world when six shepherd children in Medugorje, Yugoslavia declared that the Virgin Mary materialized before them on a mountain top. The incredible reports of the sightings resonated all across the world, all the way to the Rio Grande Valley of South Texas. The author a scientist and student of evolution, inadvertently traveled to the mountain village in a group of pilgrims. She would form her own opinion if the allegations lack credibility or were simply a figment of someone's imagination.
In 1981, a religious fervor was generated in. the Catholic world when six shepherd children in Medugorje, Yugoslavia declared that the Virgin Mary mat...