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wardric
December 25th, 2007, 10:37 AM
Joyeux Noël à tous les québécois et autres francophones de Scubaboard et une année remplie de magnifiques plongées

:)

andre14
December 26th, 2007, 06:48 PM
Joyeux Noël à tous les québécois et autres francophones de Scubaboard et une année remplie de magnifiques plongées

:)

Merci beaucoup! :beerchug:

-André @ Fredericton

subcookie
December 28th, 2007, 10:29 PM
bonne annee a vous autre aussi. Je viens just de commencer a plonger aux Saguenay Wardric je pense quont cest deja parler. Faudrais bien organiser une plongee et ce rencontrer.

CLEAR BLUE
December 28th, 2007, 10:57 PM
Feliz Navidad a tu, tambien...y un muy bueno ano nuevo!!!

wardric
January 4th, 2008, 10:32 AM
bonne annee a vous autre aussi. Je viens just de commencer a plonger aux Saguenay Wardric je pense quont cest deja parler. Faudrais bien organiser une plongee et ce rencontrer.

Oui. Bonne idée mais il faudra attendre un peu que l'eau dégèle.... à moins de faire une plongée sous-glace.

Bonne année 2008

wardric
January 4th, 2008, 10:34 AM
Feliz Navidad a tu, tambien...y un muy bueno ano nuevo!!!

muchas gracias CB y feliz año 2008 a tu tambien

jimdiverman
January 4th, 2008, 10:35 AM
Joyeux Noël à tous les québécois et autres francophones de Scubaboard et une année remplie de magnifiques plongées

:)

Laissez les bon temps rouller!

wardric
January 4th, 2008, 10:37 AM
Laissez les bon temps rouller!

lol, cajun Jim?

jimdiverman
January 4th, 2008, 11:00 AM
lol, cajun Jim?

Un peu, monsieur Wardric. C'est tout le bien.

wardric
January 4th, 2008, 11:46 AM
J'ai visité la Louisiane 2 fois. I visited Luzy Anna twice, How's the region recovering from the tragedy?

jimdiverman
January 4th, 2008, 12:49 PM
J'ai visité la Louisiane 2 fois. I visited Luzy Anna twice, How's the region recovering from the tragedy?

Regarding how the region is recovering, I suppose that depends on who you ask. The French Quarter was never under water, so they just needed people to come back so they could hire new employees and get back on their feet. They are fine now. Outside of that, half the population of New Orleans is still gone, and I don't think that they have any intention of coming back. My parents have had their house for sale for 18 months, and they have lowered the sell price $70,000, and there is no buyer in sight. The corps of engineers undersized the new pumps, and only built the levees back where they were broken... we see how well they worked before. People know this and so do the insurance companies. People cannot afford insurance. So why should people move back here? Sad... I grew up here and have lived in this area most of my life. Most people that are just from here, and have not traveled away from here have no idea how poor the conditions in this state are.

Every one who was here for Katrina has a story, every one of us was affected by it, and none of us will ever be able to get away from the life changing effects of it.

wardric
January 4th, 2008, 02:07 PM
Regarding how the region is recovering, I suppose that depends on who you ask. The French Quarter was never under water, so they just needed people to come back so they could hire new employees and get back on their feet. They are fine now. Outside of that, half the population of New Orleans is still gone, and I don't think that they have any intention of coming back. My parents have had their house for sale for 18 months, and they have lowered the sell price $70,000, and there is no buyer in sight. The corps of engineers undersized the new pumps, and only built the levees back where they were broken... we see how well they worked before. People know this and so do the insurance companies. People cannot afford insurance. So why should people move back here? Sad... I grew up here and have lived in this area most of my life. Most people that are just from here, and have not traveled away from here have no idea how poor the conditions in this state are.

Every one who was here for Katrina has a story, every one of us was affected by it, and none of us will ever be able to get away from the life changing effects of it.

Dang, that is sad. So many broken lives. must be awefull.

I'd like to go back to see how it is now. I knew the french quarter was ok but I was wondering about the parts that authorities closed their eyes at.

jimdiverman
January 4th, 2008, 02:14 PM
Dang, that is sad. So many broken lives. must be awefull.

I'd like to go back to see how it is now. I knew the french quarter was ok but I was wondering about the parts that authorities closed their eyes at.

I'll let you know next week. On Monday I need to make a business trip to Chalmette. There wasn't a house or business in Chalmette that wasn't under water after Katrina. I'll let you know how they are doing now after my visit.

wardric
January 4th, 2008, 02:46 PM
thanks

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