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Andre LaCroix

@andrelacroix / andrelacroix.tumblr.com

An RP/Ask blog of a Ragin' Cajun
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hotnhowling

having UNHINGED THOUGHTS about that Ardyn guy today

  and i cant seem to shut up about it??????? SO?????????????

time to SILENCE MYSELF by getting extremely invested in more ridiculously dirty nsfw art of said guy

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andrelacroix

Andre: -stares intensely hard at mun-

Mun: What? I didn't think they'd screenshot that.

Andre: I didn' t'ink ya use mah account ta respond. Yet here we are.

Mun: Don't be such a baby.

Andre: If mah lover comes in an' accuses me o' makin' eyes at 'nother man I don' know, ya gonna set da record straight, right??? 'Cause I don' need ta argue wit' a deity o' death; mah cabin chalk full o' guns an' kitchen knives. True, I won' die but dat ain' da point!

Mun: Oh, absolutely.......I still have no regrets. That Chancellor can harvest me any day....and I'm Ace. Imagine that.

Andre: WHO DA FUCK IS DA CHANCELLOR?!?!?

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ask-valerius

Hey, sha. Have ya ever made ya own wine befo'? I want ta say yes but knowin' ya self I bet da answer is no. It's not dat hard t'ough. Ya can easily make strawberry wine, plum wine, blackberry wine, an' mah personal favorite bein' muscadine wine~

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I stumped on grapes for the wine as a form of therapy. Does that count as wine making?

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andrelacroix

Well......dat is pretty close. Wha' ya need ta stomp on grapes as t'erapy fo'?

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Live oak Tree

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themedusa88

Evergreen Plantation is a plantation located on the west side of the Mississippi River in St. John the Baptist Parish, near Wallace, Louisiana, and along Louisiana Highway 18. The main house was constructed mostly in 1790, and renovated to its current Greek Revival style in 1832. The plantation’s historical commodity crop was sugarcane.   The plantation operated until about 1930, when the Depression resulted in the owners abandoning the house. The plantation continued to produce sugar cane under the direction of the bank that owned it, and it is still a working sugar cane plantation today. The house was extensively restored during the 1940s, with 300,000 bricks from the demolished Uncle Sam Plantation used in the restoration.  The plantation includes 37 contributing buildings, all but eight of them antebellum, making it one of the most complete plantation complexes in the state and the South. Of great significance are the 22 slave quarters, arranged in a double row along an allée of oak trees.  Among the outbuildings are a garconnière, where young bachelors of the family or male guests could stay; a pigeonnier for keeping pigeons (a sign of status among the planters); an overseer’s cottage; and late 19th-century barns.

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