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Rocklicker
Favorite team: | |
Location: | |
Biography: | |
Interests: | |
Occupation: | |
Number of Posts: | 176 |
Registered on: | 8/23/2016 |
Online Status: | Not Online |
Recent Posts
Message
re: Tennessee 9 @ LSU 3 Final
Posted by Rocklicker on 4/26/25 at 7:46 pm
quote:
LSUGrrrl
Seriously? If you don’t want to be seen on TV don’t sit front and center!
re: Tennessee 9 @ LSU 3 Final
Posted by Rocklicker on 4/26/25 at 7:42 pm
That looks like Bubba Watson and Hillar Moore in the front row behind the plate!
re: The ump got told off by Bear
Posted by Rocklicker on 4/26/25 at 2:42 pm
quote:
Every team in the nation would bend over backwards to have Jared Jones on their team
The aggies would bend over forwards
re: Tennessee 3 @ LSU 6 Final
Posted by Rocklicker on 4/26/25 at 12:27 am
I don’t know. But I’m thinking maybe Tony was going out there as part of Jays timeout. But ump said you’re too late. So not considered a mound visit.
Basically the ump saved him.
Basically the ump saved him.
re: Tennessee 3 @ LSU 6 Final
Posted by Rocklicker on 4/25/25 at 11:31 pm
quote:
The shift has actually been good to us recently. Obviously not there
quote:
Mr Roboto
Domo arigato
re: Alternatives to RoundUp?
Posted by Rocklicker on 4/6/25 at 10:29 pm
quote:
quote:30% vinegar with a little dawn soap. Similar killing power, fraction of cost, environmentally safe
You can add salt too if you’re spraying driveways, gravel, or areas you don’t mind scarring. About one cup per gallon of vinegar. Add a tablespoon of dish soap for the surfactant. You can almost watch the weeds die.
re: Mississippi St. 6 @ LSU 8 Final
Posted by Rocklicker on 3/27/25 at 9:00 pm
Hey moock


re: Anyone want Basketball tix for today.? Good seats. Free to a good home
Posted by Rocklicker on 2/22/25 at 4:24 pm
I also have one extra free if anyone needs. Post email or cell. I can transfer or screenshot.
I’ll be cheering on the baseballl tigers
I’ll be cheering on the baseballl tigers
re: Louisiana has some of the richest history in America why isn’t there a museum to show that
Posted by Rocklicker on 1/11/25 at 2:44 pm
Capitol Park Museum
From Louis Armstrong to Huey P. Long, from Mardi Gras to fais-do-do, and from the nation-building commerce of the Mississippi River to the life-sustaining bounty of the Gulf of Mexico, the Capitol Park Museum provides a panoramic exploration of the most vibrant state in America.
See how American Indians; colonists from France, Spain, and Britain; enslaved Africans and Acadians from Nova Scotia—eventually known as Cajuns—populated and cultivated Louisiana, shaping it into one of the most culturally rich regions in the world. With thematic exhibits on diverse aspects of Louisiana history, industry, and culture, the museum includes two permanent exhibits: Grounds for Greatness: Louisiana and the Nation and The Louisiana Experience: Discovering the Soul of America.
A 48-foot wooden shrimp trawler and a two-row sugar cane harvester reveal by example the state’s agricultural and aquatic riches. An oil-well head and a scale model of a drilling rig drive home the critical role Louisiana plays in America’s energy industry. Exhibits also include a rare Civil War submarine and artifacts from steamboats, including trophy antlers won by Robert E. Lee in the Great Steamboat Race of 1870.
Exhibits on slave markets, resistance, revolt, and Jim Crow provide a glimpse into the unimaginable plight of people of color who, in the face of overwhelming hardship, contributed incalculably to the cultural fabric of the state. The museum re-creates the atmosphere of holding cells where slaves bound for the auction block were imprisoned to prevent escape. The exhibit includes the actual door from the Fairview Plantation jail for slaves. The fight for freedom is highlighted in a display on the Baton Rouge bus boycott of 1953, which made national headlines and inspired civil rights leaders throughout the South.
Louisiana offers much to the musical history of the nation as a whole, and many of those vital contributions are on display. See eclectic exhibits on the state’s music and musicians, including Pete Fountain’s clarinet, Buddy Guy’s polka dot Stratocaster guitar, Clifton Chenier’s Grammy award, and, in the expansive Louis Armstrong exhibit, the bugle “Pops” played as a boy at the Colored Waif’s Home, where he received his first formal music instruction. In the interactive music exhibits, hear the distinctive southwest Louisiana sounds of Cajun, zydeco, and swamp pop, Baton Rouge blues, and world-famous New Orleans jazz.
The Capitol Park Museum tells a story of passion, adventure, and discovery that could have happened only in the Bayou State. Come explore a way of life like no other.

From Louis Armstrong to Huey P. Long, from Mardi Gras to fais-do-do, and from the nation-building commerce of the Mississippi River to the life-sustaining bounty of the Gulf of Mexico, the Capitol Park Museum provides a panoramic exploration of the most vibrant state in America.
See how American Indians; colonists from France, Spain, and Britain; enslaved Africans and Acadians from Nova Scotia—eventually known as Cajuns—populated and cultivated Louisiana, shaping it into one of the most culturally rich regions in the world. With thematic exhibits on diverse aspects of Louisiana history, industry, and culture, the museum includes two permanent exhibits: Grounds for Greatness: Louisiana and the Nation and The Louisiana Experience: Discovering the Soul of America.
A 48-foot wooden shrimp trawler and a two-row sugar cane harvester reveal by example the state’s agricultural and aquatic riches. An oil-well head and a scale model of a drilling rig drive home the critical role Louisiana plays in America’s energy industry. Exhibits also include a rare Civil War submarine and artifacts from steamboats, including trophy antlers won by Robert E. Lee in the Great Steamboat Race of 1870.
Exhibits on slave markets, resistance, revolt, and Jim Crow provide a glimpse into the unimaginable plight of people of color who, in the face of overwhelming hardship, contributed incalculably to the cultural fabric of the state. The museum re-creates the atmosphere of holding cells where slaves bound for the auction block were imprisoned to prevent escape. The exhibit includes the actual door from the Fairview Plantation jail for slaves. The fight for freedom is highlighted in a display on the Baton Rouge bus boycott of 1953, which made national headlines and inspired civil rights leaders throughout the South.
Louisiana offers much to the musical history of the nation as a whole, and many of those vital contributions are on display. See eclectic exhibits on the state’s music and musicians, including Pete Fountain’s clarinet, Buddy Guy’s polka dot Stratocaster guitar, Clifton Chenier’s Grammy award, and, in the expansive Louis Armstrong exhibit, the bugle “Pops” played as a boy at the Colored Waif’s Home, where he received his first formal music instruction. In the interactive music exhibits, hear the distinctive southwest Louisiana sounds of Cajun, zydeco, and swamp pop, Baton Rouge blues, and world-famous New Orleans jazz.
The Capitol Park Museum tells a story of passion, adventure, and discovery that could have happened only in the Bayou State. Come explore a way of life like no other.



re: Turf around a pool
Posted by Rocklicker on 1/6/25 at 8:57 am
re: Anyone here ever learned German? New Year’s resolution was to start learning a language.
Posted by Rocklicker on 1/4/25 at 9:12 pm
Gesundheit
When someone sneezes
When someone sneezes
re: Drone in Prairieville
Posted by Rocklicker on 12/17/24 at 8:56 pm
It’s getting farther away now. But just meandering around. If you live on Hwy 42 near Airline. Look up
re: Drone in Prairieville
Posted by Rocklicker on 12/17/24 at 8:41 pm
It’s over the Walmart area now. Red and green lights
re: Drone in Prairieville
Posted by Rocklicker on 12/17/24 at 8:39 pm
No BS. How do I post video?
re: Drone in Prairieville
Posted by Rocklicker on 12/17/24 at 8:34 pm
Over I10 around Bluff Rd and Highland Road
Drone in Prairieville
Posted by Rocklicker on 12/17/24 at 8:33 pm
Right now!
re: Louisiana leaders discuss getting a second live tiger to bring to LSU football games
Posted by Rocklicker on 9/27/24 at 7:57 pm

re: Helene - Recovery Begins...Devastating Flash Flooding in Western NC and Eastern TN
Posted by Rocklicker on 9/23/24 at 8:57 am
quote:
this could be the third hurricane in a year for the big bend region of florida
I call it “the armpit”
re: Skenes picks off De La Cruz
Posted by Rocklicker on 8/24/24 at 10:45 am
quote:
I still don’t understand how these fricking oven mitts that give the runner another 2 inches of reach in a slide are legal.
The fielder’s glove gives them an extra 6 inches of reach
Email signatures
Posted by Rocklicker on 8/19/24 at 5:54 pm
Email salutations or quotes. Some can be misunderstood.
I came across this one and for some reason I was the only one at the office whose mind was in the gutter. Am I just reading it wrong?
“…it’s not who you are underneath, it’s what you do that defines you.”
This just doesn’t seem appropriate for an email salutation. I get what he’s trying to say, but the wording can be misconstrued.
I came across this one and for some reason I was the only one at the office whose mind was in the gutter. Am I just reading it wrong?
“…it’s not who you are underneath, it’s what you do that defines you.”
This just doesn’t seem appropriate for an email salutation. I get what he’s trying to say, but the wording can be misconstrued.
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