Posts tagged Mike Danna
Central America: An Epilog

By Mike Danna
Louisiana Farm Bureau Public Relations Director

I trust everyone made it safely home, got some well-deserved rest and is readjusting to being back in the greatest country on earth. There’s nothing like seeing the world for what it truly is, but there’s also nothing like sleeping in one’s own bed safe in the knowledge that, essentially, we have it made.

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La Pura Vida Comes To An End

By Mike Danna
Louisiana Farm Bureau Federation Public Relations Director

The last voyage of the famed explorer Christopher Columbus found the worldly Italian landing in Costa Rica. The man probably thought about retiring here. Who wouldn’t want to spend his golden years in one of the most beautiful places on earth. It isn’t called the rich coast for nothing.

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The Votes Are In…And The Winner is…Apathy

By Mike Danna
Louisiana Farm Bureau Federation Public Relations Director

Donnie Wooley and Danielle Yerby supported Johnny Araya for president. Danielle wore her candidate’s colors, green and white and waved a green and white flag. Kristin McLaren was pulling for Luis Guillermo, whose supporters handed her a red T-shirt bearing his web address. With 60 percent expected voter turnout, it’s doubtful class members had enough political stroke to sway the election, particularly since they weren’t allowed to vote. But that didn’t stop the candidates’ supporters from letting them score some serious Election Day swag.

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Check Out the New Posts Below

By Mike Danna
Louisiana Farm Bureau Federation Public Relations Director

Hey folks, check out my two new posts below. The net is very slow here. The copy loaded, but if you don’t see any new photos it’s because the hotel couldn’t provide enough bandwidth. A final post coming tomorrow as we wrap up our tour of Central America on Monday. Thanks for following us.

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So this guy walks into a bar with a banana in one hand and a pineapple in the other…

By Mike Danna
Louisiana Farm Bureau Federation Public Relations Director

If you refer to a banana plant as a tree Carlos Gamboa will point his razor sharp machete at you and tell you not to call it that. At the Dole Banana Plantation today outside La Fortuna the class learned everything there is to know about the banana. It really is the perfect food.

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Who is Class XIII (Part 2)

By Mike Danna
Louisiana Farm Bureau Federation Public Relations Director

There’s still a prevailing notion that women in agriculture are something of a novelty. That’s like saying women might one day make it to the boardroom. While women do make up a small percentage of farm-owner/operators, (less than 6 percent nationwide), the number of women taking a more active role in agriculture is on the upswing.

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Who is Class XIII? (Part 1)

By Mike Danna
Louisiana Farm Bureau Federation Public Relations Director

It’s amazing what hours on a bus will do for your interpersonal disposition. Every AgLeadership international trip involves riding on buses to get to the next destination. That down time usually gives me a chance to get to know the class members. Some I’ve known for years; others I’m meeting for the first time. But each member has, so far, left a distinct impression on me.

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Information Blackout; Nicaraguan Style

By Mike Danna
Louisiana Farm Bureau Federation Public Relations Director

The blog blackout over the last two nights comes to an end with our arrival in Costa Rica Wednesday night. The hotel in Jinotego, Selva Negra, Nicaragua, was something out of a Hemingway novel; pre-War German-influence architecture, small rooms and rustic, lush green courtyards and sitting areas. The most reliable thing in the hotel was the laundry service and the bar. For most on this tour that’s all that was really needed.

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Internet Going Down in 3…2…1

By Mike Danna
Louisiana Farm Bureau Federation Public Relations Director

As a result, the rich were wiped out in a purging for the poor and in the end everyone was poor. The economist Thomas Robert Malthus said that population expands geometrically, while the food supply expands arithmetically. That basic principle was at the heart of the Nicaraguan dictatorship, where food and other essentials were rationed.

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Snake and Eggs

By Mike Danna
Louisiana Farm Bureau Federation Public Relations Director

There’s an old saying about having to break a few eggs if you want to make an omelet. There’s another old saying that goes, “a snake might not hurt you, but it’ll make you hurt yourself.” But more on the snakes later.

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