I ran across this book at a garage sale and bought it having previously heard of the Snake King. I am glad I did because a recent search located only one for sale on the internet for $500! That’s because of its limited distribution, having been published in Brownsville by the son of the Snake King who wrote the memoir. All the editions advertised as sold were signed by the author, as is mine. They must have all been sold by him. I found it valuable in describing Brownsville from the 1910s to 1930s.

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With the recent increase in cochineal, I now have plenty of scale insects available to be harvested. This will now afford me the opportunity to pick up with a natural dyeing experiment using cochineal that I put on hold about a year and a half ago. There are many resources, both in print and online, for dyeing with this dried insect. I have a personal favorite, which is a paperback that I purchased many years ago at the Valley Nature Center in Weslaco, Texas, titled “Edible and Useful Plants of Texas and the Southwest: A Practical Guide,” by Delena Tull. Ms. Tull gives her reader a synopsis of dyeing with cochineal on page 350 of her book.

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On recent ranch trips over the last couple of months to El Mesteño Ranch and Arboretum, I began noticing what seemed to me to be an extremely large amount of cochineal (Dactylopius coccus) on the prickly pear cacti (Opuntia engelmannii var. linderheimeri)—significantly more than I had noted in previous years. Here in deep South Texas, we commonly refer to prickly pear cacti by its Spanish name “nopal.”

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