Agriculture in Alabama – Encyclopedia of Alabama

Agriculture in Alabama – Encyclopedia of Alabama

Black Belt. The nineteenth-century cotton plantations and sharecropper farms have long vanished from the Black Belt region along with many of the dairies and large cattle operations that replaced them. Pine trees have been planted where suitable, and the pulp and paper industries thrive in this region today. Cattle operations remain an important industry, and there are still a few row-crop farms. Catfish farms and other forms of aquaculture, including shrimp, crawfish, and tilapia, have grown rapidly in this area because of favorable soils and the relatively low cost of pond construction. Hunting and wildlife management have also become important in the Black Belt, providing some income for landowners.

Maybe my problem is overnight oatmeal after all 🍜

I was thinking some more about when I’m having problems with excessive pissing, especially on road trips. I realized one thing that has changed recently — my use of overnight oatmeal for a quick filling breakfast before road trips. There is a lot of water absorbed in the oatmeal, especially when I dump the water into a storage container, then fill with oatmeal. While by morning it doesn’t look like much water, a lot of it has been absorbed by the oatmeal, and unlike oatmeal cooked in the microwave, virtually none of the water boils off in a sealed container sitting in the refrigerator overnight. Combined with a few cups of coffee, I can see why it keeps me running to the pisser.