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From: auntyemfaustus@hotmail.com
To: announce@nuestrosranchos.org
Subject: RE: [Nuestros Ranchos] My MtDNA Results
Date: Fri, 6 Jul 2012 16:18:00 -0700
Armando,
Thanks again for explaining about the nucleobases not being the same as the haplogroups.
Now I have a question about Family Finder. Is that part of FamilyTreeDNA on their website? Does it cost extra? I only signed up for the $99.00 kit when it went on sale for half price a few months ago. I am on a fixed income. In this economy $100 dollars is a lot of money for something we don't really "need", which is why it is difficult to get people to do it.
I did a Google search for a haplogroup T and I found an explanation on Wilipedia. Apparently they are from India? and were the first people to develop agriculture. Maybe that is why I love to pull weeds and work in my garden. The T I think is part of the list of "mutations" they sent me, along with A and G and C, but now I think I am back to confusing the nucleobases and haplogroups.
My father's surname is Olague, and in the 1980s I went to the Navarre area in Spain where a Spanish friend from Pamplona told me her folks had a "chalet" near a town called Olague. They thought my husband was the Olague since he is fair, and they didn't realize I was the Olague. They all had bright blue eyes, and were mostly dairy farmers. We saw lots of spotted cows walking back to the barns by themselves past modern houses with TV antennas and nice small cars in the driveways. They were busy preparing for some kind of festival in front of the only public building we saw, kind of like a bar/inn, white plaster with pretty flowers in planters along the balcony, the men dressed in white with red bandanas and berets on their heads. They were nice, but we didn't get any information; they were just pleased we liked their little town, etc.
The Olagues came to the New World in the early 1500s and settled in Panuco, Zacatecas. There were some Olague brothers who were in the Onate party that went to Santa Fe in 1580 or so, but they soon abandoned the colony and went back to "civilization" in Zacatecas. Someone in Mexico told me that all Olagues in Mexico are the descendants of these people. However, I have been unable to bridge the gap between the Olagues in the Onate party and the most distant of my father's ancestors of that surname in Zacatecas.
My father told me he was a mestizo, but he also said that his great-grandfather was called "el frances" because he was fair with blue eyes. My father was born almost blond and his eyes were the color of coffee with lots of cream in it; his grandmother gave my mother a lock of his baby hair; it was very light tan, tied with a little ribbon. I don't know what happened to that lock of hair, but it would be useless for DNA testing since it had to have been cut and not pulled. However, in my research of his lines, I found no French at all, only mostly espanoles, very few yndio and one line, the Surianos, had many individuals labeled "mulato". He did say that his surname was "un nombre basco". I heard him tell a priest that.
You know, I do have my father's watch, his wallet, his eyeglasses. I wonder if anyone could pull DNA from that, but I think FamilyTreeDNA can only use the oral swabs for genealogical testing.
With the help of several members of Nuestros Ranchos, I was able to trace my Olagues back to a Pedro Olague who was a captain or something in some town in Zacatecas in the late 1600s, but not in Jerez where my father was born in 1903. Pedro's wife was a Maria Haro I think. Mostly my father's people lived near Jerez in a place called Tepetongo and Salitrillo. Also, in researching my father's Llanos y Valdez I found they linked to a line of Olague Etulain. Maybe Pedro was related to them.
I have tried to find male Olagues on the lists of those who have tested with various DNA labs and can find no one with that name. I have been told that there are some Olagues in Jerez who breed bulls for the bullfights, but I would have to go and knock on their doors, and maybe even then I couldn't get any information since my father and his father and uncles left Mexico in 1913 when my father was only 10 years old. Further, the people from Jerez don't seem interested in genealogy, don't understand why we would want to search ancient records and cemeteries and have our DNA tested. They are more interested in raising cattle and in charriadas or whatever, and of course they only speak Spanish, which I have difficulty with. They don't emigrate over here; they seem to do OK where they are.
Thanks again for the information,
Emilie
Port Orchard, WA
My MtDNA Results - to Armando
Emilie,
Family Finder is $289. It sounds like that isn't what you wanted to hear.
You are confusing three different things mutations, nucleobases, and
haplogroups. The nucleobase T has nothing to do with the haplogroup T. A
mutation can be caused by placement of a nucleobase but the mutation won't
just be called T.
If an Olague never wants to test then you will never be able to tell what
their subgroup is. They are almost definitely R1b haplogroup since northern
Spain mostly belongs to that group.
My great uncles were bullfighters and my grandfather was a co-founder of
organized charrería in his hometown. My uncle invented the 6x20 rectangle
used in all charreadas for the cala de caballo. One uncle has been national
champion multiple times and another 2nd place in charro completo in
nationals.
Saludos,
Armando
On Fri, Jul 6, 2012 at 6:23 PM, Emilie Garciawrote:
>
>
> Armando,
>
>
>
> Thanks again for explaining about the nucleobases not being the same as
> the haplogroups.
>
>
>
> Now I have a question about Family Finder. Is that part of FamilyTreeDNA
> on their website? Does it cost extra? I only signed up for the $99.00 kit
> when it went on sale for half price a few months ago. I am on a fixed
> income. In this economy $100 dollars is a lot of money for something we
> don't really "need", which is why it is difficult to get people to do it.
>
>
>
> I did a Google search for a haplogroup T and I found an explanation on
> Wilipedia. Apparently they are from India? and were the first people to
> develop agriculture. Maybe that is why I love to pull weeds and work in my
> garden. The T I think is part of the list of "mutations" they sent me,
> along with A and G and C, but now I think I am back to confusing the
> nucleobases and haplogroups.
>
>
>
> My father's surname is Olague, and in the 1980s I went to the Navarre area
> in Spain where a Spanish friend from Pamplona told me her folks had a
> "chalet" near a town called Olague. They thought my husband was the Olague
> since he is fair, and they didn't realize I was the Olague. They all had
> bright blue eyes, and were mostly dairy farmers. We saw lots of spotted
> cows walking back to the barns by themselves past modern houses with TV
> antennas and nice small cars in the driveways. They were busy preparing
> for some kind of festival in front of the only public building we saw, kind
> of like a bar/inn, white plaster with pretty flowers in planters along the
> balcony, the men dressed in white with red bandanas and berets on their
> heads. They were nice, but we didn't get any information; they were just
> pleased we liked their little town, etc.
>
>
>
> The Olagues came to the New World in the early 1500s and settled in
> Panuco, Zacatecas. There were some Olague brothers who were in the Onate
> party that went to Santa Fe in 1580 or so, but they soon abandoned the
> colony and went back to "civilization" in Zacatecas. Someone in Mexico
> told me that all Olagues in Mexico are the descendants of these people.
> However, I have been unable to bridge the gap between the Olagues in the
> Onate party and the most distant of my father's ancestors of that surname
> in Zacatecas.
>
>
>
> My father told me he was a mestizo, but he also said that his
> great-grandfather was called "el frances" because he was fair with blue
> eyes. My father was born almost blond and his eyes were the color of
> coffee with lots of cream in it; his grandmother gave my mother a lock of
> his baby hair; it was very light tan, tied with a little ribbon. I don't
> know what happened to that lock of hair, but it would be useless for DNA
> testing since it had to have been cut and not pulled. However, in my
> research of his lines, I found no French at all, only mostly espanoles,
> very few yndio and one line, the Surianos, had many individuals labeled
> "mulato". He did say that his surname was "un nombre basco". I heard him
> tell a priest that.
>
>
>
> You know, I do have my father's watch, his wallet, his eyeglasses. I
> wonder if anyone could pull DNA from that, but I think FamilyTreeDNA can
> only use the oral swabs for genealogical testing.
>
>
>
> With the help of several members of Nuestros Ranchos, I was able to trace
> my Olagues back to a Pedro Olague who was a captain or something in some
> town in Zacatecas in the late 1600s, but not in Jerez where my father was
> born in 1903. Pedro's wife was a Maria Haro I think. Mostly my father's
> people lived near Jerez in a place called Tepetongo and Salitrillo. Also,
> in researching my father's Llanos y Valdez I found they linked to a line of
> Olague Etulain. Maybe Pedro was related to them.
>
>
>
> I have tried to find male Olagues on the lists of those who have tested
> with various DNA labs and can find no one with that name. I have been told
> that there are some Olagues in Jerez who breed bulls for the bullfights,
> but I would have to go and knock on their doors, and maybe even then I
> couldn't get any information since my father and his father and uncles left
> Mexico in 1913 when my father was only 10 years old. Further, the people
> from Jerez don't seem interested in genealogy, don't understand why we
> would want to search ancient records and cemeteries and have our DNA
> tested. They are more interested in raising cattle and in charriadas or
> whatever, and of course they only speak Spanish, which I have difficulty
> with. They don't emigrate over here; they seem to do OK where they are.
>
>
>
> Thanks again for the information,
>
>
>
> Emilie
>
> Port Orchard, WA
>
>
>
>
>
>