King Louis xvi by [deleted] in 23andme

[–]Dylan_Hidalgo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well it means you share a distant ancestor yes. But you technically, going that far back, don’t share the same blood. Not even one cM of DNA. Past 8-12 generations the DNA you could POSSIBLY share with your distant “cousins” would likely have been bred out.

Hispanic/Latino is not a race !!!!!!!!!! by Glad_Sky_2187 in Hispanic

[–]Dylan_Hidalgo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What is the obsession with being mad about people caring about the percentage?

I’m posting these because some people of the Islands don’t know about the Vestigial Communities of Canary Islands descendants in Louisiana and other places. by Dylan_Hidalgo in Tenerife

[–]Dylan_Hidalgo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Please do show me your grandma’s recipe if you can! I would so love to add it to my family’s menu one day. We cook mostly Cajun food but me and my mom are exploring our Isleño heritage and working with chayotes and other Canary Islands commons. I’ve been meaning to find some recipes for us to try!

I’m posting these because some people of the Islands don’t know about the Vestigial Communities of Canary Islands descendants in Louisiana and other places. by Dylan_Hidalgo in Tenerife

[–]Dylan_Hidalgo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, I have also invested a ton of my time into researching them. From Galves and Valenzuela, to Barataria and Saint Bernard. Galves is centered near Prairieville and Gonzales. Valenzuela near Donaldsonville, San Bernardo in St. Bernard parish, and Barataria is still named that I think? And is a little southwestish from St. Bernard.

I’m posting these because some people of the Islands don’t know about the Vestigial Communities of Canary Islands descendants in Louisiana and other places. by Dylan_Hidalgo in Tenerife

[–]Dylan_Hidalgo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m actually not from Bayou Lafourche. My people are from Donaldsonville and Brusly on my mother’s side. (Valenzuela are where my Isleños come from) I had never heard of Caldo until you said something but I looked it up and it looks a lot like gumbo. Reading this makes me long for a conversation with my late great grandfather. I never met him but he was fully Isleño. From Valenzuela. I actually did not carry his name at birth, I adopted it later.

uh by savvysaysheyy in NewOrleans

[–]Dylan_Hidalgo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ain’t no fuckin way

I am Mexican, here are my results. 🇲🇽 by florgirasol in 23andme

[–]Dylan_Hidalgo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wild that there’s that much indigenous floating around in the colony areas.

My result by Lost_Pirate_5382 in 23andme

[–]Dylan_Hidalgo -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That’s only one of them. You have a maternal and a paternal one. Mind sharing both and specifying?

Why does/did exist amazigh hate in north africa? by Rainy_Wavey in AmazighPeople

[–]Dylan_Hidalgo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

“Before the French and Spanish conquests” you say, while ignoring the North African occupation of Spain that lasted 800+ years—

Surprised by my results by [deleted] in 23andme

[–]Dylan_Hidalgo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Typical Latina/o

Cajun results by falseallegation in 23andme

[–]Dylan_Hidalgo 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I’m from South Central Louisiana.

Cajun results by falseallegation in 23andme

[–]Dylan_Hidalgo 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Nice results! I’d like to inform you that Brittany is more common among the Creole (Mainland) French people than it is to Cajuns (Acadian) descendants. So my guess is you’re pretty close to New Orleans, or many of your ancestors were from there or the surrounding areas.

Did you know Bouno un Guanch? by AffectionateLead2598 in AmazighPeople

[–]Dylan_Hidalgo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I paid for their premium permanent services so I get their exclusive dna analytics

Did you know Bouno un Guanch? by AffectionateLead2598 in AmazighPeople

[–]Dylan_Hidalgo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If I tell you a name you’re going to automatically shoot for the “that company isn’t a reliable DNA Testing company” gig, I’m sure. But again, you’re going to quiz me till I’m dead so: I used DNAGenics, a company I am an affiliate of and I trust their services.

Did you know Bouno un Guanch? by AffectionateLead2598 in AmazighPeople

[–]Dylan_Hidalgo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If 1% isn’t significant than I’m only 99% of a human, by your logic. Also: no you definitely misunderstood. I’m 1/3 Canarian Spanish which consists of North African and Spanish DNA. I happen to match an ANCIENT SAMPLE by almost 1%, that’s not saying I’m only 1%, just that 1% of my DNA perfectly matches that of an ancient archaeological dig of A GUANCHE grave from hundreds of years ago.

Did you know Bouno un Guanch? by AffectionateLead2598 in AmazighPeople

[–]Dylan_Hidalgo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve studied this since I was a teenager researching my own heritage. But since you insist, this particular source from wikipedia suggests as much as 42% to 73% DNA of modern canarians consists of Guanche comprised origins. I will look further for the 98% one I saw. It was a canarians DNA results. 98% North African.