The last weekend of August, Austin's family traveled to New Orleans and was nice enough to bring me along. It was a great weekend - HOT and humid but I actually kind of love that summery weather.
We did mostly typical
touristy stuff (my favorite kind of stuff). We stayed at a hotel right off
Bourbon Street, so we ended walking up and down it, by day and by
night. We ate Cajun classics, amazing po-boys and alligator gumbo at
Parkway Bakery and Tavern, barbecued shrimp at Pascal's Manale on my parents'
recommendation, gelato on Magazine Street, oysters at Peche, and beignets at
both Cafe du Monde and Cafe Beignet.
We drank very sweet
drinks on Bourbon Street, chicory coffee, Sazeracs, gin fizzes, Bloody Marys,
and a number of other excellent cocktails. Bourbon Street was somehow trashier than I expected. (I don't know what I was expecting.) We didn't spend too much time there, but I dragged Austin out for one final Hurricane on Sunday
night. And I'm sure I'll be back for a bachelorette party sooner or later...
We took the trolley to
the World War II museum (which had an awesome hangar where you could stand
eye-to-eye with WWII airplanes and, best of all, a working victory garden). We
took the ferry to Algiers Point (the name was more exciting than the location)
for what was most of our first official encounter with the Big Muddy. We wandered
Lafayette Cemetery in the Garden District - I LOVE old cemeteries, and this one
did not disappoint. I spotted the New Orleans branch of my network of Catholic
high schools. We saw live music (some pretentious, some awesome) on Frenchman
Street. We sampled hot sauces. I played with my new camera and took my new Fitbit for walks around the
French Quarter and down to the French market.
I was wandering around
Bourbon St one night (see above RE Fitbit) and followed the sounds of live
music to a neighboring street, where I stumbled on a wedding procession, the
bride and groom and wedding guests circling the block with their jazz
band. It reminded me that I'd gotten just a tiny taste of a fascinating
culture. The more I travel, the more I realize that I am just scratching the
surface of everywhere I visit.
Resolved: to keep
traveling, of course. And to pull out the Big Camera for more pictures of
people and not just pictures of buildings.
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