March 22, 2007

St. Martinville, La



We spent a fantastic 10 days in the swamps of southern Louisiana camping with the FreeRoader RV group at Lake Fausse Pointe State Park. Driving twenty three miles down the paved levee road south of Henderson will take you to the park entrance. Alongside the levee road is the Atchafalaya Basin through which flows the river by the same name. The Cajuns used to live out in the basin and travel by boat, living off the land and it's resources. It is quite interesting to take a swamp tour and learn about the history but we did not choose that option on this trip. We would have liked to have ridden the quad up on the levee but it is private property. (more photos)



One of our first trips was to the bakery in St. Martinville. We then went around the block to the park by the most photographed tree in America, the Evangeline Oak. This is supposedly where Emmeline Labiche, Longfellow's Evangeline, found her long lost lover after they had been separated in Nova Scotia. The Acadians who became what we call Cajuns were French who were exiled from Nova Scotia and eventually found their way down Bayou Teche to this area. They are the most wonderful people to know and have a unique culture based on their history and customs which have survived two centuries in this area. (more photos)


Much of our time was spent sightseeing. Breaux Bridge, which is famous for it's crawfish festival held later in the year, is a tourist friendly small town. We stopped at Cafe des Amis on Saturday morning for their zydeco breakfast. We began our meal with beignets while listening to Little Nathan and his band perform. The dance floor stayed packed as is a custom on Saturday mornings found at many venues throughout Cajun country. (more photos)




Another fun place to visit is the Tabasco factory at Avery Island, located south of New Iberia. Fourteen of us caravanned to take a factory tour and see the peppers being processed to produce their well known Tabasco products. We saw them bottle products that would be shipped to Europe and then sampled many of their sauces next door at the Factory Store. (more photos)
We drove over to the Jungle Gardens, begun by the McIlhenny family who started Tabasco, and took a driving tour through the grounds among the giant live oaks with Spanish moss hanging from their branches. Underneath were azaleas and camelias in bloom flashing all shades of pink and red. The alligators basked in the sun alongside the ponds and the egrets were nesting in their rookery.



Lake Martin, located at Parks between Breaux Bridge and St. Martinville, is the largest bird rookery in the United States. Seventeen of the FreeRoaders took a seat in Bryan Champagne's boat for an upclose look at alligators, nutria, barred owls, yellow bellied turtles, snakes, white egrets, roseatte spoonbills, and little blue herons. (more photos)

The remainder of our time was spent eating: crawfish, chowder, Cape Cod stuffies, crawfish etoufee, gumbo, hobo stew, biscuits and gravy, and potluck dishes and desserts. (more photos) On our final night the LEOs (Let's Eat Out) prevailed and we all went to Pat's Fisherman's Wharf for a seafood feast. Between meals we visited with old and new friends, kayaked, rode the bicycles, went geocaching, watched the many brilliant red cardinals, and basically just kicked back and relaxed. We had to extend our stay for one day just to find time to ride the bikes on Trail C, a 3 mile trail among the swamp in the park. As we left town I started down to Bayou Ann, across the bridge from Pat's in Henderson, to gather a few water hyacinths for my pond. I have never seen so many large snakes in one gathering. There will be no water hyacinths blooming in my pond this summer!

There is work to be done at the dead end before we go north to Mountain View, Arkansas in one month.

March 11, 2007

Bossier City, La

The toy hauler is full of toys (bikes, kayak, quad) and we are off to meet with the FreeRoaders in Louisiana. We decided to travel a few hours and overnight in the Shreveport, La area. There are 5 casinos alongside the Red River in Bossier City and with our luck the RV park at Diamond Jack's was full. For us that is good luck as we got to stay in the parking lot alongside which is where we wanted to be anyway. Why pay $30 for a little electricity we don't need!

We visited Boomtown Casino and Bass Pro Shop and then wandered along the beautiful new boardwalk they have along the Red River. No vehicles, just walkways among the shops and restaurants. Then we settled in at Diamond Jack's and paid our "camping fees. "

We stopped at noon yesterday at a great little place in Texarkana, Arkansas, Fat Jack's Oyster Bar, and watched the Razorbacks advance to the finals in the southeast conference basketball tournament while we nibbled on some of their specialties such as catfish and shrimp.

South of Bossier the fresh green of spring greeted us as we pass trees with new young leaves. The red of the maples are interspersed in the forests along I 49. The sun is warm and the temps are in the 70s.

As the French say in cajun country "Laizzes les bon temps rouller!" or Let the good times roll!

March 01, 2007

Al, Ms, Ar


We left Montgomery, Al early and blew across Mississippi, literally, as there were tornadoes about 45 miles to the south of us at one point. The dark ominous clouds overhead provided heavy rain showers and windy conditions a few times. We later learned of a deadly tornado in Enterprise, Alabama at about the same time, which was along our path yesterday.

March: In like a lion, out like a lamb. We shall see.

We stopped in Greenville, MS to put a few nickles in the machines on the "riverboat" and left with enough money for lunch in Lake Village, AR.
Dumas was along the way so we did stop and observe the devastation from the recent tornado there. We are now back at the dead end waiting for the next adventure (after taxes of course) - Louisiana in ten days!