12/30/11
Pete flew home yesterday after a very
satisfying 3 days in New Orleans. Both of us fell in love with this
town nearly immediately upon our arrival. It has been nothing but
good times.
Our ride from Baton Rouge was marked by
heavy rain in the morning, followed by a heavy fog during the last
several dozen miles. As the Mississippi River Trail approaches New
Orleans, it becomes a bike path which sits on top of the levee right
next to the river for 20 miles. This path is well paved, with light
pedestrian and bicycle traffic, and very gentle slopes. It was a
welcome relief after 65 miles of riding through wet air on a nasty
highway shoulder, full of rocks and torn up tires and debris. A
warm, light breeze came our way, and I stripped down to my t-shirt
for the last several miles through town. Highs have been in the
upper 60s to low 70s since then.
For several days before we arrived, I
had been imagining that the entire city of New Orleans would look
like a big haunted house, and I was very pleased to find that it does
fit that image quite well. As we rode in through the low, warm fog,
industrial towers of concrete and metal rose out of the fog on the
river. Willows and Oaks stretched their long, crooked branches out
over pathways and streets, filtering light through their leaves onto
the horribly ruptured sidewalks. Many of the trees that line the
streets here are over 500 years old, and have been designated
“historic,” so cannot be removed, even though their roots are
ripping up every sidewalk and street. In a city where drinking is
also a historic pastime as necessary to participate in as listening
to Jazz and eating Cajun food, this makes stumbling home drunk an
infinitely more difficult task.
The New Orleans Saints football team
are worshiped on a level that rivals any I have seen. As Pete and I
rode into town, the Saints/Falcons game was just about to start, and
people were out in droves wearing their team colors on every manner
of clothing imaginable. I realize now that this rendered an already
active, boisterous town a feeling of even more excitement and
celebration, and it was an enlivening atmosphere to ride through. We
left the bike path on St. Charles street, and happened to have to
ride through every famous historic district on our way to my friend
Ted's house in the Bywater neighborhood. Giant, old mansions line
the sides of St. Charles, with those 500 year old oaks hanging over
the streets. A streetcar line running the length of the city also
runs down the center of St. Charles, where a nice, green patch of
grass struggles to keep its place surrounding the busy tracks. Most
of the larger boulevards here have huge, green medians filled with
grass and old trees. Even the busy streets are still wide enough for
a bicycle to comfortably ride alongside the cars in the lane, even
when cars are parked all along the curb. It was a great way to enter
a great town. That night Ted, our host, joined Pete and I for a
couple of drinks at a bar near his house where people were watching
the game. We were inducted into the spirit of New Orleans football
pride, and we left at half time to get some sleep after an 88 mile
day on the bikes.
Since that day, Pete and I thoroughly
toured the French Quarter (established in 1718) on foot, which was
conveniently only a 15-20 minute walk from Ted's place. We entered
St. Louis Cathedral, Louis Armstrong Park, Jackson square (with a
great statue of Andrew Jackson on a horse rearing up), the French
Markets and last of all, Bourbon Street. We ate Po' boys, catfish,
barbeque, and street burritos, and listened to live brass bands,
bluegrass, jazz, funk, reggae, and rap.
One morning, we met up with my friend
Quinn, who happened to be taking her holidays in New Orleans with her
family from California. We ate the necessary beignets (like small,
square donuts smothered in piles of powdered sugar) while chatting at
Cafe du Monde. Later that night Pete and I met up with Quinn and her
sister Kelly for some good music and dancing. They were great
company..
The next night was much more crazy. We
had a calm morning of walking through the historic garden district,
trying to help an old man who's Prius had somehow become inoperable
just at the foot of his driveway (no success), and visiting historic
Lafayette cemetery. We then met up with my friend Laura after an
incredible Caribbean meal at the Rum House (no drinks for us, just
amazing food).
Laura has been in New Orleans for
several months now, after starting law school at Tulane University
earlier this fall. She has just finished her first semester (rumored
to be the most difficult), and was in the mood to show Pete and I a
good time on Pete's last night in town. So we hopped on the street
car into the French Quarter, and did up Bourbon street proper. Pete
was fairly intent on sampling the New Orleans-specific drinks, so we
shared some “hand grenades,” “hurricanes,” and a fair bit of
good old fashioned beer. Meanwhile, Laura took us on a tour of some
of the most famous locations along the strip, such as the 5th oldest
bar in America (Jean Lafitte's Blacksmith shop, established 1772) and
Pat O'Briens (where the “hurricane” was invented). We spent
significant portions of the night in a gay karaoke bar, and then
another more mainstream karaoke bar. We sang 4-non blondes What's
Up, and then Pete and Laura did
a rousing rendition of Lady Gaga's Poker Face. We
danced our butts off and had a blast!
After several
glasses of water and a good night's sleep, I woke up feeling
remarkably well. Pete and I ate a tasty brunch at a hip, modern
diner just down the street from Teds, and then we put him on the bus
to the airport.
That afternoon, I
got on the bike for a quick tour of the Lower Ninth Ward, the
neighborhood which was most damaged during hurricane Katrina. On my
way there, I crossed a large canal in which the water level was
higher than the ground level of the surrounding neighborhoods. Why
does this make sense?
The lower ninth
ward is still very much in a state of recovery. Lots of homes have
boarded up windows, crumbling foundations and roofs, or are simply
gutted. Most of the area, however is simply empty. Concrete
driveways lead to small piles of rubble, where houses used to be.
Grass is happy and healthy, growing over empty lots interspersed with
a mix of uber-modern green homes (apparently many of which were built
by Brad Pitt & friends) covered in solar panels; new mobile homes
on stilts, and old houses which have been or are in the process of
being rebuilt. Many of the older brick buildings seem to have
suffered the least, but they are few and far between.
I am now staying
with my friend Laura in Uptown, and will be hiking today in the
Barataria Preserve about 10 miles south of town. I hope to see
alligators and other interesting critters!