Booking
family travel for the March Break can be a daunting and expensive experience.
Dismayed at the prices of airfare to get from Toronto to Orlando, even with
connecting flights, I took the opportunity to cross another city off my bucket
list and headed, not long ago, to New Orleans, Louisiana. March
Break in many cities is an opportunity to reel in the tourists
at inflated rates, but in New Orleans, Mardi Gras is over,
and deals can be found from Ash Wednesday right through the March Break
and beyond. There's lots to see and do - ghost stories and
swamp tours, a world class aquarium and Imax theatre, horse and buggy
rides, voodoo shops and cemeteries - there is a lot more to New
Orleans than Bourbon Street, and plenty to entertain the
under 21 crowd too.
But for
a first time visit, typical tourist attractions will be high on your list,
and most can be accommodated by walking if you situate yourself in or near the
French Quarter. My then 12 year old son and I chose the New Orleans Courtyard
Hotel on North Rampart Street as our home base. Once a Victorian
mansion and private residence, today it features free wifi and a courtyard
pool. Only a short walk to Bourbon Street and the heart of the French Quarter,
the New Orleans Courtyard Hotel is close enough to make
wandering Bourbon Street your nightly entertainment.
And
entertaining, it is! Street performers, and buskers abound from kid
friendly magicians and musicians to the gold painted gentleman who stood
frozen with his middle finger extended - probably the highlight of
the 12 year old's trip. If you're worried a tween/teen may
restrict the adults in the party from imbibing a little of that New Orleans
"spirit", rest assured, drinks can be purchased from take out windows
along Bourbon, and enjoyed in plastic take-out cups.
We
spent our first evening on a walking ghost tour, something I always suggest, as
it helps you to orientate yourself, and pick places you might want to
revisit later. I highly recommend picking the French
Quarter Phantoms Ghost Tour. Their ticket pick up location has
changed from Flanagan's Pub to the Voodoo Lounge on North Rampart, but the two
for one Hurricane deal is still in effect, and you may score an awesome deal
off Groupon. Just under two hours, with a much needed pee break
midway, the tour explores some of the better known villains of the area,
such as the infamous Madame LaLaurie and her house of horrors, recently owned
by Nicholas Cage and rumoured to have been sold to Johnny Depp.
From
the balcony of this home, a young slave girl was reportedly chased until she
fell to her death. According to our Phantom Tours storyteller, tourists
regularly report to the police seeing a young girl fall from the balcony;
so often so, that the police no longer investigate. The locals and police
alike have learned to leave the ghosts well enough alone. Of course, if
you choose to stay at the Andrew Jackson hotel, you may find yourself the
unwitting victim of a few, long dead, pranksters. Apparently, the ghosts of
several children who perished in a fire when the Jackson hotel was a boys’
boarding school, amuse themselves turning lights and televisions on and off,
rearranging furniture and moving guests' clothing. Maybe not as unnerving as
staying at the Cornstalk hotel next door, where guests report finding photos of
themselves asleep taken with their own cameras.
Having
survived the evening (and the sleepless night which followed), we woke up
early the next morning for the first of two tours by Cajun
Encounters. The first, a city and cemetery tour, took us by bus
around the city. Highlights include the homes of Sandra Bullock, Anne Rice
and the Manning in the historic Gardens district, an emotional tour of the
lower Ninth Ward, still devastated some ten years after Hurricane Katrina, and
a walking tour of St Louis Cemetery.
This
tour provides a taste of New Orleans' rich and varied history and explains
the Spanish influence in architecture, the emergence of voodoo and the levee system.
And if you were ever curious about the origins of the expression "getting
the shaft" know that bodies left on slabs inside tombs only need one year
to decompose in New Orleans heat, before the bones can be pushed over the
edge with a long handled, stiff broom, to make room for the next occupant. Sort
of, rest in pieces.
Cajun
Encounters picks up and drops off from downtown hotels - we took advantage
of this and had the driver drop us off at the base of Canal Street. From there,
we took in the Audubon Aquarium of the Americas and an IMAX
showing of Hurricane on the Bayou. This was particularly meaningful
having just witnessed the ravages of Katrina, and as a prelude to our
upcoming trip to the Bayou. If you've got money just burning holes in your
pockets, be sure to check out the Backstage Penguin Pass, which entitles ticket
bearers to meet a penguin up close, and receive a penguin painting, painted by
a penguin. Say that three times fast.
Time to take a
rest? Enjoy a reasonably priced mule and buggy ride from Jackson Square and
then stop for a world famous beignet and café au lait. Next, hail a free
shuttle ride to Mardi Gras World and check out where and how
the parade floats are made.
Last, but not
least, on this far too short trip, was a swamp tour in the Bayou. Our second
trip with Cajun Encounters took us out to Honey Island
Swamp. Guided by well-educated local field guides, we set sail in small groups
to explore the wetlands and the fauna. Reptilian fauna. Hanging from trees
above our heads fauna. Holy crap those are snakes hanging from trees inches
above my head fauna. That kind. Also the long snout, large tooth, jaw
crushing, man eating kind. Lots of native fauna. And flora. Mossy, swampy,
spooky kinds of flora. A half hour but a world away from New Orleans. And then,
tying it all together, were the boats wrecks from Hurricane Katrina, still
lying where they were thrown, 10 years earlier.
We ended our trip
with a cab ride back to Louis Armstrong airport, past the abandoned Charity
Hospital. Friendly and chatty as most New Orleans natives are, the cab driver
related the story of the Hospital's abandonment, which can now be seen and
heard in a world class documentary that focuses on
the greed and corruption that followed in the wake of Katrina. Orlando may
be the most magical place on Earth, but New Orleans - emotional,
historical, spooky and raunchy - wins hands down, the title most
intriguing. Take a trip to the Big Easy; you won't be sorry you did.
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