may/june 2013
louisianalife.com
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contents IN EVERY ISSUE 8 From the Editor
26 Home
Lunch With Aunt Doris
A Place Called Perique
By errol laborde
This River Road Creole home is a gem among the mansions.
10 Barometer
By bonnie warren
A compendium of what’s hot and what’s not
30 Art
by Carolyn Kolb
Libby and Tess
12 Rural Life
An artist’s awakening By john r. kemp
Country Calories
18
Keeping the weight off is harder here.
34 Traveler
By melissa bienvenu
Scenic Route
14 Biz Bits
Cycles of life along the Creole Nature Trail By paul f. stahls jr.
Business news from around the state By kathy finn
16 Health
82 Lifetimes Our statewide calendar of events By Judi Russell
Medical news in Louisiana By eve kidd crawford
86 Great Louisiana Quiz High Water
18 Great Louisiana Chefs Miles Prescott Executive Chef of RioMar, New Orleans
20 State of the Plate Dining and Dancing Ruby’s Restaurant and Courtyard in Eunice
30
22 Traveling Gourmet Vine Time
Kermit Poling Shreveport maestro keeps the music coming. By megan hill
ON THE COVER: This crappie is just a small representation of the fish
In praise of the honest tomato
you can catch in Louisiana waters.
by stanley dry
PHOTOGRAPHED BY John N. Felsher
FEATURES
SPECIAL SECTIONS
38 Dropping a Line
72 Around Louisiana
A guide to freshwater fishing
Louisiana Life presents Around Louisiana, a section featuring the people and places of North Louisiana, Central Louisiana, Cajun Country, Baton Rouge and Plantation Country and Greater New Orleans.
43 Baseball’s Shrine Louisiana’s 4 Hall of Famers By Ryan Whirty
2 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
88 A Louisiana Life
By Ian McNulty
By John N. Felsher
34
By Errol Laborde
48 The Saga of the Original Louisiana Tiger Chatham Roberdeau Wheat By Ron Soodalter
By jeanne frois
special edition 53 Louisiana Life Travel Guide by judi russell
LouisianaLife may/june 2013 Volume 33 Number 3 Editor Errol Laborde MANAGING EDITOR Eve Kidd Crawford Art Director Tiffani Reding Amedeo Associate Editors Haley Adams, Sarah Ravits Contributing Editor Paul F. Stahls Jr. Food Editor Stanley Dry Home Editor Bonnie Warren INTERNS Elizabeth Heideman, Caroline Malouse sales manager Kathryn Beck Sanderson kathryn@louisianalife.com
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4 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
on the web louisianalife.com Louisiana Life Photo entry Are you an amateur, professional or “just for fun” photographer with some Louisiana photos to share? We want to hear from you! We want to see some great Louisiana photos, whether they’re of people, landscapes, food, culture or even animals. Don’t miss your chance to have your photo featured in the pages of our magazine for all of our readers to see. Send in your photos by going to myneworleans.com/Louisiana-Life/LouisianaLife-Photo-Contest/. Please note that the URL is case-sensitive.
Our readers’ photographs
january:
Street Entertainer: Mandy Clement of Jeanerette snapped a photo of this street entertainer on Royal Street in New Orleans in January 2013.
february:
Pelicans: Gayle Richard of Napoleonville spotted these pelicans on Grassy Lake in Napoleonville in January 2013.
?
what are you thinking? Send feedback about this issue to Managing Editor Eve Kidd Crawford at Eve@LouisianaLife.com. www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 7
from the editor
Lunch With Aunt Doris When I last had lunch with Aunt Doris, she was apologetic about what she had to offer. “This is all I have,” she said shyly. Then she placed on the table three pie pans: one filled with boudin, the other with sweet potatoes and the third with biscuits. She did not realize what a classic Louisiana meal she was serving. To her it was just everyday food. She
spicy sausage. (The biscuits are a great
probably thought I was just another silly
comfort food and can be used to make a
city person when I hovered over the table
boudin breakfast sandwich.)
inexplicably trying to take a picture with my cell phone. Aunt Doris lived in Moreauville, almost
Whenever I would call Dow, which wasn’t often enough, the conversation would always end with an inquiry
in the geographic center of the state.
of “When are you coming?” My
Her apartment was only a few blocks
answer was always the same: “soon.”
away from Louisiana Highway 1, which
Unfortunately the last time I gave that
cuts across the state diagonally from
answer, soon did not come soon enough.
Grand Isle to Shreveport. At Moreauville,
There is a field next to the cemetery.
Highway 1 is about halfway through its
In 2005, the year of Katrina and Rita,
run, bridging the boundary from French
the fields were snow-white with cotton.
dialect to the Southern drawl.
In more recent years there has been
Like most people in rural French
more profit in soybeans. Sweet potatoes
Louisiana, she had a nickname. She
remain as a steady crop grown not far
was called “Dow,” which had nothing
from places where each winter folks
to do with the industrial average or the
butcher pigs to prepare packaged meats
chemical company but was probably due
and to make hogshead cheese, cracklins
to a childhood pronunciation of “Doris.”
and sausages.
The name stuck. Life had given her some challenges.
My Christmas present from Aunt Doris was always the same. From
She was born with a hearing problem
the freezer of her refrigerator came a
that caused a speech impediment.
package of boudin brightly wrapped in
Later in life a tumor blinded her in one
holiday paper.
eye. Yet she persisted. For most of her
I had hoped that our lunch would
adult life, she had her own at-home
become a tradition; instead it is a
beautician business, but then one day,
memory. Her meal was special, though
she confessed, she was getting tired
she did not know it. The same can be
– and perhaps a little weary of country
said about her life. Through it all, she
neighbors showing up at 6 a.m. to get
remained consistent in loving her family
their hair done.
and in being a good person. Armed with
No one will ever confuse boudin for
little more than that, she faced life as
a health food, but sweet potatoes are
best as she could. In the end I would like
one of the most nutritious items of all.
to think that she won. n
The two complement each other as the sweet orange pulp neutralizes the 8 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
—Errol Laborde
barometer A compendium of what’s hot and what’s not in Louisiana By carolyn kolb ULL budget was also easily accessible, student Lanie
HOT
Heroes to Remember
He told the Bogalusa Daily News: “As soon as I saw the
Cook discovered, according
Louisiana Public Broadcasting
white raccoon in my trap,
to the Daily Advertiser.
has announced eight statewide
I grabbed my phone to call
Louisiana Young Heroes
my daddy [Kelton Breland].
Speaking in Tongues
of 2013. They all “excelled
I hung the phone up and
in the classroom, served
called my grandpa.” Kyle’s
The old 4th Brigade Combat
their community, inspired
mom, Patsy Breland, is a
Team, 10th Mountain Division’s
others through their deeds
first-grade teacher at Wesley
headquarters building in Fort
or strength of character
Ray Elementary School in
Polk is temporarily housing the
or show[ed] great courage
Varnado, so the newly caged
Defense Language Institute’s
in overcoming adversity,
raccoon was brought to her
Pashto and Dari Afghanistan
physical or otherwise, in their
classroom, and the pale,
and Pakistan Language
lives.” Those honored include
pink-eyed creature was the
Training Course. The five-
Hollie Fields, Carissa Fruge,
star of show and tell.
day-a-week, 16-week course
Henry Futch, Aamina Green,
The Louisiana Association
includes about 640 hours of
Madison Perri Martin, Hunner
of Fairs and Festivals has
language training, with the
Monceaux, Rachel Patteson
named the Bogalusa Blues and
goal of having one language-
and Maggie Elizabeth
Department of Wildlife and
Heritage Festival the associa-
enabled officer in every Army
Tortorich. Awards are
Fisheries has warned St.
tion’s New Event of the Year.
platoon. Cultural training is
co-presented by the Rotary
Mary Parish residents to
The festival also took first
included, as well, according to
Club of Baton Rouge and
take precautions to minimize
place for its poster, which
the Beauregard Daily News.
underwritten by ExxonMobil.
encounters with black bears.
featured artwork by BBHF
The program at Fort Polk could
Bears will forage for food
chair Malinda White, reported
become permanent, said Fred
in garbage cans, according
the Bogalusa Daily News.
S. Holt, a language training
to Catherine Siracusa, St.
detachment liaison with the
Mary Parish black bear
Lighten Up
Defense Language Institute
conflict officer, and Roddy
For Sunshine Week,
Foreign Language Center at
Matherne of Progressive
Presidio of Monterey, Calif.
Waste Solutions. Matherne
HOT
HOT
HOT
Can’t Be Blue About This!
a project of the American Society of News Editors drawing attention to open
NOT
Can You Bear This? The Louisiana
said his company now has
How Low Can You Cargo?
about 1,300 bear-proof cans
government laws, University
HOT
of Louisiana – Lafayette
Engineers are designing a
journalism students of
new $11 million landing system
professor Robert Buckman
for Baton Rouge Metropolitan
Pine High School senior
carts are not.” Siracusa has
asked public agencies for
Airport. The new system will
Kyle Breland, was taken
students from local 4-H clubs
basic public information.
enable planes to descend
aback when he found an
passing out information on
Some were cooperative;
farther before deciding
extremely rare albino raccoon
avoiding attracting bears,
most were not. “These clerks
whether to attempt to land
in a trap he’d set in Angie.
reported StMaryNow.com.
and their bosses need to be
or not, said Ralph Hennessy,
reminded that these records
the airport’s assistant director
belong to the people,”
of aviation. This is especially
Buckman noted. Student
important to cargo carriers,
Elizabeth Rose was lucky –
which the airport hopes to
the Lafayette Consolidated
attract as customers, the
Government city-parish
Advocate reported.
budget was available. The 10 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
in the parish, but “as we
HOT
Raccoon Rarity
keep on putting carts, they
An outdoorsman,
keep moving to where the
n
quotable “Newspaper columnists don’t retire. We ‘leave the paper.’ That makes retirement conform to our dramatic and romantic natures.” “Attic Salt,” Ed Cullen, the Advocate. (Cullen’s 41-year career at the Advocate ended with his March 10 column.)
rural life
fish and baked potatoes with
might find herself saying yes
plain, nonfat yogurt. Not only
to the elastic waistband.
did I eat such healthy fare, I
If I had to pick a turning
had actually convinced myself
point in the demise of my
that it was pretty darn tasty.
self-control, I would probably
I typically drank water with
have to blame Wookie.
a slice of lemon or 1 percent
Wookie is a living saint and
milk or something sugar-free.
amazing Southern cook who
I was stingy with the butter.
worked for my in-laws and
My refrigerator was stocked
helped raise my husband and
with Lean Cuisines and
his six siblings here on the
low-calorie everything. I
farm. When I arrived on the
attended an aerobics class
farm in 1992, Wookie was still
semi-regularly at a fitness
preparing full-blown, meat-
club in the basement of
and-vegetable lunches every
my Midtown Atlanta office
day for my father-in-law, my
building. I was no Jane
husband, various relatives
Fonda, but I did all right – all
and the men who worked on
right enough, at least, that
the farm. These midday smor-
my future spouse did not
gasbords featured dishes
run screaming when he first
such as chicken pie, fried
spotted me on the beach.
catfish, fried chicken, pot
It was shortly after this, I
roast and creamed potatoes
can see now, that everything
with homemade biscuits and
went to pot. In retrospect,
sweet tea. High-calorie and
it’s apparent that several
high-everything-else-that-
major life changes ganged up
is-bad-for-you, the noon
to unfairly conspire against
meal was intended to stick to
me and my bathroom scale.
the ribs and give a manual
First, my metabolism turned
laborer fuel for the rest of
30. Then I moved from the
the day. It was also a social
skinny-obsessed city to the
event and a reward for a job
comfortably plump country.
well-done. Given the choice
Keeping the weight off is harder here
At the same time, I left behind
of eating a lonely, sensible
By Melissa Bienvenu
a culture of comparative
lunch or joining in the daily
restraint (Atlanta) for one
fun and fellowship at the
of bacchanalian abandon
main farmhouse, what choice
conducive to swimwear
(Louisiana). Finally, I gave
did I really have? I could
country, I would look much
readiness. I’m referring to
up the me-focused single
hardly risk offending my new
better in a bathing suit. I
Atlanta, but really I could be
life for marriage – marriage
in-laws, now could I?
comfort myself with this
talking about any place that
to a working farmer whose
thought whenever swimsuit
had embraced 20th-century
normal weekday lunches
lunches didn’t single-
season rolls around. It
attitudes about diet and
resembled Sunday dinner on
handedly undermine my
certainly isn’t my fault.
exercise, any town where the
the grounds and whose ideas
healthy habits. They were
restaurants served something
about healthy eating were
just symbolic of a completely
years ago – while, ironically,
besides fried chicken and
completely at odds with mine.
different mind-set that I
wearing a two-piece on a
vegetables floating in pork fat.
With so much stacked against
found myself up against in
At the time, I ate a lot of
her, the most disciplined
the country. My new husband
steamed broccoli and broiled
person (which I am not)
was not only accustomed
Country Calories If I didn’t live in the
When I met my husband 23
Florida beach – I lived in a culture that was far more 12 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
Of course, these long-ago
to eating like this every day
yogurt stuff, either. We’re
best of it, joining the health
always walk – we have a
(and active enough to get
talking Blue Bell, people.
club once or twice over
mile of traffic-free dirt road
away with it), he scoffed
Hey, who is a dairy
the years but never really
right here on the farm.
making it stick.
Unfortunately, walking
at the notion that diet food
farmer’s wife to look askance
could ever be better for you
at ice cream? Again, I cannot
than real food. In his book,
be held responsible.
These days, we do have
around the farm just reminds
fitness clubs that offer fun
me of all the repairs we need
classes, but alas, I face
to make and the projects we
than artificial sweeteners.
before my clothes started
another obstacle. Every
need to finish, and everyone
Margarine was “a bunch of
shrinking. My first instinct
time I mention joining a
knows stress is not good
chemicals,” and diet sodas
was to exercise, but that
health club, my husband –
for you. I could avoid these
reminded him of “diesel fuel.”
was easier said than done
perhaps remembering all the
unpleasant thoughts by
He also happened to be a
when the closest thing in
membership dollars gone to
walking at the fairgrounds
dairy farmer who had grown
town to a fitness club was
waste in the past – suggests
in town like other people do,
up drinking milk straight
an unattended room full of
I can get in shape right here
but how silly would it be to
from the cow. His attitude
exercise equipment in the
on the farm. If I really want
waste gas driving to town
about reduced-fat milk was
back of a hair salon. For a
to take off some pounds, he
when I can walk right here
that I was welcome to drink it
highly motivated person,
insists, he can put me to work
on the farm? Clearly, this is a
if I liked that sort of thing, but
such a setup would be more
hauling hay and cleaning
no-win situation.
as far as he was concerned,
than adequate. But I wasn’t
fence rows any time I want.
whole milk was far more
a highly motivated person.
All I have to do is say the
depressed about it, but why
nutritious. Whole milk, which
I needed something fun
word. When he puts it that
beat myself up? I’m finally at
I reluctantly gave in to, was
and group-oriented, peer
way, I realize I’m probably
peace with the fact that you
just a gateway dairy product.
pressure, something where
too old to take up aerobics
can’t live where I live, eat
Before I knew it, I was also
my absence would be noted,
anyway. Probably best if I
sensibly and exercise on a
joining Harvey in his nightly
something like the aerobics
just drop the whole health
regular basis. Thank God I’m
ice cream ritual, and we’re
classes I took in Atlanta.
club idea.
a country girl. Otherwise I’d
not talking that low-fat frozen
Nevertheless, I made the
sugar was a healthier choice
Naturally, it wasn’t long
Then again, I could
I suppose I should be
have no excuse whatsoever. n
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 13
biz bits Business news from around the state By kathy finn
Announcements of
to produce plastics, textiles,
new projects and business
paint and plywood. The plant
expansions continue to occur
is expected to employ 63
regularly across Louisiana.
workers with a spinoff impact
Here are a few highlights of
of 375 additional jobs.
the past few months.
Groundbreaking for a new culinary arts instruction building at Nicholls State University
Jobs on the way in Pointe Coupee LETTSWORTH – A Baton
Belgian company to hire 200 in Capital City BATON ROUGE – A Belgium-
and development space,
Rouge native brought good
based logistics company has
employees and vendors can
experience in building giant
news to Pointe Coupee Parish
announced plans to build a
collaborate on new offerings
fuel tanks for space shuttles
with the announcement that
$150 million plastics storage,
for CenturyLink customers.
comes in handy as Lockheed
BioNitrogen Corp. of Doral,
custom packaging and distri-
Completion of the technology
Martin Corp. invests $3
Fla., plans to invest $1.25
bution facility for producers
center and previously
million to retrofit its eastern
billion to develop five plants
of petrochemical products in
announced projects will push
New Orleans plant where it
near Lettsworth to convert
Baton Rouge. Officials with
CenturyLink’s statewide
soon will produce liquefied
agricultural waste into
Katoen Natie USA say the
annual payroll past $200
natural gas tanks. The 90-foot-
fertilizer. Company President
plant will employ about 200
million, with some 2,600
long cryogenic tanks initially
Bryan Kornegay Jr., who
people at polymer terminals,
people employed in the
will store and carry the gas as
grew up in the capital city,
warehouses and distribution
Monroe area by 2016.
fuel for the maritime industry.
said the plants would employ
facilities that will support
The work will employ about
some 260 people in operations
petrochemical and specialty
170 people. The combined
that use tree scraps and waste
chemical producers in the
activity will nearly fill the
from sawmills and sugar cane
region. The company’s plans
Culinary institute preserves past, future THIBODAUX – A new culinary
Michoud Assembly Facility,
bagasse to produce nitrogen-
include developing tie-ins
arts instruction building at
whose future appeared dim
based fertilizer for U.S.
to the Kansas City Southern
Nicholls State University
a few years ago when the
farmers. The company aims to
Railway and Canadian
named for one of Louisiana’s
last space shuttle tank was
begin construction next year.
National Railroad, potentially
best-known chefs aims to
becoming one of the few
teach future generations
facilities of its kind with dual
about the art of Cajun
railway access.
and Creole cooking while
A tank is a tank, Lockheed Martin says NEW ORLEANS – Its
completed.
Industry bulks up along river corridor ST. JAMES PARISH – The
Where natural gas morphs into gasoline LAKE CHARLES – Plans by Houston-based G2X Energy
a network operations center and spaces where
preparing students for jobs.
already-bustling industrial
to convert natural gas to
corridor along the lower
gasoline could mean nearly
CenturyLink adds elbow room MONROE – North Louisiana
Mississippi River recently got
250 new jobs in southwestern
economic stalwart
of skilled workers and
yet another boost from the
Louisiana. The company
CenturyLink recently broke
perpetuate the state’s culinary
announcement that South
recently announced it will
ground on the Fortune 500
heritage.
Louisiana Methanol will
build a $1.3 billion plant at
company’s new Technology
build a $1.3 billion plant in
the Port of Lake Charles,
Center of Excellence,
feature four teaching
St. James Parish, across the
taking advantage of the
a 250,000-square-foot
kitchens, a bistro-style
river from the Nucor Corp.
Calcasieu River Ship Channel
expansion of the telecom-
restaurant with two dining
steel plant currently under
for distribution of the end
munications company’s
rooms, a cultural research
construction. The methanol
product. G2X is leasing 200
corporate headquarters in
center, classrooms and a
plant, billed as the largest in
acres at the site and says it
Monroe. The project will
commissary. The state has
North America, will convert
will have the flexibility of
help fulfill the company’s
committed $8.1 million of the
natural gas into some 5,000
shipping gasoline by pipeline
2011 announcement of an
$12.6 million total cost, with
metric tons of methanol
or ocean-going vessels.
800-job expansion. The new
the university supporting the
center will house research
remainder of the cost.
each day. Methanol is used 14 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
The Chef John Folse Culinary Institute will give Louisiana’s hospitality industry a pipeline
The new building will
n
Photo courtesy of Louisiana Seafood Board
health By eve kidd crawford Rare Surgery Saves Newborn SHREVEPORT – In late
mother and her child.”
February, Brendicianna
technicians gathered in a
Turner was having what was
large surgery suite at LSU
supposed to be a routine
Medical Center on Feb. 27.
ultrasound when doctors
The OB team first delivered
noticed that her son, who
the head and partial
was at full term, had an
shoulders of the baby via
underdeveloped jaw. “I
cesarean. Next, Ghali and
a press release, Lafayette
thought I might have seen
his team worked to establish
General Medical Center
only just a little tiny bit of
an airway – while the baby
Chief Operating Officer
bone,” obstetrician and
is still receiving oxygen
Patrick W. Gandy accepted
Lakeview Regional To Offer Emergency Transfers COVINGTON – In collabora-
clinical professor of OB Rose
from the mother, there is a
the award, saying, “Our
tion with Lagniappe Transfer
Brouillette said in a press
90-minute window to put
process is among the best in
Center, Lakeview Regional
release. “It was very bad.”
a tube down the baby’s
the state because of the team
Medical Center now offers
tiny throat to establish an
effort from our incredible
emergency transfer services.
Ghali, an oral and maxillofa-
airway. After Ghali was
physicians and staff here at
The two entities will work
cial surgeon who specializes
unable to get a tube in, he
Lafayette General.”
together to coordinate all
in craniofacial deformities.
and his team performed a
LOPA said that in 2012
“Due to a severe lower jaw
tracheotomy instead. The
Lafayette General had the
patients from one health care
deformity, the infant would
time from the start of the
third-most organ donations
facility to another.
not have been able to breathe
cesarean to the completion
in the state and the most
on his own …” Ghali said.
of the tracheotomy was less
among hospitals with fewer
release, the ability to make
than 450 beds.
these transfers illustrates
Brouillette called Dr. G.E.
In all, more than 50 doctors, nurses and medical
aspects of transferring
According to a press
Together, Brouillette and
than 10 minutes. After the
Ghali decided that the baby’s
tracheotomy, the obstetrics
best chance for survival was
team finished delivering
Bank honored Lafayette
to outlying areas; when a
a rare procedure known
Donavan Turner, and he was
General with its Hospital
patient requires a higher level
as Ex-Utero Intrapartum
immediately taken to the
of the Year award for its
of care, Lagniappe Transfer
Treatment, or EXIT, which
Neonatal Intensive Care Unit.
“exemplary support and care
Center will work with the
to grieving families as they
patient’s current facility to
make end-of-life decisions
ensure a safe and fast transfer
for their loved ones.” In 2012,
to Lakeview Regional.
umbilical cord. Fewer than six
Lafayette General Exceeds Average of Organ Donation LAFAYETTE – April was
57 families make cornea
Lakeview Regional, said
of these surgeries have been
National Donate Life Month,
and tissue donations, which
that in situations such as
performed in Shreveport; it
and Lafayette General
in turn helped 62 other
trauma, cardiac, surgical and
was Ghali’s third. Only a few
Medical Center held a press
families receive the gift of
stroke-related conditions,
medical centers in the country
conference in the lobby to
sight. “Saving and restoring
the availability of efficient
perform EXIT procedures at all.
celebrate “donor heroes”
eyesight falls in line with
patient transfer is critical.
and honor its commitment
Lafayette General’s mission
“We understand acute
the safest way to secure the
to and involvement in
‘To Restore, Maintain and
patient care and are sensitive
child’s airway,” Ghali said.
registered organ, tissue and
Improve Health,’” Gandy said.
to the needs of the family, as
“With the help of a well-
cornea donations.
Lafayette General flew the
well,” Kolman said. “When a
allows doctors to perform life-saving surgery while the baby is still in the womb and attached to the mother via the
“The EXIT procedure was
organized team consisting of
The Louisiana Organ
In addition, Southern Eye
Lafayette General helped
the hospital’s commitment
Bret Kolman, CEO of
Donate Life flag in front of
patient’s condition warrants
obstetrics and gynecology,
Procurement Agency, or
the hospital for the month of
a transfer to Lakeview from
oral and maxillofacial surgery,
LOPA, presented Lafayette
April in honor of Acadiana’s
another facility, we are
anesthesiology, neonatology,
General with the Medal of
organ and tissue donors,
able to offer this transfer
respiratory therapy, nursing
Honor for exceeding the
transplant recipients and
service. It reinforces our
and operating room
national average of organ
their families.
commitment to the highest
personnel, we were able
donation with a consent rate
level of health care possible
to safely care for both the
of 95 percent. According to
for our community.”
16 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
n
great louisiana chefs Nikkei Sauce: 1 tablespoon soy sauce 1 teaspoon aji amarillo paste 2 teaspoons Dijon mustard 1 1/2 teaspoons fresh-squeezed lime juice Combine all ingredients in a mixing bowl, and whisk together. For the Chayote-Coconut Relish: 1 chayote (mirliton) 1/2 cup red bell pepper, seeded and finely julienned 1/4 cup red onion, finely julienned 2 tablespoons coconut milk 2 tablespoons canned grated coconut 1 tablespoon white vinegar 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil 1 teaspoon fresh ginger, grated Salt, pepper and chile flakes, to taste Cut the chayote into quarters. Cut out the core, and slice the remainder on a mandoline at about the width of a house key. Combine all ingredients, and refrigerate for 20 minutes.
Miles Prescott Executive Chef of RioMar, New Orleans
Chef Miles Prescott earned his cooking chops working for some of the country’s top chefs. He is now serving as the executive chef at RioMar, where he continues to build upon his deep interest in Spanish-influenced cuisine.
Louisiana Black Drum With Gulf Shrimp, Maduro Relleno, Chayote-Coconut Slaw and Salsa Criolla For the relleno: 4 maduros (ripe plantains), peeled 5 Louisiana Gulf shrimp (36/40 count), peeled and cleaned 1 1/2 tablespoons Nikkei sauce (recipe follows) Place the plantains between two sheets of parchment paper, and pound them flat. Form the mash into a rectangle. Poach the shrimp in boiling water for 2 minutes. Cool in an ice bath. When chilled, finely chop the shrimp. Remove the top sheet of parchment paper. Spread the chopped shrimp in a line across the center of the rectangle of mashed plantain. Pour the Nikkei sauce all over the mash. Using the bottom parchment paper as a sushi roller, fold the mash over the shrimp and form into a tube resembling a sushi roll. Twist in the ends to pack the roll tightly. Refrigerate for at least 1 hour.
For the Salsa Criolla: 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil 1 red onion, julienned 1 1/2 tablespoons aji amarillo paste 2 tablespoons white vinegar 2/3 cups of fresh-squeezed lemon juice 1/8 bunch fresh cilantro Salt and pepper, to taste Sweat the red onion in extra-virgin olive oil over low heat until translucent. Put the softened onion and olive oil along with all of the ingredients except cilantro into the blender. Blend until smooth. Add the cilantro, and pulse a few times until the cilantro is chopped up. Season to taste, and refrigerate. For the fish: 3 tablespoons cooking oil 7-ounce fillet of black drum, with blood line and pin bones removed Salt and pepper, to taste 1 teaspoon butter Preheat the oven to 500 degrees. Add the cooking oil to a large sauté pan, and heat until the oil begins to smoke slightly. Season the fish with salt and pepper. Lay the fish into the pan. Cook for 30 seconds, and then add the butter. Immediately move the pan into the preheated 500 degree oven. Cook for 5 minutes. Fillet should be nearly cooked through but still a little raw on top. Remove the fish from the pan, and place it on a resting rack. To assemble: Place the relleno in a 350 degree fryer for 4 minutes. Remove, and sprinkle with salt. Cut the relleno in half, and place in the center of the serving plate. Encircle the relleno with salsa criolla. Reheat the sauté pan. Place the fish, raw side down, into the pan, and finish cooking it. Remove it from the pan, and place it, brown side up, on top of the relleno. Top with the chayotecoconut relish. n cheryl gerber photograph
18 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 19
state of the plate
Dining and Dancing Ruby’s Restaurant and Courtyard in Eunice | Cajun dancing is
By Ian McNulty
Ruby’s is a family-style
what’s on the plate that usually
hungry work, though happily
Cajun restaurant where
wherever people are doing a
people tend to leave with
waltz or two-step, good food is
leftovers and where it’s hard
(seafood or chicken-and-
usually nearby.
to imagine anyone leaving
sausage), which are joined
less than stuffed. It’s a place
by an uncommon seafood
on Saturday evenings in
for appetizers the whole table
chowder mixing oysters and
downtown Eunice, that farm
needs to split, for straight-
shrimp in a white base as
town and hub of Acadian
forward steaks, for poor
thick as a sauce. You won’t
culture out on the Cajun
boys and for platters of local
be surprised by fried gator
prairie. Each week, people
seafood with étouffée used as
and catfish on this appetizer
line up in front of the vintage
a sauce and cheese applied
list, though the charbroiled
Liberty Theatre for tickets to
by the fistful.
oysters and barbecued shrimp
That’s certainly the case
commands full attention. There’s a choice of gumbos
the Rendez-Vous des Cajuns.
This Ruby’s was opened
This long-running live show,
last summer by the owners
style than we usually find on
broadcast on local radio and
of Ruby’s Café, a diner just
the prairie. But what really
television, has musical guests;
around the corner. The
stand out are the almond
bilingual commentary from the
restaurant is new, but its
shrimp, which are coated in a
evening’s host; and a format
address has quite a history.
spicy-sweet Asian-style glaze
following in the tradition
Until recently it was called
and arrive on a platter of slaw
of the Grand Ole Opry, the
Nick’s on Second, and Nick’s
strewn with slivered almonds.
Louisiana Hayride and even A
went back to 1937 when Nick
Fried mushrooms, stuffed
Prairie Home Companion.
Ferro and Blackie Guillory
with seafood dressing until
first opened it. Initially, this
they’re the size of golf balls,
performance wraps up
Nick’s was a barroom where
also make an appearance.
(around 7:30 p.m.), people
men would convene for
start looking for dinner.
games of dominoes and the
platters, a few pastas and
These days, that leads many
Cajun card game bourré.
entrée salads and those steaks
After this early evening
of them just two blocks up
The courtyard referenced in
are a little more New Orleans-
Fried shrimp and catfish
and poor boys make up a lot
Second Street, the zigzagging
the name is a mid-size events
of the menu, while some of
main drag, past a pool hall,
space attached to Ruby’s main
the specialties plumb the great
a coffee shop and some
dining room, a long, narrow
contemporary Cajun zeal
storefront offices, to Ruby’s
space with a sort of homey
for mixing various kinds of
Restaurant and Courtyard.
country store look. But it’s
seafood and capping it all with
20 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
cheese and rich sauces. Both the seafood enchilada and the seafood crêpes emit a blend of plump shrimp and sweet crab bound up with enough creamy goodness to make these fillings resemble a seafood dip. Meanwhile, the Seafood Dot brings big fried shrimp curled over a casserole dish of molten, bubbling shrimpand-crab au gratin. A slab of grilled red snapper gets the au gratin treatment, too. This is not exactly delicate cuisine. Instead, Ruby’s menu sits at the intersection of abundant seafood and an exuberant approach to dressing it up for hungry diners. That makes it one Cajun rendezvous you shouldn’t miss. Ed. Note: With this issue we introduce “State of the Plate,” which will provide reviews and commentary on worthy restaurants throughout the state. Ian McNulty has written about food for several publications and also appears on television and radio. His books include Louisiana Rambles, a guidebook to the state. n
Ruby’s Restaurant and Courtyard 123 S. Second St., Eunice (337) 550-7665 Lunch Monday-Friday, dinner Wednesday-Saturday Thomas Trosclair photographs
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 21
traveling gourmet
Vine Time In praise of the honest tomato By Stanley Dry
It’s tomato season again, and for the next couple of months, we can indulge
what might have been. But when you taste an honest
one of our favorite passions.
tomato – an old variety that
But cookbooks are often
has ripened on the vine, with a
confusing for those of us who
taste that holds sweetness and
live in Louisiana. I can’t count
acidity in perfect balance – all
how many times I’ve read the
those memories come flooding
admonition that a recipe should
back and you think that there
only be made in late summer
could be nothing finer, more
when tomatoes are in peak
delicious or awe-inspiring than
season. That’s good advice
that warm tomato eaten out of
for those who live in northern
hand. For the brief time when
sections of the country, but by
our tomatoes are in season,
then our weather will be too hot
you eat them throughout the
for tomatoes. So now is the time
day for their utter delicious-
to seize the day.
ness – and perhaps with a hope
Proust had a madeleine to jog his memory, but if your parents or a neighbor tended
of recapturing the pleasures of your past. For the most part, no recipes
a garden, your muse is likely a
are needed in order to enjoy
ripe red tomato that you twisted
local tomatoes. All you need
off the vine and ate on the spot,
is some coarse salt and, if you
juice dripping off your chin
wish, a few grinds of the pepper
and running down your arm. A
mill. Or make a sandwich with
sprinkle of salt would have been
crusty bread, mayonnaise and
a welcome addition, but since
sliced tomatoes. Or build your
you were sweating profusely
sandwich on French bread
from the heat, your lips, which
liberally doused with olive oil
were already salty, probably
and layered with tomatoes, fresh
provided all the seasoning you
mozzarella and basil leaves. Or,
needed.
yet again, combine tomatoes
The details in those memories
with olive oil and the cucumbers
either grow dim or else they
and bell peppers that are also in
multiply with imagined embel-
season for an utterly delicious
lishments over the years, but
and refreshing salad.
run-of-the-mill commercial
eugenia uhl photograph
sadness and disappointment for
But when you have an
tomatoes picked green and
abundance of tomatoes from the
ripened with gas aren’t sufficient
garden or the farmers market,
to call up the past. There is
there are many tasty ways to
neither joy nor memory in
make the most of your bounty.
a supermarket tomato, only
Here are a few of them.
.
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 23
Tomatoes Stuffed With Crabmeat
Tomato Pie
A quick and easy way to enjoy two of the season’s tastiest ingredients. No cooking required.
A savory pastry topped with fresh herbs, this simple dish is in tune with the season.
4 medium tomatoes 2 cups crabmeat 6 tablespoons mayonnaise 4 teaspoons chopped parsley 4 teaspoons snipped chives 2 teaspoons lemon juice Coarse salt and freshly ground black pepper Cayenne pepper
1 cup all-purpose flour 1/2 teaspoon salt 6 tablespoons cold butter 3 to 4 tablespoons ice-cold water 1 to 3 ripe tomatoes, depending on size 1 tablespoon olive oil Pinch coarse salt 3 tablespoons snipped chives 1/4 cup flat Italian parsley leaves 10 to 12 basil leaves
Cut off the tops of the tomatoes, and, using a small spoon, scoop out the pulp and seeds. Lightly salt the tomatoes, and turn them upside-down on paper towels to drain for 30 minutes. Combine the crabmeat, mayonnaise, parsley, chives and lemon juice. Season to taste with salt, black pepper and cayenne. Stuff the tomatoes with crabmeat, mounding the tops. Serves 4.
Tomato Fritters The South is well-known for its devotion to fried green tomatoes, but ripe tomatoes can also be battered and fried. The result, which is very different from frying the green variety, is quite delicious in its own right. 4 medium, firm tomatoes 1 cup low-gluten, self-rising flour, such as White Lily 2 egg yolks, beaten 1 cup cold sparkling water or club soda Vegetable oil for frying Coarse salt and freshly ground black pepper Slice the tomatoes a half-inch thick, and, using a small spoon, remove the seeds and soft pulp. Place the tomato slices between paper towels to dry. Combine the flour, egg yolks and sparkling water, and mix lightly with a fork. The batter will be lumpy. Pour oil about a quarter-inch deep in a frying pan, and heat. Dip the tomato slices in the batter, and fry, without crowding, until browned, about 90 seconds. Turn the fritters, and cook on the other side until browned, about 1 minute. Remove the fritters, and drain on paper towels. Repeat with the remaining tomato slices, adding additional oil if needed. Season with salt and pepper. Serves 4.
24 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
In a mixing bowl, whisk the flour and salt to combine. Cut the butter into small pieces, and add it to the bowl. Using a pastry cutter or two knives, cut the butter into the flour until it resembles coarse meal. Add the water 1 tablespoon at a time, mixing it in with a fork, until dough forms. Turn the dough out onto a floured surface, form into a ball, and press into a disc. Wrap in wax paper or plastic wrap, and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes or overnight. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Slice the tomatoes a half-inch thick, and place the tomato slices between paper towels to dry. On a floured surface, roll out the dough to fit an 8- or 9-inch pie pan. Position the dough in the pan, and cut off excess dough. Place the tomato slices in the pan to cover the dough. Bake on the bottom shelf of the preheated oven until the crust is nicely browned, about 20 to 25 minutes. Remove the pie to a cooling rack for 20 to 30 minutes. Drizzle the tomatoes with olive oil, and sprinkle with coarse salt. Scatter the chives, parsley and basil over the tomatoes. Serve warm or at room temperature. Serves 6.
Maque Choux Sometimes written as “maquechou” or “maque-choux,” the origins of this dish are as uncertain as its spelling, and I have yet to see a convincing explanation for the name. Regardless, it is a delicious way to use the tomatoes, corn and bell peppers that are in season now. Many families make it in bulk and freeze portions for the coming year. 4 tablespoons butter 1 large onion, chopped 2 cloves garlic, minced 1 bell pepper, seeded and chopped 4 cups corn 2 medium tomatoes, chopped Coarse salt and cayenne pepper In a heavy casserole, melt the butter and cook the onion, garlic and bell pepper until softened, about 5 minutes. Add the corn and tomatoes; season with salt and cayenne; cover; and simmer, stirring occasionally, until the corn is tender, about 10 minutes. Adjust seasonings. Serves 4 to 6.
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 25
home
A Place Called Perique This River Road Creole home is a gem among the mansions. By Bonnie Warren | Photographed by Craig Macaluso
Michael Hopping
was built some time between
cotton and perique tobacco
has a special apprecia-
house the first time I saw it,”
1835 and 1840. Florian and
were grown here. There
tion for his historic Creole
says the landscape designer,
Julie Brignac purchased it in
was even a sugar mill on the
raised home that hugs the
who is well-known as a
1863 at a sheriff’s sale. Here
property for over 100 years,
Mississippi River in Paulina,
historical authority on the
the couple raised 15 children
and records show that it also
a quaint community in St.
gardens of Louisiana. “I could
and operated a successful
had its own cotton gin.
James Parish just 8 miles
tell it was a fine authentic
plantation. Only a few other
upriver from San Francisco
structure. Even the enormous
owners surface in the history
before Hurricane Katrina
Plantation. Hopping’s home
hand-hewn blocks of cypress
of the property.
and signed a purchase
isn’t a huge mansion in the
supporting the house were
“I fell in love with this
“I found the property just
“Although it was always
agreement two weeks before
genre of some of the other
intriguing to me. After years
a small operation compared
the destructive hurricane hit.
plantations that front the
of searching for just the right
to the grand River Road
The sale was delayed because
Mississippi. Yet it boasts
historic house to purchase, I
plantations, it’s every bit as
the owner’s home in New
just as much history and
knew this was the one.”
much a plantation as the big
Orleans had major damage
ones,” Hopping explains.
from Katrina and the family
“Over the years sugar cane,
moved to Paulina until they
importance as its grand sisters. 26 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
Located in a pastoral setting of 6 acres, the home
found another house to
he says earnestly, “and I
purchase 15 months later. I
wanted to take my time and
had to wait until November
do everything just right.”
2006 to actually go to the act of sale.” Once Hopping owned
Today Perique is a showplace on the historic River Road. “I have no
the property, he decided
regrets about purchasing
to rename it Perique after
this house,” Hopping says.
the tobacco crop that had
“I still marvel at the fine
thrived on the land. “Locals
bones of the building. It is
called the property ‘Little
solid to the core, and while
Texas’ because it was said
the renovation was a great
that a Texas regiment
undertaking, it is definitely
camped there during the
the house I always wanted
Civil War,” he says. “The
to own.”
name was local lore that I
Standing on the levee
was never able to substan-
separating the property
tiate, so I took the liberty of
from the Mississippi River,
giving it a new name.”
Perique presents a perfect
It has taken six years
picture of the past. Cows
for Hopping to completely
graze in the pasture beyond
restore the house and
the historic house, further
furnish it in keeping with
adding to the picture-
the period. “I love the
perfect pastoral setting.
simplicity of this house,”
“There’s a special serenity
FACING PAGE: Located in a pastoral setting on 6 acres fronting historic River Road in Paulina, Perique, a raised Creole plantation home, was built between 1835 and 1840. TOP: Michael Hopping BOTTOM: Appointed with heirlooms collected over the years, the dining room adjoins the drawing room.
. www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 27
TOP: Furnished in fine antiques, the study opens onto the broad gallery. BOTTOM: The view from the front door of the drawing room shows the lush lawn, front gate and picket fence. Decorated in keeping with the period of the house, the room displays the timelessness of the home. FACING PAGE, TOP: The historic bed in the master bedroom came from Bocage Plantation. An antique black teddy bear has a place of honor on the bed. FACING PAGE, BOTTOM: Although the kitchen is new, Hopping wanted it to blend seamlessly with the rest of the house. The 1795 table is like the ones used in the Ursuline Convent. 28 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
here that I enjoy,” Hopping
and I will finally have my
will be something simple
rocking chair on the porch
says. “The only excitement
garden in place. I know it
and in keeping with the
with a cup of coffee and
around here is when we
is strange for a landscape
serene setting. There isn’t
marvel at my good fortune
build bonfires on the levee
designer to only have a
any need to be in a hurry
to own Perique.”
to celebrate Christmas.”
sweeping lawn, but I am
here. Life is easy. The birds
And he hastens to add:
not in a hurry to do a
sing, the camellia bushes
at Perique, call (225)
“Come back in a few years,
garden, and when I do, it
bloom, and I sit in a
802-2141. N
For tours or functions
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 29
art first. She preferred to paint figures. Then came Italy and its architecture, food, villages and nuances of life. Although her eyes often scanned the Italian countryside, she truly didn’t see its beauty until a 1979 train ride across northern Italy. Her eyes and thoughts were buried in Hardy’s dark novel Tess of the D’Urbervilles when she came upon a passage describing the sun-blazed fields and the dark, brooding English countryside. She went on to read of a valley where the “atmosphere beneath is languorous, and is so tinged with azure that what artists call the middle distance partakes also of that hue, while the horizon beyond is of the deepest ultramarine.” She looked up from the book and through the train window saw for the first time the beauty of the Italian landscape. Since that awakening on the train, Johnson has created an impressive body of paintings, exploring both the Italian and South Louisiana landscapes, many of which can be found in corporate collections and museums such as the New Orleans Museum of Art, the LSU Museum of Art and the Louisiana Art & Science
Libby and Tess
Museum in Baton Rouge.
An artist’s awakening | By John R. Kemp
but eventually create a sense
Her work strives to capture the drama between heavily clouded and roiling skies and dark wooded landscapes that seem menacing at first of peace. “I immediately started
“Behind him the hills
colourless.” In this simple line
to paint landscapes, Johnson
exploring landscape ideas
are open, the sun blazes down
published in 1891, the 19th-
turned to her brushes and
when I got home, and I am
upon fields so large as to give
century British novelist and
imagination. Born and raised
still at it,” she says, reflecting
an unenclosed character to
poet Thomas Hardy changed
in Baton Rouge, Johnson was
upon that special train trip. “I
the landscape, the lanes are
the life of Baton Rouge artist
keenly aware of the region’s
currently concentrate more
white, the hedges low and
Libby Johnson.
varied landscape. But as an
on my home environment.
artist, it didn’t interest her at
The darkness and mystery of
plashed, the atmosphere 30 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
Where Hardy used words
the landscape interests me more now.” From early childhood, Johnson wanted to be an artist. “I asked for an oil painting set for my 10th birthday,” she recalls. “When I got it, I sat down to do a masterful Dutch portrait in the tradition of Rembrandt. When all I came up with was a canvas full of muddy globs of paint, I became upset, and my mother found a teacher for me. I studied with Henrietta Joseph Yoder for a good while and learned the art of painting portraits.” She later continued her studies at LSU where she received bachelor’s and master’s degrees in art. In graduate school, the
Orleans; and Florence, Italy.
taught me a great deal by the
her to explore her art in
acclaimed Louisiana artist
During those travels, various
way she splinters light on
rural landscapes of Italy and
and art professor Robert
artists past and present
objects and how she could
South Louisiana. “I crave
Warrens pushed her to be
have influenced her work.
turn objects into shimmering
the experience of other
more innovative in her work.
“I learned to paint Italian
pieces of separate abstract
places,” she says. “But here,
Another professor, Edward
landscapes by looking at
shapes and colors. Edward
where there is always a
Pramuk, “helped me bust out
those surrounding the figures
Hopper is responsible for
sense of something unseen
of a color funk I was in. It
in Giovanni Bellini’s work.
first giving me a passion for
happening below the surface
worked beautifully, and I have
I learned to push light by
intense color.”
of our dark and humid
never gone back.”
studying the paintings of
Yet it was a 19th-century
environs, there is a powerful
Over the years, Johnson
George Inness. The American
English poet and novelist,
mystery found nowhere
has lived in New York; New
realist painter Janet Fish has
not a painter, who inspired
else. It fuels an unconscious, free-flowing and sustaining element in all my work.” Unlike painters who paint what they see before them, Johnson’s landscapes are composites based on photographs of dramatic cloud formations and the way light plays on a bayou tree line. “I combine photographic images to make a new idea,” she explains. “They incorporate things that would never really be found in nature. I build composite photographs with overlays as points of departure. My paintings are all about color reactions. I have to see how colors react to one another. For instance, the light sources in the paintings are often coming from several sources
.
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 31
to make visual sensations
the bugs and nature. It’s all
studio surrounded by paint-
being.” One can only imagine
around the composition
about the smells, the humidity,
brushes, tubes of paint,
what might not have been
rather than being true to
the vastness of air and the
walls lined with finished and
had Johnson not taken that
nature.” She gathers most
difference between you and
partially completed paintings
train trip across northern
of her images at City Park
what you’re painting. You
and bookcases filled with
Italy with Thomas Hardy and
in New Orleans; around the
get into this meditation when
books and educational
Tess of the D’Urbervilles as
LSU lakes in Baton Rouge;
you paint in the landscape.
videos, Johnson reflects
travel companions.
and on Avery Island, which
Everything becomes part of
upon her work and life as an
she describes as the “most
you. Those elements you are
artist: “I cannot imagine not
Libby Johnson, visit
magical place on earth.”
painting are acting on you at
creating art. It is part of my
libbyjohnson.com. N
Although Johnson works primarily in her studio,
the same time.” Even the shapes of her
she occasionally leaves the
paintings often reflect her
controlled atmosphere of
perceptions of nature and
her studio to paint plein-air
art. In the mid-1990s she
on location. “I venture into
began painting landscapes on
the landscape, especially
wooden panels with arches.
when I travel in Italy and in
They reminded her of the
Louisiana when the weather is
magnificent Renaissance
good,” she says. “I make tiny
altar paintings so prolific in
paintings that have their own
the ancient churches and
identity and are not studies for
cathedrals of Italy. The arched
making larger works later in
tops also reflect her view of
my studio. They are finished
the natural world with its
works in themselves. If you
“mythological dome above us
are a landscape painter, you
in the sky.”
have to get out there and feel 32 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
Sitting in her spacious
To learn more about
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 33
traveler nearest Audubon Society can
Boardwalk sunset
provide details). Withal, it’s a full year of constantly changing scenery, activity and life, for the wildlife and for us. The 180-mile primary route of the Creole Nature Trail is U-shaped Louisiana 27, which departs Interstate 10 at two spots, heads south through (occasionally) dry land and freshwater marsh to the Intracoastal Waterway and then moves onward through brackish marshes to the Gulf of Mexico where it junctions with B. LaFleur photo
beachfront Louisiana 82 for
Scenic Route
20 miles before heading north again. The spurs are those Gulf Coast stretches of 82 that lead west from the primary route to the Sabine River and east from the main trail to the Rockefeller Wildlife Preserve. Plan on at least a four-hour drive for the central route, which with the
Cycles of life along the Creole Nature Trail | by Paul F. Stahls Jr.
spurs can grow to eight or more. Ready? OK. First gather cameras, binoculars, a Wild
the Creole Nature Trail offers
– to recoup in the marshlands
Louisiana Stamp (from Wildlife
From the farthest corner of
by far the easiest and best
before dispersing for their
& Fisheries, not necessary
Louisiana, it’s only four hours
introduction to our Gulf Coast.
summer vacations throughout
for holders of hunting/fishing
North America.
licenses) and bug spray (mostly
Road trip! to a destination that attracts
These wetlands are teeming
nature-lovers from the
all year long with non-migra-
The remaining months of
for evening hours), and then
farthest corners of America.
tory birds; amphibians; reptiles;
spring and summer are great
visit CreoleNatureTrail.org to
The Creole Nature Trail –
and, of course, fur-bearing
for gator-watching; photo-
question its Interactive Map
among the first of the U.S.
critters such as muskrats, otters
graphing fur-bearers (with
about specific sights and to
Department of the Interior’s
and mink – of great importance
a zoom and some luck); or
download its Creole Nature
150 National Scenic Byways
and certainly fun to spot in
crawfishing, crab-netting and
Trail app. Don’t think, however,
– has now been promoted to
the wild, even though it’s the
fishing from roadsides and
that these are a substitute for
All-American Road status, one
spring migration of birds and
levee tops. Some folks even reel
your essential first stop on
of only 34 in the nation, and
butterflies that gets all the press
in big Gulf fish from beachfront
North Lakeshore Drive in Lake
together its central route and
from February to early May.
piers, but I think I’m jinxed.
Charles, where the visitors
spurs traverse the Southwest
After all, it’s hard to top the
Louisiana Wildlife Complex,
drama of innumerable species
birds and butterflies pass this
National Wildlife Refuge
ranked as an Internationally
arriving wave upon wave
way again, ready for their
brochures and bird/wildlife
Important Bird Area.
after the astonishing 600-mile
flight back across the Gulf, just
checklists, of course, but also
nonstop flight across the Gulf
as the geese and ducks are
the loan of a handheld video
swamps, river valleys and
of Mexico or the phenomenon
flying south to spend winter
device called the GPS Ranger
coastal marshlands are all as
of exhausted songbirds
here. Also flocking in will be
that will track your progress
different in flora and wildlife
dropping like hail into the first
avid birders from across the
and recite the features and
as they are in appearance. You
clusters of trees they see – the
continent, come to enjoy the
activities of each point of
can’t claim to know your state
oak-covered ridges called
semi-competitive events called
interest as you go.
till you’ve seen them all, and
cheniers strewn along the coast
Winter Bird Counts (your
Louisiana’s hills, prairies,
34 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
In fall and winter the small
bureau will provide trail maps,
I-10’s two intersections
areas for crabbing, fishing
miles southeast via Louisiana
and picnicking along 27,
397/14/27 to Cameron Prairie
but of prime importance for
National Wildlife Refuge), and
wildlife-sighting at Sabine
Exit 20 west of Lake Charles at
are the elevated walkways
Louisiana 27 in Sulphur, which
and observation decks at
will be our starting point today
Hog Island Gully, Blue Goose
because … oh, just force of habit.
Trail (reaching all the way to
For a last look at a city
big Calcasieu Lake) and the
before the gators get you, turn
1-mile roadside loop called the
north on 27 (Ruth Street) and
Wetland Walkway.
fork left on Huntington to the
Leaving the Sabine, you’ll
Brimstone Museum. Sulphur
be nearing the actual Gulf
was named for a nearby sulfur
Coast, and you’ll notice the
dome where Herman Frasch,
colors of freshwater plants and
a German immigrant, devised
greener grasses fading to more
a method of mining brimstone
somber browns as the salinity
that revolutionized the industry
increases. When 27 reaches
worldwide, and the museum
the Gulf at Holly Beach, the
features a film with vivid
main route turns east on
footage of the Frasch Process
Louisiana 82/27 to follow the
in action: melting the sulfur
seashore, but be aware that
with steam far below-ground
some of Holly Beach’s camp
for pumping to the surface.
houses can be rented, and the
Southward lie marshlands
visitors bureau in Lake Charles
and the sea, a prospect that
(337-436-9588) can provide
somehow always makes me
phone numbers for these and
hungry, but fortunately it’s just
others along the coast. The
18 miles down 27 (crossing the
82 West spur, for instance,
busy Intracoastal Waterway
leads 8.5 miles to Gulf View
and entering Cameron Parish)
Road, where shiny-new cabins
to Hackberry, made famous by
are clustered just outside
the Hackberry Ramblers and
the Baton Rouge Audubon
by (nota bene) Brown’s Food
Society’s Peveto Woods Bird &
Center. More than a grocery,
Butterfly Sanctuary – a chenier
Brown’s opens at 5 a.m. for
that becomes quite popular
fishermen and early-bird trail-
during spring migrations.
riders who stop for their day’s
Heading back from Peveto,
takeouts (plate lunches, poor
notice the monument at the
boys, deli sandwiches and
new (well-elevated) Cameron
boudin) plus all the essentials
Parish Library. Created in
for fishing and crabbing.
2012 by sculptor Jerry Gorum
Anne Taber Klenke photo
and mink. You’ll find recreation
which you would zigzag 17
Victor Monsour photo
and turtles to otters, muskrats
just east of Lake Charles (from
Bill Turnbull photo
with the big “U” are Exit 36
Sandhill cranes
Marsh otter
Now it’s 8 miles south
of Glenmora, it depicts the
to Sabine National Wildlife
waterfowl, fish, wildlife and
Refuge, 124,511 acres of coastal
shrimp boats of the region, all
prairie and marsh (freshwater,
emerging, appropriately, from
seat of Cameron Parish, by
the year, January’s Louisiana
intermediate and brackish),
a big bronze book.
way of what’s likely to be the
Fur and Wildlife Festival,
shortest ferry ride of your
with music, amusements and
established in 1937 to protect
Back on the main route, the
Roseate spoonbills
the habitat of migratory ducks
shore east of Holly Beach can
life. Head for the railing with
great food, of course, but also
and geese and all species of
be white with sand or partially
your camera, though, because
competitions in wetland skills
covered with seaweed that
this Calcasieu Ship Channel is
such as retriever dog trials;
wade, slither, walk and fly,
washes in from time to time
jumping with porpoises and
skeet-shooting; trap-setting;
from raptors, snowy and
(also bringing a fresh layer of
alive with birds.
and, yes, muskrat-skinning.
great egrets, cormorants,
seashells for beachcombers),
alligators, blue crabs, shrimp
and soon you’ll reach Cameron,
year-round residents that
In a state famed for festivals, Cameron boasts the first of
Year-round attractions include Airboats and Alligators
.
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 35
B. LaFleur photo
Victor Monsour photo
Victor Monsour photo
at 1151 Oak Grove Highway,
short marsh grass, ponds, mud
Refuge, where Wildlife Drive
where an ATV-pulled cart
flats – and a million birds.
encircles shallow Lacassine
delivers you to the airboats and
It’s not impossible to see an
Pool with its gators, birds and
gator ponds (337-274-2395),
occasional whooping crane
furry fauna. Then, for a good
and the Cameron Jetty Pier
around Rockefeller, and back
comparison of marshlands and
Facility at 799 Davis Road,
on 27, heading up the eastern
typical Louisiana swamps, head
with its playground; RV park;
side of the “U,” you’ll pass,
back up to 14, and drive 8 miles
observation tower; elevated
above Cameron Prairie National
east to Louisiana 3056, 4 miles
walkway to the beach; and,
Wildlife Refuge, pastures
south to Streeter Road and 2
best of all, its spacious pier
sometimes visited by sandhill
miles west to Lacassine head-
complex projecting into the
cranes, hundreds of them,
quarters where boardwalks
Gulf where you can snag
looking to be nearly 4 feet tall.
and tower reveal the beauty of
tarpon, snapper, wahoo and all their friends (337-775-2800). East of Cameron you must
Cameron Prairie, maintained to provide natural foods for resident and migrating
a cypress-tupelo swamp of the Mermentau River basin. And now, oh, great
choose between curving now
waterfowl, is a wonderland
navigator, get home the best
onto the northward upswing
of geese, ducks and wading
of the Louisiana 27 “U” or
birds, of course, but also of
way you can! n G.W. “Bud” Willis, a master
first taking the trail’s 82 East
otter and other fur-bearers.
spur, which will pass famous
“Fishing roads” will entice you
Grand Chenier and smaller
as you pass through on 27, and
ridges on its way to Rockefeller
watch for the turn onto Pintail
Wildlife Refuge. Rockefeller is
Wildlife Drive, a popular 3-mile
credited with saving the once-
loop (auto and boardwalks)
endangered American alligator,
through the freshwater marsh.
and it’s still the go-to source
It’s 2 miles farther to the
of expertise for nurturing
visitor center, where you’ll be
crocodilian populations
entertained indoors by wildlife
around the world. Boaters
displays and a theater (where
can arrange for credentials
an animated Cajun grand-père
to explore that 76,000-acre
and grand-mère introduce
preserve (337-491-2593), and,
their beloved wetlands) and
three-quarters-of-a-mile west
outdoors by an elevated
of refuge headquarters, Price
walkway into a little freshwater
Lake Nature Drive is a prime
wonderland where you’ll
spot for fishing, crabbing and
probably see more roseate
shrimp-netting that actually
spoonbills at a glance than the
leads 3 miles (partway by foot)
total you’ve seen in your life.
into our very briniest of marsh.
Continue north on 27 to
Taller canes and grasses soon
Louisiana 14, which marks the
turn the pathway into a virtual
beginning of your final spur.
tunnel, but suddenly the cane
Take 14 east and Illinois Plant
disappears, leaving nothing
Road 4 miles south to enter
ahead but a dramatic vista of
Lacassine National Wildlife
36 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
Great blue heron botanical photographer and lifelong friend and supporter of Briarwood (the Caroline Dormon Nature Preserve), contributed four of the wildflower photos shown in last issue’s Briarwood article but inadvertently was credited for only one. We regret the oversight and encourage readers to find more of his photography at willisfarm.net, the nursery farm on Lake Bistineau where he has cultivated native and heirloom shrubs and trees since retiring from Ochsner Hospital. Information on his “Saturday Markets,” Fruits & Nuts Catalog and newsletter can be requested at willisfarmnursery@gmail.com.
best bets War in the Wetlands: If you take the recommended Creole Nature Trail detour from Cameron down Davis Road to the Cameron Jetty Pier Facility, you’ll not only be following the last 3 miles of the Calcasieu River but also skirting the site of a battle fought here on May 6, 1864. A handsome obelisk at the Cameron Courthouse honors the 14 Confederates and eight Union Navy men who died during the Rebs’ capture of two Union gunboats here, and a new book by prolific Civil War writer Michael Dan Jones of Iowa, La., The Battle of Calcasieu Pass, gives a detailed account of that encounter and a review of Union attempts at other Louisiana ports, for the duration of the war, to enforce Lincoln’s blockade strategy (available on Amazon, $9.95). Knowing Your Place: It’s a fact that Louisiana travelers like to read Louisiana books, even fiction set in special places, but with so many old and new titles out there, it’s hard to stay abreast. I recommend LouisianaBookNews.com, a personal project of author and Lafayette journalist Cheré Dastugue Coen, whose site includes book and travel blogs, reviews and book-related events, plus lists of bookstores and Louisiana authors (with links to many). It’s also a quite convenient place to acquire her own travel guide, called Exploring Cajun Country (also available on Amazon), which divides the New Acadie triangle into nine regions and explores the history and je ne sais quoi of each one’s landmarks, towns, foods, festivals and folks. You’ll use it; you’ll keep it.
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 37
g n i p p o Dr a Line
off a redeared Rachel Delinski shows she caught. pin, qua chin or sunfish,
ing ater fish w h s e r f A guide to raphed
s off Mike Baker show pie he caught. ap cr of e upl co a
otog en & ph her ritt w N. Fels n h o J by
Steven Felsher sho ws off a large crappie he caught. s off a crappie Toni Collins show ad Runner. she caught on a Ro
Tony Gallop shows off a large blue catfish he caught.
antino shows Russell Berg tfish he caught. ca l ne an off a ch
Louisiana, nobody
In
several sunfish species,
through the state. Rivers quite
wetlands in the United States.
needs to travel very
three types of catfish and
literally built Louisiana. For
These wetlands create some
far in any direction to
many other critters. Some
eons, the Mississippi River
of the richest, most diverse
hit water loaded with fish. In
species, such as blue catfish
and its tributaries drained the
habitat in the world.
fact, water occasionally comes
and alligator garfish, reach
best topsoil from 31 states
to the people – whether they
enormous size. People don’t
and two Canadian provinces
want it to or not!
call Louisiana the Sportsman’s
and deposited that fertile
Paradise for nothing!
cargo into the vast wetlands
of the Red River, a major
of South Louisiana. Today,
tributary of the Mississippi,
In just about any fresh system in the state, anglers
Sportsmen of Louisiana
The Red
The crimson-stained waters
might catch largemouth
owe this diverse bounty to
Louisiana contains about
flow down out of the Great
bass, two species of crappie,
the mighty rivers that flow
41 percent of the coastal
Plains and cut a 250-mile-wide
more than 300 bird species, numerous animals and countless fish call home.
deep in places. Ranked 15th on the national list of top bass waters, Toledo Bend probably holds more
The Mississippi
double-digit largemouths
The Mississippi River and
than any other Louisiana lake.
its tributaries harbor some
Eric Weems set the lake bass
of the biggest catfish in
record with a 15.32-pounder
North America. On Sept.
he caught in July 2000. More
27, 2012, Mike Richardson
recently, Donnie Gill caught a
set a pending state record
15.03-pounder in 2009.
with a 31-pound, 2-ounce
s Daniel Felsher caught a bas er. while fishing a river backwat
channel cat he pulled from
good for big bass,” says
the Mississippi River while
Ricky Yeldell, a Louisiana
fishing beneath the Crescent
Department of Wildlife
City Connection in New
and Fisheries biologist. “It
Orleans. In April 2005,
produces a lot of 10-pounders
Keith Day hauled in a state-
each year and some up to 13
record blue cat weighing
pounds. Any part of the lake
more than 110 pounds from
can produce a big bass.”
the Mississippi near St.
Taylor Whitted shows off a channel catfish she caught.
Savannah McKinney shows off a panfish she caught while fishing off a park dock.
“Toledo Bend is always
While largemouth bass
Francisville. The Mississippi,
generally make the most
Red and Atchafalaya rivers
news, Toledo Bend also
contributed seven of the
holds striped bass exceeding
top 10 blue cats caught in
40 pounds, massive blue and
Louisiana. Wax Lake Outlet,
flathead catfish and huge
part of the Atchafalaya
numbers of crappie with
River delta, produced
some exceeding 3.5 pounds.
the state- record flathead
The reservoir also holds
catfish, a 95-pounder. The
some of the largest bluegills,
Red River contributed four
white bass and yellow bass
of the top flatheads.
in the state.
The Pearl and the Sabine
a tremendous catfish
Besides the Mighty
utilized,” Yeldell says. “It’s
Mississippi, two other rivers
possible to catch a catfish
help define state borders.
over 100 pounds in Toledo
Pearl River creates 119 miles
Bend. The bigger catfish are
of the border with the state
usually flatheads, but we
of Mississippi before flowing
have some pretty impressive
into the marshes near Lake
blue cats. It’s not uncommon
Borgne by Slidell. The Sabine
to catch 40- to 50-pound
River separates Louisiana
blue cats.”
“Toledo Bend has
ht on Jim Nolan’s bass he caug Monroe the Ouachita River near
population, but it’s under-
swath across Northwest and
Atchafalaya River breaks
from Texas for about 265
Central Louisiana. Five water
off from the Red and flows
miles, including Toledo Bend
control structures between
about 142 miles to the Gulf
Reservoir, before emptying
Shreveport and Simmesport
of Mexico near Morgan City.
into Sabine Lake. The 186,000-
tamed the once-raging river,
The Atchafalaya siphons off
acre Toledo Bend probably
and the Pearl, Louisiana
creating five fish-rich pools
30 percent of the Mississippi
offers the best freshwater
sportsmen might also fish
that now produce lunker
River flow, creating the
fishing in Louisiana and
the Ouachita; Tensas; Black;
bass exceeding 10 pounds.
million-acre Atchafalaya
some of the best in the entire
Boeuf; Calcasieu; Amite;
Bassmaster magazine ranks
Basin. The river feeds
country. This 65-mile-long
Blind; Tickfaw; Tangipahoa;
the Red River as No. 47 of the
the largest river overflow
impoundment near Many
Tchefuncte; Bogue Chitto;
top 100 bass destinations in
swamp in the United States
offers anglers more than
Whisky Chitto; and numerous
the nation.
and creates a vibrant,
1,260 shoreline miles and
other rivers, creeks and
growing natural delta that
drops to more than 110 feet
bayous that feed an abundant
Near Simmesport, the
Rivers, Creeks and Bayous Between the Sabine
Jay Denton shows off a cr caught on T oledo Bend Re appie he servoir. ss f a ba ws of hl sho l River. u r B f Jef Pear ght in he cau
bass es a ht by r a p g m u s co nder ca River. u l anes a M to a flo ing Pear r d n h t Ke augh while fis c e sh Bruhl Jeff
tapestry of life. Most fresh water in the state comes from these rivers and associated waters. In just about every
Jay Gallop shows off a flathead catfish he cau ght.
Daryl Masingale shows off a blue catfish he caught.
a s off show quapin. r e ll in e h iemo h, or c ve N is Ste red sunf a e d re
Pontchartrain Basin
300-mile swath of wetlands
Roughly 41 miles long
collectively known as the
the 9,280-acre Lake
by 24 miles wide, Lake
Louisiana Delta ranks 27th on
Cataouatche averages 6 feet
Pontchartrain covers about
the Bassmaster magazine list
deep and connects to the 44,800-acre Lake Salvador.
Just south of Westwego,
630 square miles on the
of hot fisheries. The Louisiana
find that a lake, river, creek or
edge of New Orleans. Lake
Delta hosted four Bassmaster
The Davis Pond freshwater
bayou runs through it.
Pontchartrain connects to
Classics. In February 2011,
diversion project pumps
With so much fresh
Lake Borgne through two
Kevin VanDam set a record
Mississippi River water into
water flowing through the
deep, natural passes – the
for the largest weight ever
these brackish wetlands. With
Sportsman’s Paradise, anglers
Rigolets and the Chef
seen during a Bassmaster
that sweet flow freshening
can find fishing action just
Menteur. Much of the Lake
Classic. Fishing in Lake
the system, Lake Cataouatche
Pontchartrain Basin remains
Cataouatche at the upper
now produces huge numbers of 3- to 7-pound largemouths,
Louisiana parish, sportsmen
about anywhere in the state.
brackish to salty, but several
end of the Barataria Estuary,
spots don’t even have names.
freshwater streams flow
VanDam landed a three-day
a few topping 8 pounds
Children on bicycles fish small
into the system. Marshes
tournament limit of 15
and an occasional 9- or
ponds for bass and bluegills
along the northern and
bass weighing 69 pounds,
10-pounder.
or tiny roadside ditches for
western shoreline hold good
11 ounces, for about a
bullheads, while multimillion-
largemouth bass, catfish and
4.65-pound average. He beat
like Lake Cataouatche,”
dollar yachts cruise the Lake
sunfish populations.
the old record by more than
VanDam said after winning
13 pounds.
his fourth Classic title in 2011.
In fact, some of the best
Pontchartrain Basin.
South of New Orleans, the
“I have never seen anything
Lakes and Reservoirs
book largemouth when Ed
Ricky Moses, an LDWF
Stellner landed a 15.31-
biologist in Pineville. “It
Across North and Central
pounder in February 2000.
has a big watershed that
Intracoastal Waterway and
Louisiana, many impound-
The 15,000-acre lake drains
fluctuates, but when the
a labyrinth of canals and
ments offer excellent fishing
a huge portion of northern
water is stable, it’s hard to
bayous, the Cataouatche-
for bass, catfish, bluegill
Louisiana. About 13.5
beat for size and numbers
Salvador system also
and crappie. Called by some
miles long with numerous
of crappie.”
connects to the 14,720-acre
“the most beautiful lake in
channels loaded with grass,
Lac des Allemands in St.
America,” the 26,810-acre
lily pads, stump fields and
water bodies in Louisiana,
John the Baptist Parish near
Caddo Lake straddles the
flooded timber, the lake also
Cane River Lake began as part of the Red River. In the 19th century, the Red
“It’s a phenomenal habitat. This is a special place.” Through the Gulf
One of the most pleasant
Louisiana-Texas line about
produces good catches of
the Intracoastal Waterway
17 miles northwest of
bream, crappie and catfish.
connects to marshes near
Shreveport. About 12 miles
Morgan City at the southern
wide and 16 miles long,
in Louisiana, the 2,700-acre
Natchitoches, leaving a long
end of the Atchafalaya Basin.
the lake looks more like a
Poverty Point Reservoir near
narrow lake that runs for
Hurricane Isaac hit the area
flooded cypress swamp than
Delhi, began filling with
35 miles and covers 1,275
a natural lake. Both states
water in 1998 and opened
acres. The old oxbow offers
stock millions of Florida-
to fishing in 2003. The state
good bass, catfish and bluegill action.
Thibodaux. Farther west,
hard in August 2012, causing some localized fish kills.
One of the newest lakes
River changed course near
strain largemouth bass into
stocked it with Florida bass,
after Hurricane Isaac, but
the system. In fact, the lake’s
so it now produces many
Lake Cataouatche still has a
record bass exceeds the
fish in the 5- to 9-pound
State Park, Chicot Lake
lot of fish,” says Tim Ruth, an
Louisiana state record. Keith
range with some exceeding
covers 1,700 acres and looks
LDWF biologist in Lacombe.
Burns landed a 16.17-pound
13 pounds. The lake also
more like a picturesque
“I don’t think it was hit as
behemoth on March 20, 2010,
produces huge crappie and
swamp. About 7 miles from
but weighed the fish in Texas.
channel catfish. In April
Ville Platte, the scenic lake
Another Texan, Sean Swank,
2010, Randy K. Causey set
can produce bass weighing
caught a 16.07-pounder on
the Louisiana black crappie
more than 13 pounds and
March 18, 2011.
record with a 3.84-pounder.
good catches of bluegills.
“Some fish kills did occur
hard as some adjacent lakes. Lake Salvador now has more vegetation because it’s more influenced by the freshwater diversion and should be a
Not far away, Lake
The lake also delivered a
Wholly within Chicot
Cotile Lake, a 1,775-acre
good place to fish in coming
Bistineau covers 17,200 acres
white crappie weighing 3.25
impoundment near
years.”
near Minden. The swampy
pounds in March 2011.
Colfax, and Kincaid Lake,
The delta wetlands also create some of the best catfish habitat in the nation. Besides Lac Des Allemands, other great catfish lakes
cypress-studded lake has
“Poverty Point Reservoir
a 2,000-acre lake west
produced bass exceeding 11
has a tremendous number
of Alexandria, can both
pounds in the past. It also
of channel cats,” says Ryan
produce double-digit
holds good populations of
Daniel, an LDWF biologist in
bass plus good catches of
catfish, crappie and bluegill.
Monroe. “We’ve seen some
bluegill and big crappie.
as big as 15 pounds. Poverty
Lake Vernon, a 4,200-acre
Palourde, the 1,024-acre
in Jackson Parish produced
Point has also become
impoundment near Leesville,
Grassy Lake and the
six of the top 10 largest bass
known as a big crappie lake.
produced bass topping
14,000-acre Lake Verret near
ever caught in Louisiana,
Anglers commonly catch
13 pounds, plus some big
Morgan City. Each of these
including the state record.
crappie up to 2 pounds.
crappie and bluegill.
include the 11,500-acre Lake
Caney Lake near Chatham
From massive lakes
Greg Wiggins set the
Several 3-pounders came out
flathead and blue cats in
Louisiana bass standard with
of the lake.”
the 40- to 60-pound range
a 15.97-pounder he pulled
One of the better fishing
and incredible numbers of
from the lake in February
lakes in Central Louisiana,
ponds, Louisiana offers
channel cats.
1994. The 5,000-acre lake also
Black Lake covers 13,000
endless opportunities for
produced the state record
acres near Campti. Fed by
anglers to catch big line-
some of the best catfishing
redear sunfish, or chinquapin,
the Red River, it harbors
pullers. Of course, no
in the world,” says Mike
a 2.87-pounder landed by
bass occasionally topping
compendium of hot honey
Jerry Smelley in August
12 pounds. The lake can
holes could possibly cover all the great places to catch
lakes can produce numerous
“South Louisiana has
Walker, an LDWF biologist.
and mighty rivers to tiny bayous, potholes and
1998. The lake also produced
also produce crappie in the
system down to Atchafalaya
record-book crappie, yellow
2- to 3-pound range and
fish in Louisiana, but part of
Bay is phenomenal for
bass and bluegill.
good catches of flathead
the fun of fishing includes
and channel catfish.
exploring new hot spots
“The entire Atchafalaya
catfish.”
Lake D’Arbonne southwest of Farmerville also contributed a record-
“Black Lake is very productive for catfish,” says
in the rightfully named Sportsman’s Paradise.
n
42 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
LOUISIANA'S 4 HALL OF FAMERS by Ryan Whirty
I
n January, the committee that elects legendary hardball players to the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y., pitched a shutout – no players received enough votes to earn a spot in the baseball shrine’s hallowed halls. Thanks to the specter of steroids and other performance-enhancing drugs, a gloomy pall has settled over the national pastime’s recent past, with superstars such as Barry Bonds, Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa and Roger Clemens cast in hardball purgatory because of suspicions of PED use. But decades before all that mess, when baseball wasn’t dogged by such depressing road bumps as steroids and labor strife and player
contracts reaching into eight figures and beyond, there were athletes who competed for love of the game and loyalty to their teams, players whose on-field accomplishments weren’t clouded by controversy, whose exploits did earn them well-deserved spots in the Hall of Fame. Of course, the existence of rigid segregation practices did, however, mar the first half of baseball history, but even then, the black players who were shut out from the Major Leagues still managed to thrive in the Negro Leagues and were legends made in their own right, legends who, beginning in the early 1970s, received the hard-earned recognition they deserved by finally entering the Baseball Hall. Now, as it stands today, there are four Louisiana-born players whose plaques hang in the Cooperstown memorial’s hall of legends – Shreveport’s Willard Brown, Bastrop’s Bill Dickey, Vinton’s Ted Lyons and Gretna’s Mel Ott. Although the Pelican State has produced a relatively small amount of hardball Hallers, the ones from Louisiana who have been inducted into the legendary facility certainly earned those accolades. Coming from all four corners of the state, each member of this superb quartet – all now deceased – has made his own unique mark on baseball history. Here is an alphabetical rundown of these four stellar stars.
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 43
willard brown
I
t took a half-century for this talented Negro League slugger to be recognized by the Hall of Fame – but not because his accomplishments made him a questionable candidate. Brown’s long-ball power was legendary among his colleagues in black baseball, with the legendary Josh Gibson giving Willard his apt nickname – “Home Run” Brown. But like many of his Negro League counterparts, Brown’s induction into the Hall of Fame was posthumous – it took a special Negro Leagues Committee to finally select him in 2006, a decade after his death at the age of 81. And like so many of his fellow Negro Leagues legends, Brown spent his latter years balancing bitterness at being excluded for years from the Major Leagues – and the popular recognition that would have come with integration – with pride in what he and his black peers accomplished in the hardball shadows. “I tell you one thing,” Brown told Shreveport Times reporter Bill McIntyre in 1976. “I was born 20 years too early. I know so. If I could live it all over again, like quite a few of those ball players, I wish I had an opportunity now.” Brown’s career on the diamond was perhaps marked by three distinctions – his status as the fourth black to cross the Major League color line, his phenomenal performances in Latin American leagues and his (possibly undeserved) reputation for giving 100 percent on the field only when the mood struck him. After Jackie Robinson debuted for the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947, to be shortly followed by Larry Doby for the Cleveland Indians, Brown and Hank Thompson, his teammate on the Negro League Kansas City Monarchs, were signed by the eternally hapless St. Louis Browns, who wanted a gate attraction just as much as a boost to their lineup. In July, Thompson and Brown became the third and fourth black Major Leaguers.
44 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
Their arrival was trumpeted in the black press. In a July 1947 article in the esteemed Pittsburgh Courier, writer Kermitt K. Wheeler pronounced that Brown and Thompson would certainly boost the struggling Browns, while in accompanying commentary, none other than Jackie Robinson stated that although the newly minted Browns would see some stiff competition in the Majors, he was confident they could succeed. He also praised Brown. “Willard Brown was one of the best hitters in Negro baseball,” Robinson wrote. “He hits a long ball and is hard to fool. He is a smooth type of player and a real student of the game.” Unfortunately, perhaps largely due to animosity from his white teammates and his own frustration with what he perceived was a lack of quality on the squad, Brown foundered in his brief tenure in the Majors and was released by the Browns in mid-August. He then returned to the Monarchs the next year. There could, however, be an alternate explanation for Brown’s lack of success in the Bigs – according to some of his contemporaries, he often let his prodigious talent go to waste during weekday games, dogging it when the crowds in the stands were small. It was only on the weekend, when Negro League games attracted throngs of spectators, that Brown turned it on in full. But other observers believed that Brown was so good that he made the game look easy, thereby giving the impression that he wasn’t going all out. “Brown’s legacy is reflected in his nickname, ‘Sunny,’” says Negro League historian Larry Lester. “Brown was known to play his best on Sunday, when the biggest crowds were present. His effortless talents in the field and at bat caused many to believe perhaps he could be even better than shown. He was a Hall of Famer with a laid-back attitude.” The final distinction about Brown’s career was his performance in Latin America, especially in the Puerto Rican Winter League, where he set batting records that still stand to this day, a fact that earned him yet another nickname, this one from the Puerto Rican locals – “Ese Hombre,” or “That Man.” “The outfielder was one of the most feared hitters in the Negro Leagues,” wrote Society for Baseball Research writer Rory Costello, “but he was an absolute wrecking ball in the Puerto Rican Winter League.”
Bill Dickey
O
f the four Louisiana Hall of Famers, New York Yankee great Bill Dickey’s connection to the state is considered somewhat tenuous. Although he was born in Bastrop, Dickey and his family moved to Arkansas when he was a youth because his father earned a job as a brakeman for Missouri Pacific Railroad. For the rest of his life, Dickey called Arkansas home in general and Little Rock in particular. Because of that, many Bastrop residents aren’t even aware that a Hall of Famer sprang from their midst, says Bastrop Enterprise editor Marq Mitcham. The one person from Bastrop who did know a good deal about Dickey was former Enterprise writer Wes Helbling, who wrote a pair of articles about the great catcher in 2008. “Dickey is considered by many historians to be the greatest catcher the game has ever seen,” Helbling wrote in one of those articles. However, Helbling added, “Little is known of his early years here.” Dickey’s Major League career ran from 1928 through 1946, during which time the catching great earned 11 All-Star nods and helped the Yankees win seven World Series. Dickey was a key player in the history of baseball’s most storied franchise – his career bridged the gap between the famed “Murderers’ Row” years of Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig in the 1920s and the squad’s subsequent title winners in the 1940s with Joe DiMaggio. In fact, Dickey emerged as the team’s leader after Gehrig died in 1941, and he briefly managed the squad in 1946 after his military service and before his retirement from baseball. Yankee management invited Dickey back into the fold a few years later when he was tapped to mold the latent but extremely promising talents of an awkward young catcher named Lawrence “Yogi” Berra. Under Dickey’s tutelage, Berra quickly emerged as the best backstop in the contemporary game and a Hall of Famer in his own right. In addition, Dickey tutored the Yankees’ first black player, catcher Elston Howard, who once said: “Without Bill, I’m nobody. Nobody at all. He made me a catcher.”
Dickey also garnered accolades from opponents, including Hall of Fame speedball pitcher Bob Feller, who called the Yankee great the best catcher he ever witnessed. Hall of Fame voters agreed, electing him to the shrine in 1954. Dickey died in Little Rock in 1993, after which the New York Times lavished praise on a key figure in Yankee heritage. “Rated by many as the finest all-round catcher in the history of the sport, Dickey was one of the brightest stars of Yankee teams that held sway over the American League between World War I and World War II,” wrote Times reporter Thomas Rogers. “He was one of the most feared clutch hitters in lineups that included Babe Ruth, Bob Meusel and Joe DiMaggio. ... Behind the plate, he displayed all the qualities needed by a top-notch defensive catcher.”
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 45
ted lyons
L
ake Charles native, Vinton resident and famed pitcher Ted Lyons presented a curious case for Hall of Fame voters. On paper, Lyons’ stats would seem to make him a marginal Hall candidate; after 21 years in the Majors, all with the Chicago White Sox, Lyons’ win-loss record was only 260-230, and his 3.67 career earned run average is the second-highest of any Hall of Fame pitcher. Those numbers undoubtedly contributed to the hesitancy the Hall selectors showed when considering him for induction. Lyons retired in 1946, but he wasn’t chosen for the shrine until 1955, on his eighth ballot. But if you look past the black and white, you perhaps see why Lyons’ statistics were so modest. During his two-decade-plus Major League career –
Lyons didn’t spend a day in the minors – the White Sox were perennial losers who never provided the support Lyons needed to post better numbers. In fact, Joe McCarthy, who managed many of the Yankee championship teams during Lyons’ career, once said, “If he’d pitched for the Yankees, he would have won over 400 games.” In addition, Lyons’ loyalty and dedication to the White Sox, despite the franchise’s lousiness, endeared him to Chicago fans and made him the team’s career leader in pitching wins to this day. One of those victories was a no-hitter tossed in 1926 against the Boston Red Sox. But Chicagoans aren’t the only ones who remember Lyons fondly – in Southwest Louisiana, the boy from Cajun Country is regarded as a legend and one of the finest products of the region. “We are proud that Ted Lyons called Vinton home,” says Vinton Mayor Kenneth Stinson. “Most people that knew him are gone, but there are a few younger ones that remember him when he lived in town.” Stinson notes that Vinton has a youth ballpark named after the Hall of Famer, and he adds that after retiring from baseball, Lyons returned home and became a fixture in the Vinton community, which embraced him until he died in 1986. Even Stinson himself cherishes the times he spent near Lyons. “My memories include seeing him talking about baseball,” the mayor says. “As a youngster, it was amazing to know someone that had played ball with Babe Ruth. Ted had these little bat-shaped pens with his name on them that he gave people. I still have one that I treasure.” Lyons’ Louisiana fame isn’t limited to Vinton, either. In New Orleans, longtime TimesPicayune columnist Bill Keefe wrote in 1955 about a local event at which Lyons would be the keynote speaker. “Principal speaker will be Ted Lyons, for many years one of the Major Leagues’ most famous pitchers,” Keefe penned. “A Louisianian, Lyons has become as popular a baseball [player] as ever represented the Pelican State.”
mel ott
T
hey called him “Master Melvin,” the “Little Giant,” a compact, 5-foot-9-inch bundle of brawn from Gretna, whose slight size belied a powerful bat that, upon his retirement, made him the career home run leader in the National League. The fact that New York Giants legend Mel Ott died tragically in a car crash at the age of 49 only burnished his legend, especially in his Westbank hometown, where a park is named after him and a life-size bronze statue dedicated in 2009 welcomes visitors to his hometown. “Based on our dedication of his statue, Mel Ott’s reputation is still very highly regarded not only by Gretna residents but by the New Orleans baseball community,” says Gretna Mayor Ronnie Harris. Born in Gretna in 1909, Ott became a burgeoning hardball prodigy, but he was passed over by the New York Pelicans minor-league team at the age of 16, ostensibly because of his small stature. So he was set up with a lumber company’s semi-pro team in Patterson, where the owner of the firm noticed Ott’s talent and hooked him up with legendary Giants manager John McGraw. “The luckiest thing that ever happened to me was that I was turned down the first time I tried to get a job in baseball,” Ott told New York Times scribe Arthur Daley in July 1958, just four months before Ott’s sudden death. “It changed the course of my life.” Thus, at the tender age of 17, the little teen from Gretna debuted at the Polo Grounds, one of baseball’s biggest stages. Over the next 21 years, all with the Giants, Ott amassed 12 All-Star selections; a World Series title in 1933; a .304 career batting average; and 511 home runs, then the most ever by a National Leaguer. The laid-back, eternally friendly Ott also managed the Giants for several years but couldn’t pilot them to any more titles. In fact, the Giants were occasional residents or close neighbors of the NL cellar, a fact that spurred one of our country’s most famous sayings. Reportedly, before a Giants-Brooklyn Dodgers game, Brooklyn’s irascible manager, Leo Durocher, was chided by a local beat writer to be nicer. Pointing to Ott in the opposing dugout, Leo the Lip then
famously groused: “Who wants to be nice? Nice guys finish last.” Despite the mediocrity of the teams he managed, Ott’s excellence on the field earned him an easy pass into the Hall of Fame, which welcomed him 1951, on his first ballot. But just seven years later, on Nov. 21, 1958, Gretna’s most famous resident succumbed to the massive injuries he suffered in a car crash a few days earlier. His passing sent shock waves across the baseball world, but the New Orleans community and Gretna were especially hard-hit. “Mel Ott, probably the mightiest ‘little man’ baseball ever knew, is lost to the world of sports,” the Times-Picayune’s Keefe opined shortly after the star’s death. “Quite a loss to all who knew him, too, as well as to his family. Having known him since he caught for Gretna High ... I can say without hesitancy that he went through his entire life, on or off the field, not as a ‘nice guy’ but as a prince of young Americans.” The outpouring of honors from Ott’s hometown quickly followed. In April 1959, the Gretna board of aldermen changed the name of Gretna City Park to Mel Ott Park, and two years later Gov. Jimmie Davis declared May 28 “Mel Ott Day.” Since then, the relationship between Ott’s legacy and his hometown has only grown stronger. In 1970, Daley wrote: “If Ottie has faded from memory over the years, a visit to Gretna brings a warm nostalgic glow. It also brings rich recollections of the nice guy whose image could not be dented even when he finished last.” Ott’s descendants and relatives still populate Gretna, including Virgie Ott, whose late husband was Mel’s second cousin and who served as Gretna’s tourism director for several years, partially to promote Mel’s connection to the town. “He never forgot us when he left [Gretna],” Virgie Ott says of Mel. “When he came back for visits, he took some of the local guys out for a beer. Gretna is so proud that he is honored in the Baseball Hall of Fame. We try to keep his memory alive.”
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 47
The Saga of the
Original Louisiana Tiger Chatham Roberdeau Wheat | By Ron Soodalter
S
creaming at the
Orleans waterfront, and though their
South Carolina contingent inadvertently
tops of their lungs
official designation was the 1st Louisiana
directed friendly fire at them; the Tigers
as they charged the
Battalion, they were known and feared
deliberately took aim and returned the
hapless Yankees,
by Federals and Rebels alike as the
fire. When there were no enemy troops
they were a vision
Louisiana Tigers.
to engage, the Tigers often fought among
straight out of hell.
It was a name they wore with pride.
themselves. Recalled one South Carolina
Many had chosen to enhance their
soldier: “They were the worst men I ever
outlandish Turkish-style Zouave uniforms
uniforms by painting on their caps
saw. They were always ready to fight,
– bright-red shirts, embroidered jackets,
such individually inspired slogans as
and it made little difference to them who
billowing knee-length blue-and-white-
“Lincoln’s Life or a Tiger’s Death,” “Tiger
they fought.” Wrote one Confederate in
striped pantaloons and white gaiters, all
in Search of a Black Republican” and
his diary, “They neither fear God, man
capped with tasseled red fezs – which
“Tiger Bound for the Happy Land.” One
or the Devil.” And a third called them
made them easy targets, but they seemed
English journalist provided a firsthand
“tigers in human form” and admitted, “I
to care not at all. They descended in a
account of their battle tactics: “They
was actually afraid they would … knock
fury, killing without qualm and – when
would maintain a death-like silence until
me down and stamp me half to death.”
time and safety permitted – slaying the
the foe was not more than 100 paces off,
wounded and looting the dead. Above
then delivering a withering volley, they
and control and direct their mayhem:
them flew their battalion flag, itself a
would dash forward with unearthly yells
their commanding officer, Maj. Chatham
deliberate mockery of the solemnity of
and [as] they unsheathed their knives and
Roberdeau Wheat. Richmond native
war. On it were embroidered the words
rushed to close quarters, the Yankees
Sallie Putnam was familiar with the
“Gentle as a …” and the image of a lamb.
screamed with horror.”
unusual relationship between Wheat
Some of them wore
They had been largely recruited from the wharves, gutters and dives of the New 48 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
Not all their targets were Yankees. During the First Battle of Manassas, a
Only one man could hold their loyalty
and his troops: “The battalion of ‘Tigers’ … were, as their name denotes, men
of desperate courage but questionable morals. … Among them were
through his various adventures. After graduating with a bachelor
swept to the edges of the sea and beyond. One target that had been in America’s
many a lawless character, whose fierce
of arts degree from the University of
sights since the days of Thomas Jefferson
passions were kept in abeyance by the
Nashville in 1845, Wheat studied law and
was the island of Cuba. For both tactical
superior discipline of their commander.
briefly worked for a law firm. By this
and economic reasons, the “Pearl of the
… [H]e was gentle, easy, graceful and
time, however, hostilities had erupted
Antilles” seemed to represent a necessary
dignified in society; toward the men
between Mexico and the United States,
adjunct to the fledgling United States.
under his command he was kind, but
and with a Congressional declaration
grave and reserved, and exacting in the
of war came a nationwide call for
Cuban official named Narciso Lopez was
performance of duty; in battle he was
volunteers. Abandoning both his studies
putting together an invading force for the
fiery, impetuous and resolute.”
and his job, Wheat immediately enlisted
purpose of liberating Cuba from Spain.
As it happened, in 1849, a former
A combination of “the iron hand of
in the Tennessee state militia. He was
He had tried unsuccessfully to take the
discipline” and “fatherly kindness” was
the first to join and was soon elected
island the previous year, and now he was
noted by a fellow officer, who added,
second lieutenant of the First Tennessee
in the United States soliciting support
“Wheat had these two qualities … in a
Mounted Regiment. It was a fortuitous
for a second attempt. Many Americans,
remarkable degree. His men loved him
choice; with his affable nature, impressive
sensing an opportunity to seize the island,
– and feared him. The power or spell he
size and strength and natural gift of
supported Lopez’ campaign. Several
had over his men was truly remarkable.”
leadership, the 20-year-old Wheat –
young filibusters, or soldiers of fortune,
mounted on his blooded warhorse, Jim
signed on, inspired by the promise of
– made the perfect officer.
glory, land and wealth in a newly liberated
Chatham Roberdeau Wheat – or Bob, as he was known among his friends and fellow officers – was a walking contra-
For his part, Wheat was more than
Cuba. Among them was Roberdeau
diction. A handsome, dark-haired giant
ready for combat. “Grandpa and Pa have
at 6-foot-4-inches and 250 pounds, the
been in the wars,” he wrote his mother,
dashing, highly cultured and well-educated
“and I must, too.” Over the next year,
acquitted himself well, constantly
Wheat embodied the image of a man
Wheat led his men in several skirmishes,
rallying his dispirited troops and placing
of breeding. Yet student of poetry and
and when their one-year enlistments
himself in the thick of battle, in one
literature though he was and a Southern
ended, Wheat, now a captain, re-enlisted,
instance suffering a shoulder wound.
gentleman in the truest sense of the term,
convincing several of his men to remain
Outnumbered and outgunned, however,
Wheat was a war-lover. He thrived on the
with him. Despite bouts with debili-
Lopez’ forces were badly defeated. Wheat
danger, chaos and carnage, as well as the
tating, near-fatal illness; horrific living
returned home and again took up his law
pomp, the bombast and the opportunities
conditions; and an Army often devoid of
practice – and again, soon left it to follow
for glory. As one biographer wrote of him,
discipline, Wheat had become addicted to
the sound of the drums.
“Wheat’s story is that of a man who learned
the lure of battle and would so remain for
to play soldier late in youth and thereafter
the rest of his life. In a sense, Wheat was
disastrous as the first, but it didn’t take
was never able to shake off the fascination
a throwback to the knights of Arthurian
Wheat long to find another cause – and
that battle held for him.” And when no
legend. His attention to his appearance (“I
another war. This time, he joined the
wars were available to him at home, he
am splendidly equipped,” he wrote) and
makeshift army of a Mexican “patriot”
traveled to foreign countries to fight in
his adherence to a strict chivalric code
and former freebooter named Carvajal
theirs. By the time his military career came
defined him as a true “beau sabreur” – a
in an attempt to establish the Republic
to an abrupt end, Bob Wheat had earned
gallant warrior. Gen. John A. Quitman,
of Sierra Madre below the border. The
a reputation as a skilled commander and a
under whom Wheat served in Mexico,
insurrection failed, however, and Wheat
fearless soldier. Stonewall Jackson himself
called him “the best natural soldier” he
– now 26 years old – returned to New
described Wheat as “too brave to ever think
ever knew.
Orleans and ran successfully for the
of himself.”
After returning home at war’s end,
Wheat, who joined as a colonel. The invasion was a disaster. Wheat
A second Cuban invasion proved as
Louisiana State House of Representatives.
Wheat finished his law studies in
The restless adventurer quickly grew as
WAYWARD VISION
New Orleans and was admitted to the
bored with politics as he had with the
Wheat was born to a large and venerable
Louisiana Bar in 1848. He found the
practice of law, and he turned once again
Virginia family in April 1826. When
practice of law profoundly unsatisfying,
to his military muse. He attempted to join
he was 12, his father, an Episcopal
however, and soon found a means of
the celebrated filibuster William Walker
minister, moved the family to Nashville,
satisfying his lust for battle.
in his brief conquest of Northern Mexico – an area which the megalomaniacal
Tenn., which became Wheat’s home through early manhood. And although
MANIFEST DESTINY
Walker declared the “Republic of Lower
his father tended to look askance at his
The first half of the 19th century was a
California,” with himself as president –
chosen pursuit and referred to him as
golden time for young men in search of
but arrived in California in time to see the
“wayward,” he shared an unusually close
adventure. The cry of Manifest Destiny
invasion crumble.
relationship with his mother all his life,
was on everyone’s lips, and Americans
remaining in constant contact with her
envisioned a national expansion that
Wheat soon joined yet another Cuban insurrection, which fared no better than www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 49
the first two. He then offered his services
portended civil war, Wheat returned to
his wound and rejoined his regiment in
– and his sword – to a Mexican rebel
New Orleans and set up the recruiting
mid-September. In December, two of
named Juan Álvarez in his attempt to
station at 64 St. Charles St., where he had
his Tigers were found guilty by court
unseat Gen. Santa Anna and establish a
enlisted hundreds of men for his previous
martial of violating an article of war
government more favorably disposed to
adventures. This time, the former general
and – despite Wheat’s entreaties on their
the United States. Álvarez made Wheat a
in a number of foreign causes would
behalf – sentenced to be shot. As the
general the day after the American’s 29th
be fighting on and for his native soil.
firing squad, selected from among the
birthday. Álvarez was successful and led
He raised some 500 men, who became
Louisianians, fired on command, Wheat
his 30,000 men triumphantly into Mexico
known as Wheat’s Special Battalion.
sat sobbing in his tent.
City. Wheat was rewarded with land,
Although many were Irish and German
money and a pearl fishery in Acapulco.
immigrants, the bulk consisted of street
Stonewall Jackson’s campaign in the
After months of inactivity, however,
thugs and wharf rats whose first – and,
Shenandoah Valley during May and
Wheat resigned from the Mexican army
in some cases, only – allegiance was to
June 1862, earning the praise of Jackson
for a more challenging adventure.
Wheat. One company, designated the
himself, as well as that of a number
Tiger Rifles and officered by Capt. Alex
of other general officers. At the Battle
White, was described by one contempo-
of Gaines’ Mill, however, the law of
Once again, William Walker – the “Grey-eyed Man of Destiny,” as the
averages finally caught up with
press liked to call the tiny man
Roberdeau Wheat. The day
with huge ambition – staged an invasion, this time of Nicaragua.
Wheat gallantly led his men throughout
Chatham Roberdeau Wheat
before the battle, he had a strong
And again, he perempto-
presentiment of his death, and he
rily named himself president.
beseeched his comrades to bury
Wheat, on hearing of the forces
him where he fell. Throughout the
being mustered against Walker,
day, he spoke of his mother and
immediately boarded a ship
wept and recited lines from his
bound for South America, at
prayer book. The next day, during
the head of a relief expedition
a particularly vicious exchange of
of 40 volunteers. After several
fire, Wheat rode to within 40 yards
skirmishes, interdiction by the
of the enemy lines and a Yankee
British navy and a disastrous
volley felled both man and horse.
shipboard explosion that killed
As he lay dying, he murmured,
some 20 men, Wheat gave up all
“Bury me on the field, boys.” The
hope of reaching Walker and in
morning following the battle, two
April 1857 returned to the U.S.
fellow officers and four Tigers dug his grave and solemnly spoke a
The next two years found him
prayer over him.
working with an inventor in the
By the time Wheat died, his
creation of a cannon that would fire farther and with greater
Tigers had been drastically
penetrating power than any gun
reduced in number, from an initial
of the period. Typically, he grew
enrollment of 500 to fewer than
bored, and in 1859 the 33-year-old
100 men. On Aug. 9, 1862, the
warrior returned to Mexico and
battalion was disbanded by special order and its remaining troops
the forces of Juan Álvarez. Within a year, he read of Garibaldi’s rebellion in
rary as having been “recruited from the
reassigned to other Louisiana regiments.
Sicily, and he was soon steaming to Italy,
very dregs of the city and commanded by
They had always fought with distinction
ready to lend the Red Shirts his skill and
a man who had served a term in the peni-
and often just for the love of fighting.
experience. According to one newspaper
tentiary” – which was true.
Perhaps the most accurate memorial
account, Wheat “went through battle
By late May 1861, Wheat commanded
to the Louisiana Tigers, and to Wheat
and skirmish, displaying the magnificent
five companies as their major, and on
himself, was written by Confederate Maj.
courage, the rare horsemanship and the
June 5, they were inducted into the
David Boyd: “Wheat’s Battalion was a
personal chivalry of the cavalier.”
Confederate service as the First Special
unique body, representing every grade
Battalion. They marched to Virginia,
of society and every kind of man, from
CIVIL WAR
where Wheat and his Louisiana Tigers
the princely gentleman who commanded
Meanwhile, the United States presiden-
fought in the first battle of the war – First
them down to the thief and cutthroat
tial election raised to world prominence
Manassas, or Bull Run. They fought well,
released from parish prison. … Such a
the successful campaign of the fledgling
although Wheat himself was shot through
motley herd of humanity was probably
Republican Party candidate, Abraham
the lung. Despite the dour predictions of
never got together before, and may
Lincoln. Aware that the election
the field surgeons, Wheat recovered from
never be again.”
50 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
n
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 51
Discovering Our State A Staycation guide for Louisianians |
By Judi Russell
Louisiana residents just happen to live in a state targeted by
your batteries right in your own backyard. Because you
folks in the other 49 as a top vacation destination. A desire
won’t spend a lot of time flying or driving to some distant
to experience the great food, culture and outdoor activities
destination, you’ll use less of your precious time off sitting
Louisiana offers leads people from Maine to Minnesota to
around airports or behind the wheel of a car. That leaves
pack their bags and head for the Bayou State.
more days for having a good time, and isn’t that what
If your vacation budget this year doesn’t stretch to a crosscountry trip – or if you just want to see what all the others
vacations are all about? Whether your hometown is one of Louisiana’s exciting big
are excited about – plan a “staycation” in Louisiana instead.
cities or its many charming smaller towns, you’ll run out of
Check out the ways you can relax, have fun and recharge
vacation days long before you run out of things to do.
Northern Delights Sci-Port
Festival, the 18-block Historic District lets visitors admire period architecture while they shop and dine. If you crave outdoor relaxation, head for the region’s many golf courses and state parks. You can glimpse a variety of native wildlife at Olde Oaks, an Audubon Golf Trail course near Shreveport, while creeks add interest to the 300-acre Black Bear Golf Course in Delhi. Spend your
T
vacation days in a cabin or
hose who hail from
bottler of Coca-Cola, built
S. Ford Memorial Museum
camp site at Lake D’Arbonne
North Louisiana can
the magnificent mansion in
in Homer. The former is the
State Park, where you can
choose from myriad
1914. Today, guests can tour
site of a utopian community
fish, swim, bike or go bird-
ways to vacation close to home.
the historic home, furnished
founded by a group of
watching. The fishing is
This part of the state bears
with antiques, as well as the
Germans in the 1830s; the
also great at Poverty Point
the nickname Sportsman’s
beautiful gardens, a Bible
community lasted 40 years,
Reservoir State Park, near
Paradise, a tribute to its
museum and displays of
and several of their buildings
Delhi. If you like canoeing,
rolling hills and many lakes,
Coke memorabilia.
and a cemetery remain. The
try the 6,400-acre lake at Lake
Ford Museum is a detailed
Claiborne State Park.
rivers and state parks. But
Those interested in
Another outdoor treat is
you needn’t go far to enjoy
military history can take in
look at North Louisiana history
more urban entertainment,
the Chennault Aviation and
from pre-Columbian times to
the Gardens of the American
including casinos, restaurants,
Military Museum of Louisiana
the present day and contains
Rose Center in Shreveport,
theaters and shops.
in Monroe or the Louisiana
period rooms such as a
where more than 20,000
Military Museum in Ruston.
general store, a medical office
roses perfume the air.
and a hotel room. The exhibits
The gardens are lovely in
If museum-hopping is your thing, opportunities
Smaller specialty museums
abound. One standout is
are often fascinating. Two
give visitors a real feel for life
spring, summer and into fall;
the Biedenharn Museum
in North Louisiana are the
in days gone by.
during the winter holidays,
& Gardens in Monroe.
Germantown Colony Museum
Joseph Biedenharn, the first
near Minden and the Herbert
In Ruston, home to the popular Louisiana Peach
thousands of twinkling lights turn it into a wonderland,
Black Bear Golf Course
complete with train rides. Vacationing with the kids?
Casino Resort. Bossier City is noted for its
Don’t miss Shreveport’s
giant riverfront mall, Louisiana
Sci-Port – Louisiana’s Science
Boardwalk, with more
Center, more than 90,000
than 70 outlet stores along
square feet of interactive,
with an IMAX theater and
educational fun for families.
restaurants. Or try Monroe’s
Kids can learn about science,
Antique Alley, blocks and
math and outer space in
blocks of antiques shops.
hundreds of exhibits and
Other fun side trips include
catch a flick at the IMAX
visits to the tasting room at
Dome Theatre. Chimp Haven,
Landry Vineyards in the hills of
a national chimpanzee
West Monroe and Vieux Carré
sanctuary, is located just
Gourmet, also in Monroe,
22 miles from Shreveport;
which specializes in food with a
on Chimp Discovery Days,
New Orleans flavor.
visitors are admitted to see the chimps and their habitat.
Speaking of flavor, the cuisine in northern Louisiana
Kids and water go together
has something for everyone.
like peanut butter and jelly, and
“Barbecue is big, and catfish
in addition to swimming in the
is king,” says Louisiana food
region’s state parks, try Splash
commentator Ian McNulty
Kingdom Family Waterpark in
(see his column, p. 20).
Shreveport, featuring slides, a
Restaurants run from white-
lazy river and a special area for
tablecloth to neighborhood
the small fry.
cafés, and you can also take
Shopping, placing a wager
advantage of summer’s sunny
or two and taking in a show
weather and pick up some
are other popular vacation
regional favorites, including
pastimes. Don’t miss the
pecans, blueberries and those
breathtaking Strand Theatre in
juicy Ruston peaches for a
Shreveport, built in 1925 and
picnic in the park.
lovingly restored. It reopened
With a little advance
in 1984 and provides an
planning, you can schedule
opulent backdrop for concerts,
your staycation to coincide
plays and touring Broadway
with one or two of North
shows. In the Shreveport-
Louisiana’s festivals. Popular
Bossier City entertainment
gatherings include the
districts, you can try your luck
Franklin Parish Catfish fest in
at several casinos and Harrah’s
Winnsboro, the Teddy Bear
Louisiana Downs, a casino and
Festival in Tallulah, Ruston’s
race track. This summer will
Louisiana Peach Festival and
bring the grand opening of
the Germantown Bluegrass
Jimmy Buffet’s Margaritaville
Festival in Minden. www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 55
Capital THRILLS, plantation adventures Francisco, Oak Alley and
contemporary art museum,
The Myrtles (which calls
restaurants and gallery
itself Louisiana’s most
spaces.
haunted home). At Laura
have fun, spend an afternoon
show the reverse side of
or two at Blue Bayou Water
the coin; enslaved African
Park and its neighbor, Dixie
Americans provided the
Landin’, filled with thrilling
labor to keep the plantations
rides for children of all ages.
going, and the slave quarters
They might also enjoy seeing
show the poverty of their
the U.S.S. Kidd Veterans
lives. Another don’t-miss
Memorial & Museum.
destination is Oakley House
The destroyer, nicknamed
at the Audubon State
“The Pirate of the Pacific,”
Historical Site. Oakley is
was launched in 1943. On
where John James Audubon
Thursdays, Fridays and
painted some of his famous
Saturdays, the Enchanted
bird pictures.
Mansion: A Doll Museum
Today, many plantations
displays dolls of every
have turned into bed-and-
description; money raised by
breakfast inns, and others
the site is donated to benefit
have special holiday activities
the handicapped.
and lovely restaurants. Baton Rouge is rich in
The Baton Rouge area has plenty of places to
interesting sites. Young people
shop and dine, including
would especially like the LSU
the Baton Rouge Mall of
Rural Life Museum, a collection
America, with its carousel;
of 27 buildings filled with
L’Auberge Casino & Hotel,
tools, furniture and other items
with three restaurants and
Afton Villa Gardens
E
Because kids just want to
Plantation, six slave quarters
from Louisiana’s
plenty of gaming action;
19th-century rural
and the Denham Springs
culture.
Historic and Antique District,
At the Louisiana Art &
where dealers sell toys, art,
ven if you’ve lived in
wealthy planters who called
Science Museum, kids can
Christmas items and silver.
the Baton Rouge area
the area home in antebellum
have fun in the interactive
Stop by Cottonwood Books,
for some time, there
days.
science center or view a
filled with thousands of new, used and rare books,
are bound to be interesting
The area’s nickname is
show at the planetarium.
places you’ve never visited.
“Plantation Country” for a
Parents will like the fine
including those on Louisiana
Maybe you’ve put off
reason: Nowhere else can
art on display. And at the
history, the Civil War and
exploring the parts of the
you tour such a unique
Old Governor’s Mansion,
Southern literature.
region you’re not familiar
collection of mansions
built by Huey P. Long, get
with or you’ve skipped your
that tell the tale of a time
a look at Long’s pajamas,
home to such charming
hometown’s highlights,
when cotton was king and
Gov. Jimmie Davis’ guitar
towns as New Roads and St.
thinking they would always
planters lived like royalty.
and other artifacts. Other
Francisville. In New Roads,
be available. A staycation is
Start with Nottoway,
specialized museums include
enjoy fishing, boating and
the ideal time to see what’s
sometimes called “The
the Old Arsenal Museum,
water-skiing on the False
happening in a section of
White Castle of Louisiana,”
with its exhibits of military
River, an oxbow lake.
Louisiana that combines
with 64 rooms of grandeur.
history, and the Shaw Center
The town is also home to
big-city life with a glimpse
Other notable plantations
for the Arts, a downtown
the Pointe Coupee Parish
into the lifestyles of the
include Destrehan, San
architectural gem with a
Museum and lots of antiques
56 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
Plantation Country is also
Rural Life Museum
shops. St. Francisville, noted
The Bluffs on Thompson
for its Main Street, is often
Creek, just five minutes from
called one of America’s most
St. Francisville. The course,
beautiful small towns. Don’t
built to an Arnold Palmer
miss Afton Villa Gardens;
design, is noted for its creeks,
although Afton Villa burned
ponds and breathtaking
in 1963, its lovely gardens
rolling bluffs. Or walk the
are filled with sweet olive,
Iberville Parish Birding Trail,
magnolias and camellias, as
where you can spot neo-
well as azaleas of all colors.
tropical songbirds, migratory
In the town of Zachary,
hummingbirds, wading birds
take in the Zachary Historic
and raptors.
Village, with its blacksmith’s
Dining is a big part of
shop, and watch corn
every vacation, and there are
ground into grits.
lots of options in the Baton
If you time your staycation
Rouge area, ranging from
right, you can join the
elegant meals to neighbor-
locals and celebrate at the
hood cafés with Cajun and
Baton Rouge Greek Festival,
Creole specialties. In Baton
the Jambalaya Festival in
Rouge, local favorites include
Gonzales or one of the many
Ruffino’s, with its classic
other area festivals.
Creole Italian dishes, and
Vacation is an ideal time to
Juban’s, with its Creole menu.
head for the great outdoors,
Many plantation homes also
and in Baton Rouge and
have restaurants, such as The
Plantation Country, choices
Carriage House Restaurant at
abound. At the Tunica Hills
The Myrtles, which features
Wildlife Management Area,
“down home Southern
northwest of St. Francisville,
favorites.” It’s also fun to pick
visitors can hunt, hike, bike,
up some fresh produce and
ride horses, bird-watch or
prepared foods at one of the
take a walk on the 3-mile
area’s many farmers markets
nature trail with camera in
and have a picnic.
tow. The Bluebonnet Swamp
Dining, shopping, hiking
Nature Center in Baton
or taking in a bit of history
Rouge is crisscrossed with
– the Baton Rouge area
gravel paths and boardwalks
is a complete vacation
and is noted for its live animal
destination in one easy-to-
encounters. Like golf? Try
navigate package. www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 57
big easy fun city park
good place for children to run around. They can watch the ships on the river and ride the ferry across and back. In the nearby town of Folsom is an unusual spot, the Global Wildlife Center. During a 90-minute safari tour, you can see giraffes, zebras, camels, elands and other animals. You can even feed them. Of course, just wandering through the French Quarter, or Vieux Carré, is an ideal way to spend an afternoon or two. On Royal Street, you can take in the magnificent antiques stores, and later, you should get out and experience the nightlife on Bourbon Street. Another fun staycation activity – one you may have always wanted to do but never had time for – is to board the streetcar at
F
ew cities have the
buildings in the French
allure of New Orleans.
Quarter; and Mardi Gras
enjoy the Audubon
Its charms are known
World, where you can get a
Aquarium of the Americas
all over the world, and its
behind-the-scenes look at how
and Entergy IMAX Theatre
restaurants, hotels, museums
the parade floats are built.
and Audubon’s spectacular
and cultural activities are a
One of the most moving
Families will especially
zoo. A fairly new venue,
magnet for tourists. Those in
places to visit is the National
the Audubon Insectarium,
the know, however – especially
World War II Museum,
gives an up-close look at
those who live near the city –
which tells the story of the
the smaller critters we
realize that the Greater New
Greatest Generation and the
all live side by side with.
Orleans area holds lots of
battles fought in Europe and
The Louisiana Children’s
lesser-known delights just a
in the Pacific, on land and sea
Museum, just a brief walk
short hop from the city itself.
and in the air. The recorded
from Canal Street, is packed
A staycation is the ideal time
interviews with veterans
with hands-on, educational
to explore one of Louisiana’s
are poignant; other exhibits
activities children of all ages
most exciting regions.
show how life was on the
will enjoy.
New Orleans has museums to suit just about
home front. The Historic New Orleans
Another treat for children is City Park, where kids can
every interest. Don’t-miss
Collection on Royal Street
play in Storyland, feed the
venues include the Ogden
in the Vieux Carré tells
ducks and ride paddle boats.
Museum of Southern Art; the
the story of the city’s
Woldenberg Park, which
Contemporary Arts Center;
past through exhibits and
borders the docks on the
the Cabildo and Presbytère
research materials.
Mississippi River, is another
58 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
Canal Street and St. Charles Avenue and ride all the way up the Avenue, through the Garden District, known for its beautiful mansions and huge trees, and into the Uptown area. At the end of the line, get off and walk a short way to Camellia Grill, a favorite with college students and locals. After your meal, take the car back to town, enjoying the breeze and the sounds of the city. Just a short trip from downtown is Longue Vue House and Gardens. The classic Revival mansion, built by Edith and Edgar Stern, is filled with original furnishings and surrounded by a wide variety of gardens. Longue Vue provides a look at a way of life few people
PresbytÈre Building
ever experience. New Orleans also has
If vacation means getting outdoors to you, New
a full complement of
Orleans has many fine golf
cultural activities, including
courses, such as the TCP
symphony concerts, ballets,
Louisiana Golf Course,
operas and stage shows.
a member of the state’s
In nearby Jefferson Parish,
Audubon Golf Trail. At Jean
the Jefferson Performing
Lafitte National Historical
Arts Society offers plays in
Park and Preserve’s Barataria
several venues.
Preserve in Marrero, you can
Generations ago, New
canoe, follow nature trails
Orleanians escaped the heat
and learn about the area’s
of the summer by crossing
unique topography.
Lake Pontchartrain to visit
Dining, in all its variations,
what is now called the
is a big part of visiting
Northshore. The communities
the Greater New Orleans
of Covington, Mandeville,
region. The city itself is
Madisonville, Abita Springs
famous for its elegant white-
and Hammond, among
tablecloth restaurants, such
others, offer a plethora of
as Antoine’s, Arnaud’s,
activities including bicycling
Commander’s Palace and
along the Tammany Trace;
Brigtsen’s. But locals know
shopping in Historic
neighborhood spots, such
Downtown Covington;
as Jacques-Imo’s on Oak
grabbing a beer and a burger
Street, Venezia’s in Mid-City
at the Abita Brew Pub; and
and Praline Connection on
feasting on fresh shrimp,
Frenchmen Street, offer
crab and oysters. Covington
delicious food and lively
has become famous for its
atmospheres.
Three Rivers Art Festival,
Traditional treats include
which draws art-lovers
enjoying café au lait and
from miles away. The
beignets at Café du Monde,
Madisonville Wooden Boat
where you can sit and watch
Festival is another popular
the world go by, or buying a
destination. Many New
muffuletta (an Italian stuffed
Orleans cultural groups,
sandwich) at Central Grocery
such as the symphony
downtown and then sitting
orchestra, offer shows on
on a bench by the Mississippi
the Northshore, as well.
River to eat it. www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 59
heart of louisiana Hodges Gardens State Park
Few states can match Louisiana’s colorful politics; learn the story at the Louisiana Political Museum and Hall of Fame in Winnfield. Gov. Huey P. Long Jr., Oscar K. “O.K.” Allen and Earl K. Long were born in Winnfield. Other stops include the Alexandria Museum of Art, the Old Courthouse Museum in Natchitoches and the Museum of West Louisiana in Leesville. At the Tunica-Biloxi Regional Indian Center & Museum in Marksville, learn about the history of the Tunica and Biloxi Indian tribes. You
C
can see ancient Indian burial
entral Louisiana,
plantation of the early
Pineville and the Fort Polk
mounds at the Marksville State
which borders both
1800s and a modern cotton
Military Museum. The Arna
Historical Site.
Texas and Mississippi,
plantation and gin. Particular
Bontemps African American
combines Southern charm
attention is paid to the lives
Museum in Alexandria
Natchitoches, the oldest
with aspects of the Old
of the slaves who once
highlights the life of the
permanent settlement in the
West. With its rolling hills
provided the labor that made
Harlem Renaissance writer.
Louisiana Purchase territory,
and piney woods, the area
the plantation successful.
offers many opportunities
Just down the road from
Melrose Plantation,
The lovely town of
is a history lesson in itself.
about 15 miles south of
Its 33-block downtown
for outdoor relaxation. Its
Frogmore in Ferriday is
Natchitoches, is unique
Historic Landmark District
charming cities and towns,
the Delta Music Museum,
in that it was built by and
fronts the Cane River and
such as Natchitoches,
which spotlights the rock
for free blacks. The famed
contains places to shop
Alexandria, Pineville,
’n’ roll and blues musicians
primitive painter, Clementine
and dine, as well as some
Leesville, Ferriday and
from the Delta. Learn more
Hunter, lived and worked
bed-and-breakfast inns. At
Vidalia, are popular places to
about Mickey Gilley; Jerry
at Melrose, and today it
Christmastime, the town is
shop, dine and learn about
Lee Lewis; and Louisiana’s
holds a major arts and craft
brilliantly illuminated during
the region’s history.
“singing governor,” Jimmie
festival. Kent Plantation
its Festival of Lights and
Davis, remembered for
House in Alexandria, built in
Christmas Festival. Be sure
Central Louisiana are wide-
his big hit, “You Are My
1796, is also an interesting
to check out the activities on
ranging. Some provide a look
Sunshine.”
destination. In addition to
tap at Northwestern State
the main house, you can
University.
Visitor attractions in
at the area’s bygone days; at
Our state’s military
Frogmore Cotton Plantation
past is remembered in
see slave cabins, a sugar
& Gins, for example, you
the Louisiana Maneuvers
mill, the milk house and the
the family, you’ll find enough
can tour both a working
& Military Museum in
open-hearth kitchens.
to do in Central Louisiana
60 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
If your staycation includes
Mark Bills photo
downtown Natchitoches
to keep the younger crowd
is just minutes from the
busy. Alexandria’s T.R.E.E.
Alexandria/Pineville area.
House Children’s Museum
One of the state’s Audubon
and the town’s zoo are two
Golf Trail courses, OakWing
such stops.
is ornamented with lakes,
Youngsters will also enjoy the many outdoor activities
bayous and tall trees. All that outdoor exercise
in the region. Kisatchie
will make you hungry, and
National Forest, more than
Central Louisiana can meet
600,000 acres, is Louisiana’s
that need, too. Natchitoches
only national forest. It’s a
is famous for its meat pies,
great place to fish; hunt;
and Lasyone’s Meat Pie
hike; and go boating,
Restaurant is one of the local
swimming and camping.
favorite places to get one. Try
Toledo Bend Reservoir
the crispy fish at Paradise
is one of the nation’s top
Catfish Kitchen in Pineville
fishing spots, and you can
or Tunk’s Cypress Inn in
also picnic and camp there.
Boyce, noted for its alligator,
At North Toledo Bend State
crawfish and oyster dishes,
Park, near Zwolle, amenities
as well as steaks.
include swimming pools, a boat launch and cabins. Hodges Gardens State
There’s always something good to eat at the area’s festivals, too. The Louisiana
Park in Florien is a serene
Pecan Festival in Colfax pays
getaway with formal rose
homage to the tasty nut with
gardens, colorful azaleas,
pies and pralines, and the
nature trails, waterfalls,
Cochon de Lait Festival in
fountains and cabins. Here
Mansura is the place to try
you may glimpse deer,
suckling pig plus many other
otters, geese, ducks and
Cajun treats. If you like to
other wildlife; canoeing and
wager a bit, you’ll enjoy the
kayaking are also permitted.
Paragon Casino Resort in
If golf is on your list, the OakWing Golf Club
Marksville, with its cinema, spa and restaurants. www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 61
cajun good times Atchafalaya Basin
birthplace of zydeco king Clifton Chenier. The town draws people from all around to its Original Southwest Louisiana Zydeco Music Festival. Opelousas also has plenty of history; founded in 1720 by the French, it’s the state’s third-oldest city and served as the capital of Confederate Louisiana for a short time. The town’s historic district has many beautiful antebellum and Victorian homes, as well as historic churches and cemeteries. And like most Cajun towns, you’ll find lots of places to sample the region’s delicious boudin, crawfish étouffée and other delights. Children will find much to do in Cajun Country. Both Lafayette and Lake Charles have children’s
I
museums. In DeQuincy, let kids see the train cars at the
f you live in Louisiana’s
is delicious because it makes
Cajun Country, you already
use of the fish, game and crops
know how many fun things
that are plentiful in the region.
time to view the historic
Adjacent to the museum is a
there are to do right in your
One of the favorite foods is
Charpentier District. Long
playground with rides.
own backyard. But if you’re
boudin, a flavorful sausage
ago, lumbermen used
like most of us, the pressure
sold in dozens of small grocery
available pine in the area to
Island brings tours of the
of work and caring for family
stores and even gas stations
build tall, angular homes. The
famous Tabasco factory. In the
means most of your free
throughout the region.
area is now on the National
island’s Jungle Gardens, you
Historic Registry.
can see exotic plants, as well
time is spent taking care of
Many of Cajun Country’s
and free people of color. In Lake Charles, take
DeQuincy Railroad Museum.
A visit to beautiful Avery
as deer, alligator and snowy
everyday business. Vacation
attractions center on the
time, then, is the perfect
area’s history. In Lafayette,
and Lake Charles, celebrates
opportunity to experience for
for example, both the Acadian
the area’s rice crop in many
yourself all the riches that lie
Village and Vermilionville
ways. The Historic Rice
Country is Fred’s Lounge
in your neck of the woods.
illustrate life in the past.
Theatre, an art deco beauty
in the little town of Mamou.
Acadian Village is a folk life
built in 1940, has been lovingly
The lounge is open only on
name from the Acadians,
museum focused on 19th-
restored and features local
Saturdays from 7:30 a.m. to
French Catholics who fled
century Cajun life, while
music events. Crowley also
about 2 p.m., and you’ll find
Acadie (Nova Scotia) and
Vermilionville shows how 18th-
boasts the J.D. Miller Music
plenty of folks dancing as the
eventually settled in South
century Acadian settlers lived.
Recording Studio Museum,
lively Cajun music is broadcast
opened in 1946 and restored
for a radio program. In
Cajun Country takes its
Louisiana. Their rich culture
Evangeline Oak Park in
Crowley, between Lafayette
egrets, among other wildlife. A real fixture in Cajun
endures today and can be
St. Martinville is home to an
to its original state. The studio
Eunice, visit the Liberty
enjoyed in the region’s unique
ancient live oak named for the
once recorded tunes by local
Theatre to enjoy a live radio
food, music and festivals.
heroine of Longfellow’s famous
Cajun, zydeco, blues, country
show with zydeco music.
poem. The park also contains
and swamp pop artists.
People sometimes equate Cajun food with hot, spicy
an African American museum
food. In reality, Cajun cuisine
recounting the lives of slaves
62 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
If you are a Cajun music buff, be sure to visit Opelousas, the
Cajun Country is sometimes called Louisiana’s festival capital. There are so many
DeQuincy Railroad Museum
fests that you’re almost sure
hiking, backpacking, cycling
to find one coinciding with
and camping. Cabins are
your vacation. Like omelets?
available, too. The Louisiana
At Abbeville’s Giant Omelette
State Arboretum, located
Celebration, cooks make a
within the park, is a stately
5,000-egg omelet in a 12-foot
beech forest with nature
skillet. The fest is said to
trails. Native plants along the
harken back to a time when
trails are labeled so you can
Napoleon ordered French
increase your knowledge of
villagers to bring out all their
Louisiana plant life.
eggs to feed his soldiers. Meanwhile, the Rayne Frog
Check out the Creole Nature Trail, a state scenic
Festival holds frog-jumping
route, which is composed
and frog-racing contests –
of Cameron Prairie National
bring your own contender.
Wildlife Refuge, Lacassine
The Festival International
National Wildlife Refuge,
de Louisiane in Lafayette
Sabine National Wildlife
includes music, food and
Refuge, Peveto Woods Bird
arts and crafts; Crowley’s
& Butterfly Sanctuary and
Rice Festival celebrates the
Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge,
harvesting of the rice crop;
from which you can view
and the Contraband Days-
alligator and shorebirds. Or try
Louisiana Pirate Festival in
the Lake Charles Boardwalk,
Lake Charles recalls the days
which follows the lake and is
of pirate Jean Lafitte.
popular with walkers, bikers
Like so much of Louisiana, Cajun Country provides lots
and joggers. For a different type of
of outdoor entertainment. The
relaxation, spend a day or two
swamps and wetlands of the
at one of the area’s gambling
vast Atchafalaya Basin, the
venues. Bet on the horses
nation’s largest river-swamp,
at Delta Downs Racetrack
is heaven for those who
Casino Hotel in Vinton, or try
like to bicycle, camp, hunt,
the slots and table games at
fish, play golf or spot birds.
the Isle of Capri Casino Hotel
Calcasieu Lake near Lake
and L’Auberge Casino Resort,
Charles is well-known for its
both in Lake Charles.
abundant fish, including trout, redfish and flounder. Chicot State Park near Ville
In short, there’s no need to feel down if your vacation budget this year doesn’t
Platte is more than 6,000 acres
permit an expensive trek to a
of natural beauty. If you crave
far-flung destination. You can
catching largemouth bass
satisfy just about any vaca-
or bluegill, here’s your spot.
tion-related yen you have not
Ditto for those who enjoy
far from your own backyard. www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 63
ADVERTISING SECTION
Louisiana Destinations Statewide Summer Travel
E
njoy the beautiful spring and slow summer days in Louisiana this year with weekend, weeklong or day trips across the state. Whether you choose to explore new territory or visit old favorites, you’re sure to find an outing right for you. Family fun abounds at festivals and community events, while opportunities for girls’ weekends or leisure trips include everything from quaint small-town getaways to exciting big city stays and relaxing resort vacations. In addition to unique cultural offerings across Louisiana’s many parishes, cities and towns, destinations for dining, arts, entertainment and lodging also factor in to the following mixed bag of summer opportunities close to home. Louisiana Parishes, Cities & Towns Savor the difference in Iberia Parish — New Iberia, Avery Island, Jefferson Island, Jeanerette, Loreauville and Delcambre, located in the midst of the Atchafalaya National Heritage Area. Experience the heat at Avery Island’s world-famous TABASCO® Factory, Country Store and Jungle Gardens. Tour Conrad Rice Mill, America’s oldest operating rice mill, and KONRIKO® Company Store. Discover Iberia’s history and industries at the Jeanerette Sugar Museum; Bayou Teche Museum; and Shadows-on-the-Teche Plantation Home and Gardens, the first National Trust for Historic Preservation® property in the Gulf South. Watch a salt mine swallow a lake at Rip Van Winkle Gardens on Jefferson Island. Stroll along Bayou Teche and New Iberia’s national award-winning Main Street and Historic District, captured in the famed Dave Robicheaux novels by New Iberia native and award-winning author James Lee Burke. Of course, you’ll want to allow time to smell 100 varieties of roses at Antique Rose Ville. Spring and summer events abound. Enjoy Bunk Fest, Cruisin’ Cajun Country Cruise In, Delcambre Shrimp Festival, seafood and farmers’ markets, fishing rodeos, and more. For information, call 888-942-3742 or visit www.iberiatravel.com. Just off I-10 and west of Lafayette lies the “Cajun Prairie,” Acadia
64 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
Parish, an area known for its unique attractions, numerous year-round festivals and rich history and folklore. In Crowley, home of the International Rice Festival, tour the Rice Interpretive Center, the Historic Crowley Ford Motor Co., built in 1920, as well as the J.D. Miller Recording Studio. Travel the Zydeco Cajun Prairie Byway and visit Kelly’s Landing Agricultural Museum to take an informative walk through the past while viewing the farming equipment of yesteryear and learning the importance of crawfish and rice to the region. See why Rayne, LA, home of the annual Frog Festival, is both “The Frog Capital of the World” and the “Louisiana City of Murals.” Similarly, check out the Buggy Festival at “The Buggy Capital of the World,” also known as Church Point, LA, and visit the Le Vieux Presbytere Museum with bousillage, mud walls. Roberts Cove, LA, is home to the German Heritage Museum and the popular Germanfest. For more information, events, destinations and festival dates check out AcadiaTourism.org or call 877-783-2109. Plan your summer adventure to historic Natchitoches by visiting the newly constructed Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame Museum opening this July. Learn about and connect with several Louisiana sports legends through spectacular displays that feature the great athletics of Shaquille O’Neal, Terry Bradshaw, Deuce McAllister, Skip Bertman and Bobby Hebert. Inductees represent a wide variety of sports to include football, basketball, baseball, softball, tennis, golf, motor sports, wrestling, hunting and fishing, horse-racing and track and field. Located on Front Street in historic Natchitoches, the museum will further solidify Natchitoches as a tourist destination. Natchitoches is a great destination for a girls’ getaway! The Natchitoches Historic Downtown Association will host a “Girls Weekend” June 7-9. Activities include a wine and cheese social at Melrose Plantation, a movie night featuring Steel Magnolias (filmed in Natchitoches), “Art Under the Oaks” painting classes, discount shopping and so much more. To plan your trip to Natchitoches, call 800-259-1714 or visit www. Natchitoches.net.
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Lafayette, LA, is all about festivals, food and music. For many, a love of Cajun and Zydeco music is a craving that can only be satisfied by a visit to discover all that makes Lafayette special— unique live music venues, delectable food that can be found everywhere from gas stations to fine dining establishments and year-round festivals that showcase local musicians, artists and cuisine. From June 17-Sept. 2, enjoy EatLafayette, a summer-long celebration of the locally owned restaurants that make Lafayette’s culture so appetizing. With a wide variety of restaurants offering mouth-watering specials, EatLafayette is sure to make dining out easier on your pocketbook so you have more to spend on great live music and entertainment. Join the people of Lafayette and manger in support of Lafayette’s one-of-a-kind cuisine. They’ve got a place set just for you. For more info on EatLafayette™ visit EatLafayette.com and visit Lafayette.travel for more summer destinations and events. “Aw shucks, y’all!!” Ask any Avoyellean and you’ll learn that Avoyelles Parish is a splendid, even “corny,” place to call home. Corn is a major crop in Avoyelles and a favorite food also. This year,
Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame Museum
visit Bunkie for a true corn celebration at the 27th Annual Louisiana Corn Festival, which runs June 14-16. Corn is king in Bunkie in June, with Scarecrow Contests, corny balloon launches, parades, corn shucking, corn eating and corn cooking competitions, Corn Queens and Princesses, food booths, carnival rides, music and honors for local corn farmers. A festival favorite is the Corn Festival Country Store with arts, crafts, festival posters, cookbooks and much more. A truly fun family affair, the festival offers music, dancing and all the mouth-watering, hot, buttered corn you can handle. Gather the family and head to Bunkie. Enjoy the corniest, most wonderful weekend possible this side of heaven. For additional information, visit bunkiechamber.net/cornfestival. It’s peach season in Louisiana, and in Ruston/Lincoln Parish, the fuzzy fruit brings both flavor and fun. From Friday, June 21st, through Saturday, June 22, head to downtown Ruston for the 2013 Louisiana Peach Festival. Each night features live music in downtown’s Railroad Park. Music and peaches aren’t the only draw to this 63rd annual festival. Sports enthusiasts can show off their skills in the 5K run, rodeo or in one of several tournaments: tennis, golf and bass fishing. Saturday’s events also include an arts and crafts show, fine arts
show, antique car show and a parade. Fill your bags at the Trenton Street Marketplace before filling your belly at the Downtown Food Court. Don’t forget to bring a sweet tooth to the fest. Sink your teeth into the main event: a sweet and juicy Louisiana peach. For more information on the festival, visit LouisianaPeachFestival.org. For more information on events and destinations in Ruston and Lincoln Parish, visit www.experienceruston.com. It’s time to discover Baton Rouge—where the weather is always warm, the food has a special little kick, and the people are ready to entertain. From every direction, everything uniquely Louisiana culminates in the “Red Stick.” So while you’re in Baton Rouge, take time to experience all the city has to offer—from an eclectic mix of museums and political landmarks to unique shopping destinations and antebellum homes. Baton Rouge is a city full of colorful history, rich culture, vibrant music and exquisite cuisine—a truly cultural hot spot sure to impress. Enjoy fest season in Baton Rouge! Bring your appetite and your toga May 11th to the annual Baton Rouge Greek Festival. Later in the month, Bayou Country Superfest will align the biggest stars in country music for a two-day celebration in LSU Tiger Stadium (May 25-26). The concert lineup includes Lady Antebellum, Zac Brown Band, Miranda Lambert, Luke Bryan, Darius Rucker, the Band Perry, Thompson Square, Rodney Atkins, Aaron Lewis, and Frankie Ballard. For more information, call 800-LA-ROUGE or visit www. VisitBatonRouge.com. For more on each festival, visit BRGreekFest. com and BayouCountrySuperFest.com. The Alexandria/Pineville area is at the heart of family fun this summer. Central Louisiana is a great place for a family escape with affordable lodging, family-friendly restaurants, and a lot of exciting kid-friendly activities. With museums, zoos and safaris, the Children’s Museum and train rides, the whole family is sure to enjoy a summer vacation in the Heart of Louisiana. Need a more thrilling adventure? Explore the great outdoors by hiking the longest hiking trail in Louisiana, the 28-mile Wild Azalea Trail, located in Rapides Parish in the beautifully verdant Kisatchie National Forest. Or, hit the links and explore rolling green fairways at one of Alexandria/Pineville’s six competitive golf courses. For an unconventional golfing twist, play one of the area’s disc golf courses. No matter your interests, the Heart of Louisiana has it all! Visit www.theheartoflouisiana.com today to plan your summer trip. Visit beautiful Bayou Lafourche for a wide array of unique Louisiana events and destinations. The good times start rolling this spring and summer at the Thibodaux Firemen’s Fair & Parade on May 2-5. On June 7-9, The Bon Mangé Festival takes over Gheens with food, music and carnival rides. Get your fishin’ rods ready for the Golden Meadow-Fourchon International Tarpon Rodeo July 4-6 at Moran’s Marina in Fourchon, and celebrate the 4th of July this year with fireworks, food and fun at the Let Freedom Ring Festival at Peltier Park in Thibodaux. Summer is also a great time of year to venture outdoors and see Louisiana’s unique wetlands on one of the area’s many available swamp tours, or learn about the area’s history at the Jean Lafitte National Park Wetlands Acadian Culture Center. Go back in time during a visit to Laurel Valley Village Sugar Plantation & Museum in Thibodaux and the Bayou Lafourche Folklife and Heritage Museum in Lockport. Learn the art and craft of wooden boat building at the Center for Traditional Louisiana Boatbuilding in Lockport. Find endless events and attractions at www.visitlafourche.com and experience all Lafourche has to offer. Surrounded by the waters of Bayou Teche, the Atchafalaya River and the Atchafalaya Swamp Basin, the Cajun Coast in St. Mary Parish is known for its natural splendor and “road less www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 65
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traveled” atmosphere. There’s no better way to spend a spring day than exploring the Atchafalaya National Heritage Area or winding along the Bayou Teche Scenic Byway. Cajun Jack’s Swamp Tours takes visitors through the Atchafalaya Basin, the largest overflow swamp in the U.S. You can experience the wilderness by paddling through the Bayou Teche National Wildlife Refuge. Golfers won’t want to miss a chance to hit the Atchafalaya at Idlewild, which was rated the No. 1 golf course in Louisiana by Golfweek Magazine in 2008 and 2009. This spring, St Mary Parish is alive with festivals and events including the Atchafalaya Powerboat Race, the Battle of the Basin, outdoor drag boat racing, Bayou BBQ Bash and the Louisiana Shrimp & Petroleum Festival. For more information, visit cajuncoast.com.
Ruston’s Louisiana Peach Festival
For a serene escape into a place of beauty, visit Iberville Parish, an historical Louisiana gem tucked between the quiet swamps of the Atchafalaya Basin and the bustling capital of Baton Rouge. Step through time and elegance at one of the many magnificent antebellum homes like Nottoway Plantation, the South’s largest remaining antebellum mansion located in White Castle. Other historical attractions include The Plaquemine Lock State Historic Site, The Hansen’s Disease Museum in Carville, The Iberville Museum and the majestic St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church, the purest example of Italian Romanesque architecture in the South. With so many beautiful diverse waterways, fishing and bird watching opportunities are endless, making it a premier outdoor getaway in the heart of the Atchafalaya National Heritage Area. Enjoy a relaxing golf outing at one of Louisiana’s most popular courses, The Island, located in Plaquemine. End your day by dining along the mighty Mississippi and enjoying fresh seafood with a Louisiana sunset at Roberto’s River Road Restaurant located in Sunshine. For more destinations and events, go to VisitIberville.com. St. Tammany Parish, aka “Louisiana’s Northshore,” is a great getaway spot known for scenic beauty and charming towns. Experience boutique shopping and art galleries, the primeval beauty of the Honey Island Swamp and a vibrant, diverse culinary scene. This summer, see and eat some of Louisiana’s finest seasonal produce and products abundant among Northshore communities. Saturday farmers and artisan markets are plentiful and bountiful. Stock up on fruits, veggies, prepared foods and more by visiting the Mandeville Trailhead Community Market, the Camellia City Market in Slidell, the Covington Farmers Market and the Folsom Community Farmers Market. Take the family out for a picnic and
berry-picking at farms like Covington’s Blue Harvest Farms and Ridemore Berry Farm (an organic foods farm) or Sunhillow Berry Farm in Pearl River. Summer events include Abita Springs Opry and Pontchartrain Vineyards Jazz’n the Vines Outdoor Concert Series, the Covington Bicentennial Celebration, the Louisiana Bicycle Festival, and the Slidell Heritage Festival. For a complete listing, visit LouisianaNorthshore.com/la_life. New Orleans Plantation Country, a tri-parish area made up of St. Charles, St. James and St. John parishes, is home to some of the most famous plantation homes in the country, and the plantations’ unique stories and fascinating differences make each one worthy of a visit. Experience any and all of the nine magnificent plantations and hear real, historical accounts of the people who lived there—English sugar barons, Creole women, slaves and soldiers—all with their own perspectives on the time and place in which they lived. Visitors examine artifacts, read stories and touch the history that extends from grand ballrooms to impoverished slave cabins. Swamp tours, mouth-watering cuisine, shaded gardens and a feast of festivals weave their magic into your adventure as well. Accommodations with full amenities make for memorable stays. The winding River Road between New Orleans and Baton Rouge provides an unforgettable journey where storytellers will captivate you, and you’ll leave with your own stories to tell. For more information on each plantation as well as travel deals and more, go to VisitNOPC.com. St. Martin Parish draws visitors year-round with welcoming hospitality, world-class music and famous local cuisine. Accommodations include beautiful B&B’s, cabins, campgrounds and chain hotels. Breaux Bridge offers an array of shopping, antiquing and world-renowned hot spots like the famous Zydeco Breakfast at Cafe des Amis or Cajun music and dancing nightly at Mulate’s Restaurant. The Henderson area, at the edge of the Atchafalaya Basin, offers airboat and swamp tours and familyowned restaurants such as Robins Restaurant and Crawfish Town USA. On Sundays, Dancing on the Levee starts at McGee’s Landing at noon, ventures to Whiskey River for Zydeco and ends the night at Pat’s Atchafalaya Club. St. Martinville plays host to countless festivals and quaint cafes in the beautiful downtown district. Take heritage tours at Acadian Memorial, African American Museum and Longfellow-Evangeline State Historic Site. Outdoors enthusiasts should take advantage of numerous canoe/kayak/bicycle rentals. Highlights of year-round events include Le Cajun Music Festival, Pepper Festival, Creole Zydeco Festival, Breaux Bridge City Wide Garage Sale and the Tour du Teche, a 130-mile canoe race along the Bayou Teche. See “where Cajun began,” at CajunCountry.org. Proudly distinguished as “The Most Cajun Place on Earth,” Vermilion Parish in South Louisiana is alive with the food, music, language and scenery that define the Cajun cultural heritage. Located minutes south of Lafayette and just west of New Iberia, the towns of Delcambre, Erath, Abbeville, Kaplan, Gueydan and others all bring a little lagniappe to the enchanting region. Stroll through Abbeville’s Annual Daylily Festival and Garden Show held on June 1 in historic downtown. Hundreds of plants, garden items and more will be for sale in Magdalen Square. While in Abbeville, visit the Depot at Magdalen Place, an authentic freight depot with two cabooses for gift shopping and more. Abbeville is also home to the Sam Guarino Blacksmith Shop and Museum. The shop operated for nearly 100 years and now displays the equipment, history and importance of the trade. Don’t forget to grab a bite to eat. Seafood lovers will want to visit Shucks. From raw or grilled oysters to seafood gumbo and classic specialties, they offer a menu to please every palate.
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For more destinations, events and travel ideas, visit MostCajun.com. Discover an unforgettable place soothing to the soul—visit St. Francisville, LA, nationally recognized for its extensive historic district, surrounding plantation homes and 19th-century gardens. Founded in the early 1800s on the bluffs overlooking the Mississippi River, this quaint town boasts numerous informative markers telling the stories of its gingerbread-trimmed townhouses, fine commercial structures and historic churches. Interpretive programs are regularly presented at the two state historic sites located in West Feliciana Parish: Rosedown Plantation and Oakley Plantation, where John James Audubon painted much of his Birds of America series in 1821. The rolling Tunica hills, unspoiled woodlands and in-town sports park provide opportunities for year-round recreation. Bed & breakfast inns and motels offer cozy accommodations for weekend getaways, and local festivals celebrate everything from hummingbirds and homegrown art to an authentic country Christmas. Cafés, restaurants, boutique shops, art and antiques galleries filled with the unexpected entice visitors to St. Francisville and West Feliciana year-round. West Feliciana is the perfect setting for intimate weddings, romantic weekends, celebrations of special occasions, outdoor recreation or rest and relaxation. Plan your experience today by visiting www.StFrancisville.us. For a spring or summer festival adventure, let Houma be your passport to Louisiana’s Bayou Country. With thrilling swamp tours, a wildlife park and alligator farm, world-class charter fishing and a wide assortment of festivals, fairs, fetes, fais do dos and more, there’s always something fun to do. A terrific lineup of family-friendly events includes the TGMC 5K Run for Excellence and Cajun Food Fest presented by The Courier on May 11 with a 1-mile Fun Run, Walk, 5K race and plenty of food to delight. The Houma Oilman’s Fishing Invitational, hosted by TriParish.net, takes place in Cocodrie May 23-25. On June 29, salute the flag with family fun at the Houma/Terrebonne Independence Day Celebration, which features a Memorial Service at Houma’s Veteran’s Memorial; the Patriots Parade; entertainment and food at the Houma-Terrebonne Civic Center; the Independence Day Dash sponsored by the Bayou Runners Association; and a fireworks show beginning at 9:30 p.m. Stay the entire weekend, and let Houma be your passport to adventure. For more information, call 985-868-2732 or visit houmatravel.com.
Grand Isle State Park
Every day is an adventure in Grand Isle, LA. True to the state’s “Sportsman’s Paradise,” nickname, Grand Isle provides a wealth of exciting activities. Fishing is a main attraction, as more than 280 species of fish and four seasons of fishing bring in anglers from every corner of the state. The remote island oasis also hosts thousands of migrating birds, making it an ideal location for birdwatchers. Seven miles of beaches are open to the public and perfect for a weekend road trip. One of the area’s most popular attractions, Grand Isle State Park, features white sand beaches, a 400-foot fishing pier, nature trails and overnight camping. Louisiana’s only inhabited barrier island, Grand Isle was first home to the Chitimacha tribe before European settlement began in the 1780s. Plantations on the island raised sugar cane, cotton and cattle, and much like today, the locals fished off the coast, harvesting shrimp and oysters. Host to pirates such as Jean Lafitte and later to Confederate soldiers, the region has a rich history that adds to today’s experience. For more info, including charter fishing, lodging, events and more, visit www.grand-isle.com. Webster Parish, in the piney hills of Northwest Louisiana, is a beautiful destination for a safe, fun and family-friendly outing. Just 30 miles east of Shreveport, the natural beauty and historic charms of the region draw visitors, festival-goers and even professional filmmakers. This summer, Webster Parish warms up with the Heflin Sawmill Festival on May 4th followed by the Annual Trails and Trellises Garden Tour on May 18. Then put on your cowboy boots and hat and celebrate the 61th Annual Springhill PRCA Rodeo, the oldest rodeo in Louisiana, May 30–June 1. This is rodeo at its finest held at 8 p.m. nightly in Springhill. For more information on Webster Parish festivals and fun, call 800-2MINDEN or check out www.visitwebster.net. Looking for a place with rich heritage and tradition, a place that embraces a sense of small town charm just steps from a big city? Visit “New Orleans’ Most Historic Neighbor,” St. Bernard Parish, located along the Mississippi River and only five miles from downtown New Orleans. Walk in the footsteps of Andrew Jackson at the historic Chalmette Battlefield or learn the traditions of the Canary Islanders at the Isleños Museum, the last vestige of Spanish Colonial Louisiana. While there, be sure to try your hand at some of their world-class fishing or meander down the historic San Bernardo Scenic Byway, viewing stately old plantation homes, ancient oaks and picturesque bayous along the way. St. Bernard offers something for the entire family, starting with the Tomato Fest during the first weekend in May. Then, sign the family up for the Hook a Kid on Fishing Rodeo in mid-June. Leave room for the Second Annual Mac & Cheese Showdown in July to sample your way through new recipes of a classic dish. For all the details and additional attractions, call 504-278-4242 or check out VisitStBernard.com. Arts, Entertainment AND Accommodations Across the State Swinging syncopation wafts through the LSU Museum of Art this summer as artists Herman Leonard and Edward Pramuk capture the spirit of jazz in An Eye on Jazz: Photographs by Herman Leonard and Edward Pramuk: Seeing Music. This duo of exhibitions opens on the fifth floor of the Shaw Center for the Arts in downtown Baton Rouge on May 10 and runs through July 14. The exhibitions explore how music, musicians and musical ideas have influenced visual arts in the 20th century. Jazz photographer Herman Leonard was captivated by the ambiance of smoke-laced jazz clubs, as was painter Edward Pramuk, a retired LSU professor and resident of Baton Rouge. www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 67
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“I do not feel alone when I work,” Pramuk says. “I have the brilliant sounds of jazz men and women filling my studio.” Shown alongside 36 of Leonard’s striking black-and-white photographs, over two dozen of Pramuk’s musical-themed paintings, drawings, and mixed-media collages will share their time in the spotlight at the LSU Museum of Art. For more information, please visit the museum’s Web site, www. lsumoa.org, or call the museum at 225-389-7200. Enjoy Louisiana’s sunny summer weather with a stroll around LSU’s historic campus, home of the LSU Foundation. The 2,000-acre property, nestled in South Baton Rouge, is defined by an Italian Renaissance character marked by red pantile, overhanging eaves and honey-colored stucco. Dedicated in 1926, the current campus includes 46 buildings that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. During the 1930s, many of LSU’s live oaks and magnolia trees were planted by landscape artist Steele Burden. The roughly 1,200 towering oaks have been valued at $50 million and are supported through the LSU Foundation’s Endow an Oak program. LSU’s landscaping was called a “botanical joy” in its listing among the 20 best campuses in America in Thomas Gaines’ The Campus as a Work of Art. With myriad architectural and natural beauties, several museums and year-round theater, art and athletic events, opportunities abound to experience Louisiana’s flagship university. Visit lsufoundation.org to learn more about what the school and campus have to offer. In Bossier City, located along the picturesque banks of the Red River, is a shopping, dining and entertainment mecca full of store favorites, tasty dining options and family-friendly entertainment. Host to dozens of retailers, Louisiana Boardwalk has something for everyone, from the rustic outdoorsman and clothing specialties for the little ones to the teen looking for the hottest styles and brands. Louisiana Boardwalk brims with activity all year round. With special events, an IMAX stadiumseating movie theater, arcade and carousel, kids can play while adults enjoy the decadent dining, peaceful shopping or a romantic evening stroll along the river and fountains. This summer, stock up on all the latest fashions, gifts and gadgets. From salon and spa treatments to clothing and sporting goods, Louisiana Boardwalk’s numerous retailers cover every need. Rest your feet and satisfy your hunger with a savory meal or sweet treat at one of several Boardwalk restaurants. Nestled conveniently near Shreveport-Bossier’s vibrant downtown, the Louisiana Boardwalk is the perfect destination for shopping and fun in North Louisiana. Visit Louisianaboardwalk.com for more information, event listings and a directory of businesses. Like them on Facebook at Facebook.com/LouisianaBoardwalk. Experience Coushatta’s New Seven Clans Hotel. Coushatta Casino Resort is bigger and better with the addition of the brand new 401-room, ultra-modern Seven Clans Hotel. Book your room at this beautiful property that is 100 percent smoke-free with the latest amenities in luxury and style, such as ultra-quiet rooms with spa-style showers, custom bedding and linens as well as large HDTVs with free HBO and free WiFi. Guests will love the convenience of room service, as well as having Bar 7 cocktail bar and PJ’s Coffee of New Orleans coffee shop located right in the hotel lobby. Casino action is just steps away with more than 2,800 slots, more than 70 table games, live poker and off-track betting. Rates start at $89. Call 1-888-774-7263 or book online at www.coushattacasinoresort.com/accommodations/seven-clans/. Centrally located in the heart of the historic French Quarter, the Royal Sonesta Hotel New Orleans is “THE” destination of choice for all visitors seeking an authentic travel experience in the Big Easy. With 68 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
doors that open to world-famous Bourbon Street, this landmark hotel features the locals’ favorite coffee freshly roasted at PJ’s Coffee Café, live jazz nightly at Irvin Mayfield’s Jazz Playhouse, and award winning-dining at New Orleans most acclaimed new restaurant, Restaurant R’Evolution, where chefs John Folse and Rick Tramonto reinterpret Cajun and Creole cuisine seven days a week. For more information or to make reservations, visit Sonesta.com/ royalneworleans or call 1-800-SONESTA. Dining In Louisiana, there seems to be a festival for every day of the year, and Rouses makes a point of being involved in as many as they can, whether it be through sponsorship, food preparation or community support. This year marks the 21st anniversary of the New Orleans Food & Wine Experience (May 22-26). Rouses chefs will join vintners and other famous Louisiana chefs at this decadent culinary extravaganza. For the third consecutive year, Rouses will be sampling their own unique chef creations. Join in the fun this year and help support numerous great community causes just by sampling the variety of delicious concoctions. Rouses is also presenting the New Orleans Food & Wine Experience’s Street Stroll, an art gallery walk featuring music, fine wine, fine food and the 2013 Louisiana Seafood Cook Off, a prized feature of the festival. Chefs from around the state will compete for the crown. For more info on Rouses and to find the location nearest you, visit rouses.com. Prejean’s Restaurant
In the heart of French Louisiana, Prejean’s Restaurant has earned a worldwide reputation for its Cajun cuisine. A favorite among locals and visitors alike, this Lafayette destination has been delighting guests for more than 30 years. Prejean’s holds the record for most medals captured by any culinary team in the south, and their juicy steaks, wild game dishes and world famous gumbos turn a meal into a memorable occasion. Prejean’s has been voted No. 1 Best Ethnic Restaurant in all of the South by AAA Southern Traveler. Traditional Cajun bands entertain nightly, and the restaurant is filled with antiques, historic relics and artworks by resident artists. Breakfast is served daily from 7 a.m. to 10:15 a.m. and until 1 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays. Lunch is offered Monday through Friday until 2 p.m. For more information, or to order overnight deliveries to nearly anywhere in the lower 48 U.S., visit prejeans. com or call 337-896-3247. You can also find and follow Prejean’s online via Facebook. •
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Regional Travel Summer Outside of the State
L
ouisiana’s neighbors offer a smattering of travel opportunities this summer, from Texas-size shopping fun to the verdant landscapes of Arkansas, and fine arts as well as fine dining and nightlife in Mississippi. Whether you’re looking to discover a piece of history or plan an exciting weekend of indoor or outdoor play, you’ll find exactly what you need among the following regional travel destinations. Take just a short drive outside of Louisiana and discover a world of fun. Sometimes the greatest escapes are the ones closest to you. Discover one-of-a-kind attractions in Arkansas. Add these unique destinations to your travel plans. William J. Clinton Presidential Center and Park — America’s 12th presidential library, the Clinton Center is located on the banks of the Arkansas River in the River Market district of downtown Little Rock. The library contains the largest collection of presidential papers and artifacts in U.S. history and includes an authentic replica of the Oval Office and the Cabinet Room. Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art — This premier art institution in northwest Arkansas houses a permanent collection
William J. Clinton Presidential Center and Park
of American masterworks, as well as temporary exhibits from national museums. Museum grounds include gardens, ponds, an overlook and the Crystal Bridges Trail, which links to downtown Bentonville. Be sure to check out the Walmart Visitor Center and the new 21c Museum Hotel in the town square. From historical sites and museums to the beautiful outdoors, there is much to see and do. Visit Arkansas.com or call 1-800NATURAL for a free Vacation Planning Kit and start planning your escape today. Old Masters to Monet: Three Centuries of French Painting from the Wadsworth Atheneum is on view at the Mississippi Museum of Art in Jackson, Miss., now through Sept. 8. The exhibition features 50 masterpieces of French art ranging from the 17th-19th centuries and into the beginning of the 20th century. Théodore Géricault, Eugène Delacroix, Edgar Degas, Camille Pissarro, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Paul Cézanne, Vincent van
Mississippi Museum of Art
Gogh, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec and Claude Monet are among the masters represented. This exhibition was organized by the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, CT, and is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities. Old Masters to Monet is the 13th installation of The Annie Laurie Swaim Hearin Memorial Exhibition Series at the Mississippi Museum of Art. Admission is $12 for adults, $10 for seniors (60+) and $6 for students. For more information, visit www.msmuseumart.org or call 601-960-1515. Louisiana’s Gulf Coast neighbor, Texas, recently welcomed Royal Sonesta Hotel Houston to the heart of Houston’s bustling and sought-after Galleria area. The landmark property pampers guests with luxurious accommodations, sophisticated amenities, award-winning staff and a premier location just blocks from the famed Galleria mall. Visitors also enjoy myriad shops and restaurants lining Post Oak Boulevard and close proximity to premier business and leisure destinations including Memorial Park, the Texas Medical Center and Downtown. For more information or to make reservations, visit Sonesta. com/royalhouston or call 1-800-SONESTA. Located one hour east of New Orleans is the Southeast’s largest resort to receive the AAA Four Diamond award reflecting enhanced style, hospitality, service and attention to detail. Recognized by Travel + Leisure as one of the top resorts in the country, MGM Resorts International’s Beau Rivage Resort & Casino in Biloxi, Miss., is the premier destination for entertainment, gaming, dining and relaxation in the region. With more than 1,700 luxurious guest rooms, 85,000 square feet of gaming space, 11 restaurants, four lounges and bars, a 1,550-seat theater, 12 retail venues, a spa and salon, tropical pool and Fallen Oak, a Tom Fazio-designed golf course, Beau Rivage offers everything the discerning vacationer can imagine. Beau Rivage’s theatrical circus sensation Funambula, performs June 11-Aug. 11. Tickets start at $12.95 and room packages are available. Headline entertainment during the summer also includes Joan Jett and the Blackhearts, Cheap Trick, Gladys Knight, Menopause the Musical and Ron White. Plan now for The Beach Boys on Oct. 11 and 12 during the annual Cruisin’ the Coast car event. For more information or to make reservations, visit www.beaurivage.com or call 888-567-6667. • www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 69
around louisiana Regional Reports from across the state compiled and edited by jeanne frois
northern Worth Recalling The Battles of Madison Parish
that had been shipped to
Perched high in the northeast
be burned before it fell
began an arduous land
Army was able to cross
corner of the Bayou State,
into Union hands. Many a
invasion. His attempt to build
the Mississippi River to its
Madison Parish sports a
planter was affected by this
land canals that would divert
eastern shore at Bruinsburg
fascinating past. Located
loss. In addition, Madison
the Mississippi River from
below Vicksburg without
there are the Fitzhugh
Parish was being plagued
Vicksburg failed miserably.
trouble in late April.
Mounds and the Raffman
by Union jayhawkers.
New Orleans from across the state for storage to
The thick cane and cypress
In June 1863, the Battle of
Richmond was on a vital
Milliken’s Bend in Madison
Confederate supply route
swamps of the area became
Parish was fought between
that fed the Vicksburg
a refuge for a particularly
Confederates and the
garrison. The victory at
the Louisiana land once
motley crew composed
black troops of the Union
Milliken’s Bend severed
predominantly occupied
of runaway slaves, army
Army. The use of black
the supply line, and the
by the American Indians
deserters and those generally
troops in the Army was
blue-clads advanced to
was now rich with cotton;
involved in dodging the
a hotbed of controversy;
Richmond. After lively
wealthy planters ruled over
draft. Led by a former slave,
this battle marked the first
skirmishes with a Texan
their fields filled with the
this band, more than 100
major conflict between
troop led by Maj. Gen.
puffy white crop that turned
strong, routinely robbed,
Confederates and black
John Walker, the Federals
rose-colored at sunrise
kidnapped or murdered
troops. It was a bloody
crossed Roundaway Bayou
and sunset. The town of
unsuspecting passersby on
hand-to-hand battle, and
and burned the town of
Richmond, once the parish
roadways. Attempting to stop
the Rebels were about to
Richmond, site of Walker’s
seat of Madison Parish, was a
the crime spree perpetrated
take Milliken’s Bend when
headquarters, to the ground.
bustling place 10 miles from
by the outlaws, a group of
heavy Union gunboat fire
Vicksburg fell less than
the Mississippi River and on
Confederates donned Union
drove them back. This
a month later, and the
the road from Vicksburg to
uniforms, approached the
conflict left more than 1,000
Confederacy was split in
Texas. The Roundaway and
dissolute band and were
casualties, and the road to
two. Coinciding with the fall
Brushy bayous conjoined at
warmly greeted by its giant
Vicksburg was growing
of Vicksburg that July was
Richmond, and the planters,
of a leader. The disguised
ever shorter for the Union
the disastrous Confederate
using slave labor, cleared a
soldiers struck quickly, and a
Army. Over in Mississippi,
defeat at Gettysburg. The
60-foot channel that allowed
short time later, nearly 130 of
the brilliant diversionary raid
strong showing of the
small steamships to wend
the desperadoes lay dead, with
of Benjamin Grierson delib-
black troops at Milliken’s
their way up the bayou from
the others escaping for their
erately held the Confederate
Bend vindicated Lincoln’s
the Mississippi River at New
lives never to return again.
Army’s attention on his
decision that they should
Across the Mississippi
pillaging; destruction of
fight to preserve the Union.
River, the 200-foot-high
railroads, warehouses,
Nevertheless, they received
Civil War exploded on the
bluffs upon which Vicksburg,
trains and supplies; and
less pay and had to pay for
nation, the quiet cadence of
the Gibraltar of the
general mayhem while the
their uniforms unlike the
life in Madison Parish was
Mississippi River, rose with
Union Army made its way
white soldiers. It wasn’t until
disrupted. With the fall of
powerful guns trained on
toward Vicksburg. Grierson
June 1864 that Congress
New Orleans in 1862, the
Union gunboats below made
eventually kept Confederate
deemed they were to receive
Confederate government
a maritime Union conquest
Gen. J. C. Pemberton so
full pay, retroactively, for
ordered all the cotton
impossible. Ulysses S. Grant
occupied that Grant’s
their service. n
Site, ancient networks of American Indian sites. During the 19th century,
Carthage. By the time the American
72 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
around louisiana
central Atwood’s Bakery
the mouthwatering coconut cream pie is your decision alone. But delightful sweets aside, the soup and salad and lunch menus offer a pleasing line of choices in both a complementary and original blend of flavors. The Queen’s Soup is a rich and creamy chicken soup made with wild rice. It’s served in a sourdough bowl that soaks up the flavors
Cause to Celebrate Festivals for the Season
are transformed into a
Roy is most enthusiastic
joyous outdoor spring
about the flurry of springtime
Dinner on the Bricks, the
festival, filled with local
activity in his city.
ArtWalk and the Louisiana
artists and craftsman both
“We want to expand the
Dragon Boat Races are
demonstrating and selling
celebration to build a true,
and topped with melted
merging into a triumvirate
their handiwork. There is
unified effort for the entire
provolone cheese.
known as the AlexRiverFete.
a vibrant community of
community,” he says. “We
The three events will also
artists throughout Central
look forward to this one-of-a-
include music, a barbecue
Louisiana who exist beside
kind event that embodies the
salad, made with poulettes
cook-off and areas with
a vibrant community of
talent and heritage that is the
that have been smoked with
interactive activities for kids.
art-lovers, making the
heart of Alexandria.”
pecan wood, is but one layer
festival a perfect fit for the
AlexRiverFete, May 9-11,
of The Atwood sandwich, a
enjoyment of all involved.
Alexandria
buttery and flaky croissant
The historic Cultural Arts District, with its signature brick byways, will be filled
The splendid color and
perfectly. Classic French Onion soup is delectable with its red wine-and-onion base
The bakery’s deservedly renowned smoked chicken
filled with the creamy, smoky chicken salad; apple wood
celebrating its third birthday,
Fork in the Road Spring Dining in Alexandria
is as shimmering as sunlight
When the siren call of a
and tomato, it will make your
in part by the Louisiana
falling on the Red River.
beauteous Central Louisiana
eyes close at first bite. You
Dragon Boat Races and
Since it was launched in
spring finds you unable to
can also order this delicious
the city of Alexandria,
2010, the Dragon Boat Races,
resist and you’re out and
salad sans croissant, served
is a self-guided walking
with racing members that
about soaking up the joys
on a bed of greens with fresh
tour of sorts beloved by
total more than 1,000 and 45
of the warming season, a
veggies and the dressing of
families, also held in the
teams, are expected to draw
stop at Atwood’s Bakery is
your choice.
Cultural Arts District. The
10,000 people to riverbanks
a great way to celebrate the
Atwood’s Bakery,
alleyways, sidewalks and
lined with colorful canopies.
season with light, satisfying
1125 MacArthur Drive,
fare. Whether you can ignore
Alexandria, (318) 445-5134
with delicious food offerings
energy of the Louisiana
from several local restaurants
Dragon Boat Races, now
and eateries. ArtWalk, sponsored
open spaces of the District
Alexandria Mayor Jacques
bacon; and smoked Gouda cheese. Topped with lettuce
n
photo courtesy of Julia from foodographer.net
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 73
around louisiana
cajun Cause to Celebrate Picture a Miracle in Grand Coteau
Berchmans, a young Flemish
Perusing the pages of John
Jesuit priest. Beloved for his
Slaughter’s new book, Grand
deep spirituality, intellect and
Coteau, I was to learn of
kindness, the young man was
a remarkable story and
also the picture of humility
another layer of Louisiana’s
He was a lover of ordinary
fascinating cultural history.
things to the point of
Grand Coteau (Big Ridge)
seminarian born in 1599 who was studying to become a
mysticism and emanated the
is a very Catholic town.
paradoxical quality of down-
At the center of this small
to-earth holiness. Portraits
town, nine Catholic institu-
of the saint show him to
tions rise amid the splendid
be a baby-faced young man
beauty of centuries-old oaks
not much more than a boy;
with nestling camellia and
he died in Rome of a fever
that he immediately appeared
this sacred town, Slaughter,
azalea bushes nearby. St.
before his 23rd birthday.
to her and immediately
through the auspices of
Charles College, St. Charles
Petitions for his beatification
she was healed. A doctor
University of Louisiana –
Borromeo Church, Our Lady
began almost immediately
confirmed that she was free
Lafayette, has produced a
of the Oaks Retreat House
following his death, and by
of disease, and the young
compilation of 35 years of his
and the Academy of the
1865 he was declared Blessed
woman pursued her novitiate
photographs of the town. In
by the Vatican.
and received her habit in
Grand Coteau, accompanied
December 1866. A month
by lyrically beautiful text written by Melnick that
Sacred Heart are among them. Grand Coteau is the
The year following his
site of two religious firsts
beatification, a young
after receiving her habit,
for the United States. The
novice of the Society of the
she wrote a letter to her
tells the stories behind the
Religious of the Sacred
Sacred Heart named Mary
archbishop to be forwarded
pictures, the composition of
Heart arrived here in 1821 to
Wilson was sent to Grand
to Rome chronicling the
Slaughter’s photographs and
found what is now the oldest
Coteau because the milder
miracle when Blessed
his colors and camera angles
continuously operated Sacred
climate of Louisiana was
Berchmans again appeared
remind me of vivid impres-
considered beneficial for her
to her. He commended the
sionist paintings. He is a deft
ailing health. Her condition
letter-writing, but he also
master at shadow and light,
Melnick, Catholic faithful are
declined to the point that
told her that she would
color and contrast in pictures
drawn here as pilgrims are
blood would reportedly spew
die before she ended her
that depict rainbows, burning
to Mecca to attend retreats,
from her mouth if she spoke.
novitiate; she died in 1867.
houses, a Catholic priest
and public meandering
The sisters of the convent
with rosary beads in hand
offered daily novenas to
novice was the third and
moon rising over a church
on the beautiful retreat
Blessed Berchmans on her
final miracle needed for his
steeple. There’s a really vivid
behalf. Some accounts say
canonization, and 1888, the
shot of a storekeeper behind
that she silently prayed: “I
young Flemish seminarian
her counter amid a myriad of
might do. There are some
ask through the interces-
became known as St. John
liquor bottles and sundries
places on earth that inhale
sion of Blessed Berchmans a
Berchmans. In 2006, when St.
while overhead looms the
and exhale what can be
little relief and health.” She
John Berchmans School was
larger-than-life depiction of
called “the Spirit,” and Grand
placed an image of him on
opened in Grand Coteau, it
a loaf of Holsum bread in its
Coteau is one of them.
her tongue and told him that
became the only shrine in
signature red wrap.
if he could work miracles,
the United States built on the
American first – and in
she needed one, and if he
exact location of a miracle.
this case, only – you must
did not help her, she would
If you would like to take
not believe in him. She said
a photographic odyssey of
Heart Academy in the world. According to writer Patrice
grounds is not looked upon as something the Pharisees
To describe the second
first know about St. John 74 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
The healing of the young
leading a yoga session, the
Grand Coteau by John Slaughter, published by University of Louisiana – Lafayette Press
n
around louisiana
baton rouge/ plantation country Belle, a streamlined
first aid to the passenger
passenger train that was
train victims and then
part of the Kansas City
their own men. Rescue
Southern Railroad line.
workers had to hack their
Kenneth Mounger, who
way through the swamp to
ran the now-abandoned
reach the disaster victims.
general store next to the
Farmers who lived along
train tracks, was awaiting
the track gathered at the
the usual 7:03 a.m.
wreck laden with mattresses,
appearance of the Southern
blankets and quilts to
Belle. According to Stu
offer the victims. Before
Quirky Places Train Wreck in Lettsworth
many times, I likewise found
Beitler of GenDisasters,
ambulances could arrive,
myself saying, “There was
a website that chronicles
work trains reached them,
a bad train wreck here in
such events, Mounger
and the Marines placed the
There is a green and shady,
the ‘50s,” without knowing
said the train was late that
injured on the trains until the
almost eerily quiet stretch
exactly what happened.
particular morning.
ambulances could make their
of Louisiana Highway 1
Perhaps it’s taken too
“This morning,” said
way through the swamp.
where a railroad crossing
many years for the just-
Mounger, “she appeared
stands adjacent to an
what-the-hell-happened-here
late, and when I saw this
in a car right after the
abandoned structure that
syndrome to set in, or maybe
troop train going by headed
impact. The burning oil
was once a general store.
I’ve gotten over savoring the
in the opposite direction, I
was about to engulf him
I find it funny in a peculiar
eeriness of the spot enough
turned to my wife and said,
when his Marine buddies
way that when someplace
to delve into some historical
‘What’s that train doing on
grabbed a large section
seems “eerily quiet,” it’s
detective work. Learning
the track when the Belle is
of dislocated rail from the
usually silently screaming
about what happened at
due?’... A few minutes later, I
track, bored a hole in the
with some sad story it wants
Lettsworth was a moment
heard a terrible crash.”
car and rescued him.
to tell. Beneath the trees,
whose time had come.
a bold black-lettered sign
At approximately 7 a.m.
For an unknown reason,
One Marine was trapped
Victims were dispersed to
the troop train had ignored
clinics in nearby Morganza,
reads “Lettsworth,” and
on an August morning in
a signal to move to a side
New Roads and Baton
if you’re travelling along
1951, a troop train bearing
rail to give the passenger
Rouge. Sixty-five people
Highway 1, you cannot help
288 soldiers bound for the
train right of way. On a
were reported injured, with
but cross these tracks. In my
Pacific Ocean and Korean
double bend 1 mile away
one missing and eight who
first remembrances of such
War and secretly launched
from Mounger’s store, the
didn’t survive.
journeys as a little girl, on
from Camp Lejeune in
two trains engaged in a
my way to visit relatives, my
North Carolina had made
shattering head-on collision,
nightmare to the tragedy
older brother always intoned
its way into the Bayou State,
both travelling at 50 mph.
was the story of 9-year-old
in a sepulchral voice, “There
traveling some 60 miles
was a bad train wreck
above Baton Rouge on a
engine and exploded into
Lettsworth. Aubrey was
here in the ‘50s,” without
single track. Traveling New
flames, hampering rescuers
galloping furiously on his
fail, even into adulthood.
Orleans-bound from the
trying to save the victims.
pony to see the wreck when
Driving past this spot alone
opposite direction on the
Marines who escaped the
a car hit them. Both the boy
as an adult, no matter how
same track was the Southern
wreck began administering
and his pony were killed.
Oil gushed from a diesel
Adding even more
Aubrey Stears Jr. of
n
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 75
around louisiana
Greater New Orleans Profile Finding an Old “Friend”
milestone or guidepost in my
carefully tended herb garden
made me realize that writing
life, no matter the subject.
and the pathway lined with
stories about the treasures of
I used to be an avid but
The second example that
thyme that was always
ordinary days would always
somewhat selective clipper
impressed me came from the
crushed underfoot. He said
be worthwhile, enriching and
of either newspaper or
Times-Picayune’s food section,
that he could not smell thyme
a joy to read.
magazine articles on different
published each Thursday.
without vividly remembering
I lost my collection of
I use to relish Myriam
the cottage with the elderly
clippings many years ago
my exact feelings, moved
Guidroz’s pot-au-feu; I kept
sisters. But what made me
following a move, and
or enlightened me. Two
her vignette of visiting the
cherish this story most was
from time to time, I would
divergent examples of clipped
witch museum in Salem,
his description of their front
remember Soniat’s story
articles impressed me most
Mass., that also printed a
room, which was always
about the shuttered room and
subjects that expressed
back then. Growing
shuttered and cut off
his recipe for the casserole
up I feasted on Nancy
from the rest of the
but eventually forget about it.
Drew mysteries,
four-room cottage.
Just after last Christmas, by
and in my 20s, I
The few times he was
an odd chance at a bookstore,
found myself a little
allowed in, he “smelled
I noticed a cookbook, La
disturbed that this
God’s presence.” The
Bouche Creole, with his
love of mystery had
dark room was lit only
name on the binding and
transitioned into
by a ruby votive candle
discovered it was a collection
what became an
that filled the walls with
of all of his old newspaper
almost permanent
red designs and smelled
columns and recipes.
fixture for me –
of scented oil that he
Accompanying the delicious
murder mysteries. I
described as the “smell
recipes are Soniat’s charming
devoured the work of
of God.” It burned near
vignettes of growing up as
P.D. James, Agatha
a table with an upright
part of a Creole family in
Christie, Dorothy
crucifix, medals and
the French Quarter with
Sayers, Robert Parker,
holy pictures. At the
his parents, Mamete and
Martha Grimes and
time I was a lapsed
Papete, and grandparents
became convinced
Catholic, but nothing
Mamere and Papere. Along
that my desire to read
evoked the memories
with recipes for good old red
these stories showed
of my Catholic
beans and rice, duck-and-
some kind of deviate
upbringing as strongly
andouille gumbo, shrimp
trend. And then one
as his story of smelling
Creole and mirliton salad,
day I happened on
God in his aunts’
Soniat writes of taking the
an article in Vogue
room. The recipe that
old “Smoky Mary” train
simply called “To Bed With
recipe for clam chowder.
accompanied this story
down Elysian Fields to the
A Mystery” that analyzed
But it was Leon E. Soniat’s
was his aunts’ bell pepper
lakefront for a day of fishing
murder mystery-lovers as
“The Creole Kitchen” column
casserole, a dish I prepared
and crabbing, cleaning out
salt-of-the-earth types who
that provided me with a
many times. Soniat died in
the cistern with his father and
had a pronounced sense of
clipping I cherished most,
1981, a year, oddly enough,
shopping for fresh food at the
right and wrong and loved to
one that I would read and
in which I too faced death,
French Market.
see justice done. This article
read again. Soniat told the
survived and came back
made it into my collection.
story of visiting his three
with a strong resurgence
I mention this because
maiden aunts who lived in a
of faith that has not left me
looking back, my sampler of
cottage on St. Philip Street
since, undeserving wretch
Publishing Co., pelicanpub.
clippings represented some
as a boy. He wrote of their
that I am. Soniat’s column
com
76 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
And these stories I don’t need to clip. La Bouche Creole, Pelican n
gulf coast travel
Ohr-O’Keefe Museum of Art
A black Labrador retriever runs along the water’s edge, gleefully nipping at the Gulf waves as they roll onto the sand. His owner, a few feet away, grasps a volleyball under his arm, evidence of the competition he and his buddies held on the warm sands an hour earlier. The Gulf of Mexico attracts millions of visitors to its shores every year, offering world-class casinos, concert events and a chance to have fun-in-thesun on the Gulf’s famous white-sand beaches. Few are aware, however, that the Mississippi Gulf Coast has another claim to fame: the birthplace of modern art and the home of two American masters, George E. Ohr and Walter Inglis Anderson. Ohr-O’Keefe Museum of Art 386 Beach Blvd. Biloxi, Miss. (228) 374-5547 georgeohr.org Admission: $10 for adults, $8 for seniors and $5 for students; kids 5 and younger are free. Hours: Tuesday-Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Mississippi Gulf Coast A mecca for modern art By Elizabeth Heideman
On the shores of Biloxi Bay lies the
Ohr-O’Keefe Museum of Art, an impressive 4-acre campus whose buildings reflect the ultramodern and avant-garde spirit of the museum’s namesake. Designed by famed architect Frank O. Gehry, each of
78 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
the museum buildings is
shop that is a must-see.
the gallery, and if you’re
donated to the Ohr-O’Keefe
constructed out of stainless-
With electric blue tyran-
owl-eyed enough, you may
Museum of Art in 2000 so
steel and glass elements,
nosaurus rexes fashioned
spot a tiny version of the
that it could be preserved as
giving visitors the sense that
out of recycled soda cans
Biloxi Lighthouse etched
a monument to the perse-
they are entering a giant
and origami roses bigger
into one of his creations.
verance and hardships of
sculpture in itself.
than your head, the museum
The museum, which was
African American families
store offers unique and
named Best New Museum
living under Jim Crow. In
Ohr proclaimed himself
carefully crafted fine art,
in 2010 by Southern Living
2005, the original building
Biloxi’s own “mad potter.”
jewelry and ceramics by
and has received the
and furnishings were
He was mad, maybe,
local artists.
TripAdvisor Certificate of
destroyed by Hurricane
Excellence, also features a
Katrina. Today, the Pleasant Reed Interpretive Center is a
A born showman, George
but also a genius. In his
Before you make your
lifetime, Ohr produced
way to the main gallery
unique visitor attraction that
more than 10,000 ceramics
exhibits, take a moment
provides a rare window into
replica of the original Reed
sculpted out of clay from
to view the wood turning
life for African American
home, featuring antique
the Tchoutacabouffa River
of Terry Tjader, who
families in the days of the
family artifacts such as a
that he dug himself. His
repurposed fallen trees
experimental approach
after Hurricane Katrina into
to sculpture and form
unique works of art. Many
has earned him the title,
of the wooden forms display
among some, of “father of
fossilized insects, which
the abstract-expressionist
become part of the natural
movement” in America
grain patterns that Tjader’s’
Highly criticized for his unusual forms, Ohr
designs so expertly enhance. Within the Star Gallery/
closed his studio in 1910,
Gallery of African American
prophesying that he would
Art is a selection of Ohr’s
one day be famous despite
finest work from across
his failures thus far. After
the Gulf Coast. Although
his death from throat
only temporary until the
cancer eight years later,
permanent home for the
his collections were packed
ceramics is completed in
away by his family, and
late 2013 as Phase II of
there they remained for 51
the museum’s building
years. In 1969, a New Jersey
efforts, the Star Gallery
antiques dealer named Jim
wonderfully showcases the
Carpenter discovered Ohr’s
artist’s oeuvre, from Ohr’s
revolutionary work and
functional utilitarian pieces
introduced it to the New
to his novelty items, which
York art scene, where his
he sold to tourists as his
experimental and daring
main source of revenue.
forms that were too revolu-
After the devastating fire
tionary for their own time
in Biloxi that destroyed the
were met with overarching
majority of his work (Ohr
praise. Today, Ohr’s work
referred to these lost works
is displayed in galleries
as his “burned babies”)
segregated South. Pleasant
woman’s 19th-century-era
worldwide, including the
in 1894, he began to see
Reed was born a slave
curling iron and Bible, as
Guggenheim.
how far he could push
in Hattiesburg, Miss., in
well as an educational video
the medium, producing
1854. When the Civil War
about Pleasant Reed and the
the world of modern art by
ceramics with extremely thin
ended, the entire Reed
Jim Crow South.
either riding an elevator
walls and intricately folded
family relocated to Biloxi,
or climbing one of the two
or pinched forms, marking
and Pleasant supported his
which is a Smithsonian
arching stairways flanking
his foray into what would
wife and six children by
Affiliate, was named jointly
the building to access the
later be termed abstract
working as a carpenter and
in honor of Ohr and Biloxi
lookout tower. The museum
expressionism. Quirky Ohr
jack-of-all-trades. The Reed
Mayor John O’Keefe and his
also has a café with free
quotations are inscribed
house, built by the hands
late wife, Annette, whose
WiFi and an exquisite gift
along the white walls of
of Pleasant himself, was
funding helped make the
Begin your journey into
Walter Anderson Museum
The Ohr-O’Keefe Museum,
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 79
museum a reality.
level, he is known for living
Beginning in June,
primitively on Horn Island,
the museum will host a
Miss., enduring the heat of
collection of artist Frank
Mississippi summers for the
Janca’s oil paintings
last 18 years of his life in
that juxtapose “scenes
isolation. In his row boat,
of daily life in France ...
which is today suspended
with perceptions of the
above the vaulted glass
Mississippi Gulf Coast,”
museum entrance, along
according to the museum’s
with the bicycle he once
website.
rode as far as New York, he would venture deep into the
Walter Anderson Museum
wilds, never forgetting his
of Art
sketchbook and art supplies.
510 Washington Ave.
The museum, which
Ocean Springs, Miss.
opened in 1991, houses
(228) 872-3164
more than 1,000 objects
walterandersonmuseum.org
within Anderson’s extensive
Admission: $10 for adults;
and richly diverse oeuvre.
the street from the museum.
$8 for AAA, military and
The site was designed
The shop is a charming
seniors; and $5 for children
to be in harmony with
dedication to the artist and
5 to 15; kids 5 and younger
the surrounding natural
features a gallery offering
Nearby Attractions • Front Beach, Ocean Springs
are free.
landscape, and its interior
silk-screened art prints of
A public beach that is
Hours: Monday-Saturday,
is paneled with warm
Anderson’s work.
perfect for sunbathing
9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and
Southern yellow pine and
Sunday, 12:30 p.m. to 4:30
includes a main gallery
p.m.
Front Beach, Ocean Springs
front porch.
and shallow enough for swimming and other aquatic
space with two additional
Lodging The Inn at Ocean Springs
galleries that feature the
The Inn at Ocean Springs
fishing piers, also popular
permanent collections of
is rated “Wonderful!” by
for crabbing.
the Ohr-O’Keefe Museum
Anderson’s work as well as
TripAdvisor and is only a
and across the Biloxi Bay,
rotating exhibits of other
half-block from the Walter
• World-Class Casinos
continue your journey into
artists, usually from the Gulf
Anderson Museum of Art
From Beau Rivage to the
Mississippi’s modern art by
Coast region.
and a short car ride from
Hard Rock Hotel & Casino,
the Ohr-O’Keefe Museum of
take advantage of your many
Just 3 miles away from
visiting the Walter Anderson
Plan to spend a few hours
sports. It features two public
Museum of Art. The museum
exploring the collection of
Art. The only boutique bed-
options in lodging, gaming,
showcases the collections
colorful scenes of Southern
and-breakfast in downtown
dining and relaxing.
of Ocean Springs artist
life, and don’t miss the
Ocean Springs, the inn
and naturalist Walter Inglis
documentary screening that
offers exquisite lodgings
• Mary C. O’Keefe Cultural Center
Anderson, whose vivid
chronicles Anderson’s life
featuring antique furniture
Reserve your seat while it
paintings and ceramics
and career.
and luxury amenities, as
lasts at the Mary C. O’Keefe
well as a guaranteed Deep
Cultural Center, which
nature scenes and people.
artwork situated within the
South feel. The inn allows
offers a wide range of fun
His style is a combination of
Ocean Springs community
small pets for an additional
cooking classes, including a
colorful, boldly done folk art
itself, walk over to the Ocean
$25 cleaning fee, and the
“One Pot Wonders” series
with the modern sensibility
Springs Community Center,
entire Ocean Springs area is
taught by Carrie McCully of
of Picasso.
adjacent to the museum,
known for being largely pet-
Food Network fame. Guests,
to view Anderson’s largest
friendly. A vacation cottage
of course, get to enjoy the
Anderson was born an
murals, which are listed
called Bradford House
culinary creations that are
artist, drawing and studying
on the National Register of
is also available to rent.
prepared in the class, which
fine art and nature from
Historic Places.
Sleeping a total of four, the
could be anything from pork
cottage boasts a king-size
fried rice to ropa vieja. Visit
bring to life Mississippi
An American master,
a young age. Dedicated
To see Anderson’s
Realizations, a small
to connecting with nature
private shop run by
suite with luxurious bedding,
themaryc.org for a full menu
on a close and personal
Anderson’s family, is down
a flat-screen TV and a large
of classes.
80 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
n
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 81
lifetimes
Louisiana Corn Festival in Bunkie
a guide to events around the state may/june Compiled by Judi Russell
NORTHERN LOUISIANA May 1. Chow Down for Chimp Haven. Participating restaurants, Shreveport & Bossier City. (318) 925-9575.
(337) 475-5635.
(337) 433-2287.
May 3. Dalton Hilliard Celebrity Golf Tournament. Atchafalaya Golf Course at
May 11. The Courier Presents 5K Run for Excellence and Cajun Food Fest. Houma.
Idlewild, Patterson. (985) 395-4653.
(985) 868-5881.
May 3, 10, 17, 24, 13. Rhythms on the River. Front Street, Morgan City.
May 16-18. Cruisin Cajun Country Cruise In. Ramada Conference Center, New Iberia.
Bossier City. (318) 461-0625.
(985) 348-9291.
(337) 367-1631.
May 4-9. Barksdale Air Show. Barksdale
May 3-4. Relay for Life of Iberia Parish.
May 16-18. Starks Mayhaw Festival.
Air Force Base, Bossier City. (318) 456-3066.
1301 E. Admiral Doyle Drive, New Iberia. (337) 519-1978.
Highway 109 & 12, Starks. (337) 436-9588.
May 6-11. Blanchard Poke Salad Festival.
May 3-4. Mayfest. Downtown Leesville
May 18. Relay for Life – East St. Mary Parish. Municipal Auditorium, Morgan City.
Various locations, Blanchard. pokesaladfestival.com
Historic District, Leesville. (337) 238-0783.
(985) 300-4212.
May 18. Annual Trails & Trellises Garden Tour & Seminars. 404 Summit, Minden.
May 3-5. Breaux Bridge Crawfish Festival. Parc Hardy, Breaux Bridge. (337) 332-6655.
May 17, 24, 31. Downtown at Sundown Concert Series. Ryan Street, Lake Charles.
May 1, 7 & 9. Guys & Dolls. Strauss Theatre Center, Monroe. (318) 323-6681.
May 4. 20th Annual Pink Party. Shreveport Convention Center. (318) 200-0126.
May 4. Cinco de Mayo. Festival Plaza,
(318) 371-2586.
May 4. State Mixed Doubles Horseshoe Pitching Tournament. Kemper Williams
May 23-26. Mudbug Madness Festival.
Park, Patterson. (985) 385-3858.
Festival Plaza, Bossier City. (318) 222-7403.
May 4. Best Blues, Beans, Jazz & Peas Contestival. 102 Main St., New Iberia.
June 1. Minden Charity Classic Golf Tournament. 483 Benson Road, Minden. (318) 377-0395.
(337) 491-9159.
May 24-25. Creole Zydeco & Okra Festival. Adam Carlson Park, St. Martinville. (337) 394-2233.
(337) 560-5595.
May 23-June 2. Cajun Heartland State Fair. Cajundome, Lafayette. (337) 265-2100.
June 1. Sunflower Trail & Festival.
May 4. Herbs & Garden Festival. Marie
May 27. Memorial Day Avenue of Flags.
Street, Sunset. (337) 662-3542.
Highway 2049 North from Shreveport to Gilliam. (318) 378-4345.
May 4. TARC Garden & Market Festival.
Orange Grove-Graceland Cemetery, Lake Charles. (337) 436-9588.
June 1. Cross Lake Flotilla. American Legion Hall, Shreveport. (318) 635-8186.
June 14-16. Let the Good Times Roll Festival. Festival Plaza, Shreveport.
1 McCord Road, Houma. (985) 876-4455.
May 4. Annual McNeese Jazz Festival. Bulber Auditorium, McNeese State University, Lake Charles. (337) 475-5123.
June 1. Delcambre Seafood & Farmers Market. Delcambre Festival Grounds, Delcambre. (337) 367-0834.
June 1-3. 30th Church Point Buggy Festival. City Park, Church Point.
(318) 470-3890.
May 5. Terrebonne Livestock & Agricultural Association Horse Show. 121
CAJUN
Moffett Road, Houma. (985) 232-5141.
June 1. Daylily Festival and Garden Show.
May 9-10. Dirty Dozen Brass Band.
May 1-12. Contraband Days – Louisiana Pirate Festival. Lake Charles Civic Center.
Acadiana Center for the Arts, Lafayette. (337) 233-7060.
Magdalen Square, Abbeville. (337) 898-4110.
(337) 436-9588.
May 11. Fourth Wheelin’ N Peelin’ Car Show and Crawfish Cookoff. Gossen
May 2-5. Firemen’s Fair & Parade. Tiger Drive, Thibodaux. (985) 446-3247.
Memorial Park, Rayne. (337) 334-2332.
May 2 & 9. Rhythms on The River. River
May 11. Q-ing on the Bayou Boat Poker Run. Delcambre Boat Docks, Delcambre.
Ranch, Lafayette. (337) 216-0249.
May 3. McNeese Banners Cultural Series presents Lynn Trefzger. Rosa Hart Theatre, Lake Charles Civic Center, Lake Charles. 82 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
(337) 658-2422.
May 11. Seussical the Musical. ACTS Theatre, Reid St., Lake Charles.
(337) 684-2739.
June 7-8. Ninth Annual Opelousas Spice & Music Festival. South City Park, Opelousas. (337) 948-5227.
June 8. LCCMC-UN Celebration de Cajun-Leur Culture. Northwest Community Center Pavilion, Eunice. (337) 457-5601.
June 8. Jerry Crochet Horseshoe Pitching Tournament. Kemper Williams Park, Patterson. (985) 385-3858.
June 14. Flag Day. Bouligny Park, New Iberia. (337) 367-1080.
June 24-28. Jane in June Day Camp.
(225) 389-5520.
June 14-16. Louisiana Corn Festival.
Kent Plantation House, Alexandria. (318) 487-5998.
May 12. Mother’s Day Luncheon. Oak Alley Plantation, Vacherie. (225) 265-2151.
Hays Auditorium, Corn Festival Fairgrounds, Bunkie. (318) 346-2575.
June 29. Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame Induction Banquet. Natchitoches Events
June 15. Juneteenth Folklife Celebration.
Center, Natchitoches. (318) 238-7500.
May 23. Jambalaya Fest. Gonzales Civic Center, Gonzales. (225) 675-6550.
Farmer’s Market, 828 E. Landry St., Opelousas. (337) 945-5064.
BATON ROUGE/PLANTATION
June 15. Juneteenth 2013-150th Anniversary. Lake Charles Civic Center,
May through June 9. Heroes: Photographs by Steve Shapiro. West Baton Rouge
Lake Charles. (337) 491-9955.
June 15. Bayou Vermilion District’s Vermilionville Seed to Skillet, “Veggies.” Lafayette. (337) 233-4077.
June 17-Aug. 15. EatLafayette. Various restaurants, Lafayette. (337) 232-3737.
June 22. Clifton Chenier Celebration. 2116 Ferdinand Crochet Road, New Iberia. (337) 339-5903.
June 17. Father’s Day Event. U.S.S. Orleck Naval Museum, Lake Charles. (337) 214-7447.
June 21-22. Don Gay Championship Bull Riding. Burton Coliseum, Lake Charles. (254) 592-3662.
June 24-25. Louisiana Festival de la Viande Boucanee (Smoked Meat Festival). Ville Platte. (337) 363-1416.
CENTRAL May 4. A Heroic Finale by the Rapides Symphony Orchestra. 1202 Third St., Alexandria. (318) 442-9709.
May 4. Bug Day. 3601 Bayou Rapides Road, Alexandria. (318) 487-9709.
May 4-5. Mayfest. Leesville Historic District, Leesville. (337) 238-0783.
May 3-31. A Sculptural State of Mind. Gallery One Ellleven, 111 Third St., Leesville. (337) 238-0783.
May 9-12. Cochon de Lait Festival. Cochon de Lait Civic Center, Mansura. (318) 964-2887.
May 25, June 29. Music & Movies on the Lawn. Baton Rouge Gallery, Baton Rouge. (225) 383-1470.
May 25. Second Annual Audubon Colonial Militia Muster & Market Faire. Audubon
Museum, 845 N. Jefferson Ave., Port Allen. (225) 336-2422.
State Historical Site, St. Francisville. (888) 677-2838.
May 1. 2013 Disability Rights Rally.
May 25-26. Red, White & Denham.
Louisiana State Capitol, Baton Rouge. (225) 342-8819.
May 3. Garden Tour Fridays. Rosedown State Historic Site, St. Francisville. (888) 376-1867. May 3-4. Tickfaw 200 Power Boat Poker Run. 31999 O’Neal Drive, Springfield. (225) 294-3876.
May 3-5. Little Red Church Food & Fun Festival. St. Charles Borromeo Catholic Church, Destrehan. (985) 764-6383.
May 5, 19. LSU Hilltop Arboretum 2013 Spring Garden Tours. Baton Rouge. (225) 767-6926.
May 5, 7-12, 14-19, 21-26, 28, June 2, 4-9, 11-16, 18-23, 25-30. The Little Prince. Louisiana Art & Science Museum,
Antique Village, North Range Avenue, Denham Springs. denhamspringsantiquedistrict.net.
May 27. U.S.S. Kidd’s Memorial Day Observance. 305 N. River Road, Baton Rouge. (225) 342-1942.
June 7-9. Uplifting the Coast Festival. Baton Rouge Fairgrounds, Baton Rouge. (225) 268-4254.
June 7-9. The Day the War Stopped. Grace Episcopal Church, St. Francisville. (225) 635-4224.
June 7-9. Treasures of Point Coupee Art Exhibit. JPMac Auditorium, New Roads. (225) 638-6049.
June 9. In the Footsteps of Audubon.
Baton Rouge. (225) 344-5272.
Audubon State Historical Site, St. Francisville. (888) 677-2838.
May 10. Hot Air, Cool Nites at the Mid City Art Hop. Mid City Merchants, Baton
June 9. 2013 Springfield Fireman’s Poker Run. 32280 Terry St., Springfield.
Rouge. midcitymerchants.org.
(225) 294-5745.
May 11. Baton Rouge Greek Festival.
June 17. Toddstock Birthday Celebration.
Baton Rouge Town Square, Baton Rouge. (225) 767-7163.
May 12. Sunday in the Park. North Boulevard Town Square, Baton Rouge.
Nottoway Plantation, White Castle. (225) 545-2730.
June 28. The Great Race. Belle of Baton Rouge, Baton Rouge. (423) 648-8542.
Daylily Festival and Garden Show in Abbeville
May 11. Louisiana Dragon Boat Races. 933 Second St., Alexandria. (318) 443-3458.
May 17-19. Tunica-Biloxi Pow Wow. 711 Paragon Place, Marksville. (318) 253-1946.
May 17-19. Fisher Sawmill Days. Village of Fisher Town Square, Fisher. (318) 256-5047.
May 25. Fleur de Lis Memorial Day Weekend Craft Show. Natchitoches Events Center, Natchitoches. (318) 238-7500.
May 30-June 1. Cookin’ on the Cane. 781 Front St., Natchitoches. (800) 259-1714.
www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 83
June 30. Walker City Festival & Fireworks.
May 17-19. Mid-City Bayou Boogaloo.
June 6-8. Annual Swollfest Rodeo.
13750 Ball Park Drive, Walker. louisianatravel.com.
Intersection of Orleans and North Jefferson Davis Parkway, New Orleans. (504) 488-3065
Louisiana Highway 1, Grand Isle. (985) 787-3196.
GREATER NEW ORLEANS
May 18. Jazz’n the Vines with Pine Leaf Boys. Pontchartrain Vineyards, Bush.
(504) 558-6100.
(985) 892-9742.
June 8-9. French Market Tomato Festival.
May 21-25. New Orleans Food & Wine Experience. Events citywide, New Orleans.
1008 N. Peters St., New Orleans. (504) 522-2621.
(504) 529-5463.
May 24-26. Speckled Trout Fishing Rodeo.
June 14. City of Slidell KidsFest Children’s Art Festival. 2056 Second St., Slidell.
Highway 1, Grand Isle. (985) 787-2997.
(985) 646-4375.
June 1-2. New Orleans Oyster Festival.
June 15. Hook a Kid on Fishing Rodeo.
Woldenberg Park, New Orleans. (504) 835-6410.
Campo’s Marina, Shell Beach, St. Bernard. (504) 915-7666.
June 1-2. Back to the Beach Festival.
June 20-23. Festigals. Hotel Monteleone,
Williams Boulevard and Lake Pontchartrain, Kenner. (504) 836-7117.
New Orleans. (504) 524-1227.
May 3-5. 62nd Annual Tomato Festival. Our Lady of Prompt Succor School, Chalmette. (504) 271-2953.
May 4. Jazz’n the Vines with Linnzi Zaorski. Pontchartrain Vineyards, Bush. (985) 892-9742.
May 5. German May Festival. 301 Huey P. Long Ave., Gretna. (504) 363-1580.
May 10. French Masters presented by the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra. 16333 Louisiana 1085, Covington. (504) 523-6530.
May 10-26. Neil Simon’s Chapter Two. Playmakers Theatre, Covington. (985) 893-1671.
May 11. Second Annual Crawfish Mambo. University of New Orleans, New Orleans. (504) 280-2586.
May 16-19. Plaquemines Parish Heritage & Seafood Festival. 1292 Barriere Road, Belle Chasse. (504) 394-6328.
May 16. Art & Wine Walk. 409 Aycock St., Arabi. (504) 355-4442.
84 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
June 8-9. Louisiana Cajun & Zydeco Festival. Old U.S. Mint, New Orleans.
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great louisiana quiz
High Water 1 Pictured here is the
Mississippi River at Audubon Park in New Orleans when the river last got so high that floodgates had to be opened. What year was that? A. 2011 B. 2009 C. 2007 D. 2005 2 What major spillways control the river’s height around New Orleans? A. Bonnet Carre and Morganza B. Old River and Atchafalaya C. Huey P. Long and Krotz Springs D. Red River and Ouachita 3 Randy Newman’s song “Louisiana” was about this traumatic event: A. Hurricane Betsy B. The Great Flood of 1980 C. The Great Flood of 1927 86 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
D. Hurricane Katrina 4 The Atchafalaya River flows south toward this town: A. Houma B. Morgan City C. Ville Platte D. Bordelonville 5 Your friend is riding a raft down the Mississippi River and happens to drop his iPad into the water. He dives in to try to get it. Unfortunately he dropped it at the deepest spot in the entire river where the depth is 200 feet. Where is that spot? A. Alongside Vidalia B. Near Algiers Point in New Orleans C. Beneath the Interstate 10 bridge in Baton Rouge D. Near Lake Providence 6 Because he is afraid of
submarines, your friend decides to get out of the water and stay on the raft until the last river town. He hopes that he can scoop up the iPad when it floats by. What is the river’s southernmost town? A. Belle Chasse B. Buras C. Pilottown D. Pointe à la Hache 7 At what town is the
Atchafalaya River formed from the confluence of the Red and Mississippi rivers? A. Monroe B. Simmesport C. Ferriday D. Venice 8 Author John Barry wrote a best-selling book about the event described in Question No. 3. What is the book’s title?
A. High Waters B. Rising Tide C. Over the Levee D. Gone With the Winds 9 Those people in the picture are looking at the high water from the area of land between the levee and the waterline. What is that known as? A. The shore protector B. The embankment C. The batture D. The river walk 10 Whenever the Mississippi River is written about, this person is always mentioned – except in this quiz. Who is that person? A. Tennessee Williams B. William Faulkner C. Truman Capote D. If we said it, then we would be mentioning him.
Answer this BONUS QUESTION and be eligible to win an overnight stay for two at the luxurious PARAGON CASINO RESORT: What parishes are divided by the Mississippi River, and what is the parish seat of each? Send in your answer on a postcard addressed to: Louisiana Life Bonus Question 110 Veterans Blvd., Suite 123 Metairie, LA 70005 Two winners will be drawn from among the correct answers. Each will receive an overnight stay for two at the recently expanded and remodeled Paragon Casino Resort in Marksville. Winners’ names will be announced in the September/October 2013 issue. For our January/february issue, the question was: From north to south, name the towns where bridges cross the Atchafalaya River. The correct answer was: Some of you were smart enough to include railroad bridges and old bridges that are no longer in use – but that are nevertheless bridges. The question also asked for the listing to be north to south. Included in the answer should have been: Simmesport (the Louisiana 1 bridge as well as the old one), Krotz Springs (old and new), the Long-Allen bridge on Louisiana 182, the Union Pacific lift bridge and the U.S. 90 bridge between Berwick and Morgan City. Winners were: Henrietta Phillips, Pineville Charles J. Prest, Shreveport ANSWERS TO THE QUESTIONS: 1.A 2.A 3.C 4.B 5.B 6.C 7.B 8.B 9.C 10.D SCORING Score 10 points for each correct answer: 0-20 Consult your nearest library. 30-60 Begin by buying a good road map. 70-90 You should run for office. 100 You’re a candidate for a Ph.D. in Louisianaology. n www.louisianalife.com Louisiana Life | 87
a louisiana life
Kermit Poling Shreveport maestro keeps the music coming. By Megan Hill
Kermit Poling is a man of many notes – music notes.
music on the piano,” he
honors the 150th anniversary
says. “I guess I was blessed
of the start of the Civil War
Good Bugs. He’s also transformed
with a creative urge. But
and premiered in 2011.
Red River Radio, where he’s
first moved to Louisiana in
for a long time I didn’t take
Heavy research and period
been the general manager
1985 as a concert master of
my composition skills that
texts helped Poling frame the
for the past six years. “We’ve
the Shreveport Symphony
seriously.”
piece. “In a lot of ways it’s
replaced all of the trans-
one of my favorite works,”
mitters, put in beautiful
he says.
new studios and all new
The Cleveland-born Poling
Orchestra, a position he held
The band and orchestra
for 27 years before becoming
teacher at Poling’s high
its conductor. He is now
school noticed his talents
music director of the South
and encouraged him to write
for silent films such as
a lot of tireless fundraising,
Arkansas Symphony and
for larger ensembles. This
2003’s The Silent Treatment
he says. “It’s exciting from
the Shreveport Metropolitan
encouragement would prove
and a re-edited version of
a standpoint that it hadn’t
Ballet and general manager
pivotal in Poling’s career
the original Tarzan of the
been done before.”
of Red River Radio. If that
trajectory.
Apes, which was shot in the
weren’t enough, Poling
Snow White, Poling’s
Poling has written scores
technology,” which involved
As maestro, Poling
Atchafalaya River Basin in
has had the privilege of
performs around the world
first ballet, premiered at
1917. He also contributed the
conducting orchestras
as a violinist and conductor,
the Shreveport Symphony
score to the documentary
performing his own
and he’s a busy composer.
Orchestra in 2003. His other
Tarzan: Lord of the Louisiana
works. “I’ve been fortunate
He’s also in a string quartet.
ballets include The Wizard
Jungle, produced for the
to conduct most of my
of Oz, Phantom of the Opera
100-year anniversary of the
orchestra premiers,” he says.
enough. Poling started
and Aladdin. The Oklahoma
Tarzan character in 2012.
But he does admit that after
playing the piano at age 5
City Ballet commissioned
and picked up the violin at 6
him to write Beauty and
ments include scoring the
after he saw a demonstration
the Beast, which they will
plays The Glass Menagerie,
“The premier is the most
of string instruments at his
premier in 2014.
Memoirs, Elektra and many
nerve-racking part for me,”
more. In 1998, Emmy
he says. But there’s a deep
It all started out innocently
school. “My parents didn’t
Poling’s list of works and
Poling’s other accomplish-
all these years, he still gets a little nervous.
find out about it until after
accomplishments is long,
Award-winning artist
satisfaction when the band
they got the bill,” he says.
but he has a few favorites.
William Joyce chose Poling
strikes up and he settles in.
He’s particularly proud of his
to compose the soundtrack
music at an early age. “As
work No Sound of Trumpet
to his stage production of
says, “like having musicians
a kid I always used to write
nor Roll of Drum, which
The Leaf Men and the Brave
play your work.”
Poling also started writing
88 | Louisiana Life May/June 2013
“There’s nothing,” Poling n