It was with heavy hearts and aching heads that we finally
left the great state of North Carolina. We were pretty sure that the bar had
been set high for all upcoming states, cities, and towns in terms of the beauty
of the landscape and the excellence of the people. Our first day out involved
what would be one of our longer drives and most likely the most states traveled
across: N.C., S.C., Georgia, and Alabama. Our next major stop was in Ocean
Springs, MS/New Orleans but we decided to camp in Talladega National Forest
before completing our journey. It was a lovely site and a very nice forest to
drive through/walk around in. The next day we came within a couple miles of the
Talladega Motor Speedway but didn’t stop for the photo-op (Sorry Pops) as we
still had a pretty significant drive ahead of us. We got to Ocean Springs and
went to my old college buddy Jeni’s place, and she graciously housed us for the
evening and then played the role of tour guide in Ocean Springs and New
Orleans.
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| Team KePow meets the sea |
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| Mychie likes the beach and the beach likes Mychie |
Ocean
Springs was our first view of salt-water and sandy beach on our trip and we
took some time before heading to NOLA the next day to sit on the beach and get
our feet a bit wet. Once we got into the city we went to the French Quarter and
walked around for a few hours before snagging some excellent gumbo and heading
to our hotel. That evening Jeni showed us around some more of the French
Quarter and we did a bit of Bourbon Street.
New
Orleans is interesting. There isn’t another city, that I have been to, that is
like it. Normally I am pretty turned off by a place that has the feel of, “we
are catering to tourists now buy some crap!” While New Orleans definitely has a
lot of that going on in certain parts I got the feeling that it is a very thin
veneer over something truly unique. There were tons of fat tourists walking
around the French Quarter buying junk but then a block away the streets are
less cluttered with the pale and you can get the sense of how old New Orleans
is and that the image on the postcards is just a scrubbed clean version of
something real. There is a vibe to the place and music in the streets. For
every skank trying to pull you into a shitty bar to drink something awful there
is a bar older than America or a group of musicians actually scraping by playing
on the street because this is a city where they can do it because the city
needs them as much as they need it.
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| Bourbon St. by day |
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| Bourbon St. by night |
|
Myk
and I talked about how it isn’t necessarily a place to settle down but
somewhere we could live for a year or two if we had the dough and if we wanted
to really let go for a while. Overall, I still feel like I have a love hate
relationship with the city that leans more heavily towards love than hate. It’s
like having a friend who sells used cars but at night plays in a band and on
the weekend does charity work.
Anyway, we had a good ol’ time in New Orleans and Ocean
Springs and our trip is great overall so far. Before we left we went to Café Du
Monde and had coffee and Beignets (delicious) and then began our trek out of
New Orleans and into Texas.
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| A proper NOLA breakfast |
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| Lafitte's est. 1772 America est. 1776 |
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Daddy and I had bloody Mary's in Lafitte's. Isn't it famous for being the oldest bar in the US, or a bar in the oldest building - or something like that? Anyway, it was the bartenders cure for our hangovers.
ReplyDeleteDid you see the church in the middle of the town? It is one of the oldest churches (or perhaps the oldest church) in the US. I bought one of the St. Christophers there. Wish we could have been there with you.
I understand your analogy completely Justin. I feel the same way about nola.
momxxxoooxxx
Man I've loved all these blogs, but the part to the left of Myk's shoulder is just awesome. Keep em coming. -Nick
ReplyDeletewait! Nevermind. It moved. It's the part about the skank.
ReplyDeletemy favorite part is about the skank, as well.
ReplyDelete