10/30/17 – Day Off in New Orleans

Nothing like a good nights rest and a shower in a clean bathroom to get your day off to a good start.  Erwin and I set out early on foot to see some sights.  

We walked down Esplanade Street toward the French Quarter, and Tom C met up with us.  It was fun seeing and reading about many historic buildings and places.  

The Catholic Cemetery. Will have to look into whether the Hardys and Sheens are my relatives when I get home.

Museum recognizing the contributions of African Americans to the culture of New Orleans
Joan of Arc statue
Jackson Square with the Andrew Jackson statue that I predict will still be here years from now, in spite of the current anti-Confederate tide

After a little shopping spree in the French Market, some Halloween shopping on Dumaine Street, a little more sight seeing, and lunch in a busy little diner, we stopped to watch a few performers play in some of the clubs and on the street. There are so many talented musicians trying to catch a break in that town. 


Later in the afternoon, we all went separate directions, leaving me some time to myself to check out the art in the galleries and shops on Royal Street.  

Eric and I met up with Erwin at a club where another of his favorites, John Boutte, was performing   The venue was really cool and John Boutte was a great singer, but his 4-piece band was a little disappointing.  They looked like they were dead when they weren’t playing their parts.  No, in a coma. I am not exaggerating.  It was hard to watch. 

Then, John Boutte started looking for other singers to perform in his place, recruiting a jazz singer from the U.K. who was in the audience and a trumpet player who sings like Louis Armstrong. He sat down and played the tambourine with the UK guy and changed his clothes during the trumpet player. Seemed a little strange to me.  Somehow, I hung in there for the entire concert. 

We stopped to buy a thank you gift for Chris and Laura on our way back to their house, then turned in for the night.  

Tomorrow, we are hitting the road at 5 AM to get back to the hotel in St Francisville in time to get on the road for a 91 mile day.  I’m dreading the early wake up and 91 miler. 

10/29/17 – Simmesport to St. Francisville, LA then New Orleans (in a car)

Being in a room with Chris, it was lights out at 7:30 PM. Erwin and I had to drug ourselves up with a couple of Benadryls to fall asleep.  I can’t speak for him, but I can tell you that I fell asleep almost instantly and didn’t wake up till 6 AM. Did you do the math?  That was 10.5 hours of sleep!  It was amazing. 

At breakfast, this morning, the campers reported that the early morning temperatures dropped down to 31 degrees and that there was ice on their tents. There is no way I could have slept through those temperatures, so the motel room that cost me $15 was a great investment.

Truck stop breakfast

Erwin, Tom, Eric and I had hatched a plan to spend our day off in New Orleans. We would ride as quickly as possible to St. Francisville (50+ miles), check into a motel room to shower and park our bikes, then hop in a car with Tom C’s niece, Jill, who lives in New Orleans and was driving up to get us. In New Orleans, part of us would stay with Jill and the other part with friends of Erwin.  

I was under strict instructions not to stop and take photos, probably because I’m the slowest in the group, and we were short on time. So I started out a few minutes ahead of the guys in that freezing weather and pedalled my little heart out.  I was going 16 mph when Tom C and Erwin caught up to me on the bridge over the Atchafalaya River, where I had strict instructions from Ken that it would be unsafe to stop for photos, due to there not being s shoulder.  Busted. There was a shoulder, and I was taking photos.  (No regrets for being a disobedient 61 year old and refusing to be manipulated.) 

The Atchafalaya River Bridge
 

I rode with them for a while, and I was really pushing myself to stay up and even pass them.  Finally, Tom told me that at the rate we were going, we would get to our destination way too early. Sounded like permission to stop and take more photos. I had just passed a cool sign for Prayer Lake, so I made an immediate U turn and went back for it.  

From that point on, I rode by myself for the rest of the day and did what I wanted to do and stopped where I wanted to. 

The Prayer Lake sign was appropriate, because today is Sunday. I decided that today I would not turn on my IPod Shuffle, and instead I would sing hymns. It made for a better Sunday for me and remembering the words worked my brain a little. 

The next cool thing I came across was the Morganza Spillway, a massive water retention system designed by the Army Corps of Engineers and built in the 1920s to control flood water water from the  Mississippi and keep the river from changing its course.  The spillway, which to me looked like a 4000 foot long bridge, is actually 125 bays with gates that can be lifted to allow floodwater to flow into the Atchafalaya basin, swamp and/or river.  Levies surround the miles wide basin and everything else in the area that could be flooded by the Mississippi.  

Looking back on the Morganza Basin

Further down the route I passed through a couple of towns: Morganza and New Roads.  In Morganza, I was looking forward to riding along the Mississippi River, but guess what.  There was a tall levy along the river to prevent flooding–as far as I could see.  There was no riding along the river. 

My view of the Mississippi River–a levee.
 
A rodeo in New Roads. If it hadn’t been Sunday and I wasn’t on a mission to get to the hotel, I would have stopped to watch.
My favorite yard in New Roads.

About 5 miles after passing through New Roads, I came to the real Mississippi River crossing, the John James Audobon Bridge. 

I thought we were supposed to use our feet. (Got that line from Ed.)

Ten miles later I was at the hotel in St. Francisville getting ready for the trip to New Orleans.  

Sign by the hotel pond.

We showered and packed for New Orleans, then Jill arrived and we loaded into her car for the 2-hour drive.  Once there, Erwin and I spent some time with his friends, our hosts, Chris and Laura. They broke out their costumes and dressed us up a little before we left to catch a street car to get downtown.  

After eating dinner at a Seafood Festival that was going on down by the river, Erwin gave me a tour of the French Quarter. 

One of the musicians who played at the seafood festival.
I tried this alligator sausage.

Apparently they have parades here for any occasion. This was a wedding parade that Erwin and I joined in on.

After eating dinner at a Seafood Festival, Erwin gave me a tour of the French Quarter and we stopped at Cafe du Monde for benniettes. 

Cafe du Monde

 

Then we headed over to a little club named Chickie Wah Wah, where a musician he has seen perform in Amsterdam and really likes, Meschiya Lake, was performing.  She could really belt out the tunes and had a super talented 3-piece band backing her up.  We stayed for both sets and really enjoyed the music.  

When the concert ended, we rode the streetcar back to Chris and Laura’s,made nests on the sofa and a futon, and hit the sack.  


And all that happened in one day starting with a 51 mile bike ride.