Tips 1 - 4 of 4 New Orleans Local Customs
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Local Customs: Take the dog for a walk in the New Orleans
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New Orleans French Quarter has more dogs on leashes than most urban hot spots I've seen. Most are cute little pooches whose security for the master is emotional not physical. We took our miniature schnauzer, Dali, on the road trip and he found it quite pleasant smelling the pungent smells of the French Quarter, but he also enjoyed a walk along the river and lake fronts. We took him for a scenic walk through the Garden District as well. Some hotels actually cater to pets, but ours didn't so we had to leave him in the cage in the car. That wasn't too bad, especially since he likes his cage and the car was kept in a secure garage. Since Katrina, if the weather is right, leaving the pooch overnight in the car is OK, but I'd be careful when the weather gets warmer. In any case, the pooch will love mingling with other dogs and children that love to pet them. We also saw a few street vagrants with larger dogs that seemed tolerant of exchanging smells with our overly pampered pooch. I recommend a six foot leash and choke collar if the dog is a puppy. Ours is trained enough, but I like keeping close control of the pooch on city streets. The Garden District, Bayou St. John, and the shorelines at the river or Lake Pontchartrain are more wide open areas that are easy to walk the dog, in some cases even off leash.
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Local Customs: Local Political Bayou
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Since Katrina, the politics of the city may have balanced in favor of the more conservative constituency. Unlike San Francisco, Boston, or Amsterdam, liberal politics is certainly not a given in New Orleans politics. The older mostly white upper class of the Garden District, Audubon Park, and Bayou St. John survived the flood rather handily while the liberal poor blacks of the Lower Ninth Ward got washed out. However, the middle-class Lakeview district also got flooded, and many of these die-hard New Orleans residents may return. Moreover, it pretty obvious that New Orleans as a whole was neglected by the Bush Adminstration and Republican Congress during the past few years as money and attention has been more focused on Iraq. Nevertheless, racial politics of the city is an old wound that frequently blisters. For instance when a lone knife wielding crazy black man was gunned down by sixteen police officers, this didn't go over well with the African-American community leaders. I saw a confrontation at a hotel between political leaders over this issue during the Christmas Holidays. The politics of recovery after Katrina are very complicated. After taking these pictures, an AP reporter asked me all kinds of question about why I was in town and what I thought of New Orleans after Katrina. I also talked to her after the visit to the devasted wards, but I doubted my comments made the news like these guys did. Later though, I found my remarks in several on-line news articles.
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Local Customs: Reading Palms at Jackson Square
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New Orlean's love of the mystic, voodoo and the steamy bayou, allows for many street fortune tellers. At Jackson Square, I watched a woman read tourist palms. I don't know if she read GW's when he stopped by to make his post-Katrina Jackson Square speech, but maybe he should have, just to consider his political fortunes in the city. The notoriety of this fortune telling tradition in the city would seem to be most famously related to the importation of voodoo from Benin, or via Haiti, but actually the Bambara and Woloof slaves imported from Senegambia appear most responsible for its early incorporation into Creole culture of Louisiana. During the French Colonial period, very few slaves came from anywhere other than Senegambia. There are many varieties of Voodoo in the Americas, a few of which came to Louisiana, probably after the colonial period. Men preside in the Haitian variant, and the most famous male diviner was Doctor John, after whom the modern musician must certainly be named. But, even more powerful in New Orleans is the woman dominated variant. This woman dominated variant may be due to the relative stability and power of women in the African-American slave system. In any case, the most famous women to preside over voodoo in New Orleans during the 19th century were Marie Laveau, a mother and daughter combo of legendary greatness. It is not surprising therefore, that other female fortune tellers would arrive to divine the futures of tourists visiting the city.
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Camping_Girl Fri Nov 14, 2008 04:15 UTC Great page, Alan. It is sad to see the devastation left by Katrina. This is a place I definitely intend to visit one day, and your tips here will be helpful when I do. | TravellerMel Mon Jul 14, 2008 07:21 UTC Wonderful NOLA page - thanks for being so upbeat! I love this city SO MUCH - and we ARE coming back. Now is a great time to visit! | SteveOSF Tue Mar 25, 2008 07:35 UTC Alan, Excellent treatment on post Katrina New Orleans. Great photos! But such tragic destruction. This is a city I’d like to visit again. The music, food, and architecture are fantastic. I hope New Orleans doesn’t loose its soul to the reconstruction. | SLLiew Thu Sep 6, 2007 02:20 UTC Great page of New Orleans. I was there pre-Katrina. Bring back fond memories especially on the street car trolley and the infamous Bourbon Street. |
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