“And if the music ain’t good, well it’s just too bad….We’re gonna sing along no matter what.
Because the dancers don’t mind at the New Orleans….If you tip ’em and they make a cut”– Scissor Sisters – Take Your Mama Out
I’m on my way back to Texas for the last few days of my Road Trip 2018. After driving 1,300 miles by myself, I’ve lured my adult kids to meet me here with a promise to show them 3 ways to do New Orleans right! Then I’ll have their company on the last 350 miles back to Houston.
Day 1 of this 2018 road trip was a nine-hour drive across 3 ½ states to end the day with a haunting discovery in Marianna Florida. Day 2-5 was spent with distant family in the small town of Perry, in the Big Bend and Mud Flats of Florida. Now I’m headed back home with this stop in New Orleans to celebrate a safe trip. [Read more…]


Felix Voorhies in Acadian Reminiscences : The True Story of Evangeline proposed that the poem was actually based on Emmeline LaBiche and Louis Arceneaux, who reunited under the Evangeline Oak on the Bayou Teche. Emmeline’s grave in the St. Martin de Tours square and Evangeline Oak are as revered as the relics of saints on the altar of that nearby church. Evangeline was commemorated in the naming of Louisiana’s first state park and the first oil well. There was a DVD of the 1929 Delores del Rio movie in the Old Castillo’s parlor, and Delores reportedly posed for the statue in front of the church.


It was a little after 3 am in St. Martinville, Louisiana on the last night of my road ramble. I was alone and locked in the Old Castillo Hotel on the banks of the Bayou Teche. At 11 pm, I’d made a final walk around the downstairs salon and dining room to make sure the deadbolts on the heavy front entrance doors were secure. The salon was furnished with heavy antique furniture, upholstered in the red velvet so popular in the 1800’s. Hidden speakers played Cajun music so quietly that you had to strain to hear the fiddle and vocalist competing for the high notes. This music was not as raucous as chanka-chank or zydeco music. Tonight these melodies sounded like a invitation to a ghostly fais-do-do. Soft lighting from lamps in the parlor and on the stair landing would guide my steps if I needed to come downstairs in the middle of the night.










