Monday, December 12, 2011

June Roll Call

It%26#39;s getting closer, can hardly wait! Four of us coming down June 11-14. First time since Katrina for me and the wife, first time ever for the other couple.



Good food, good drinks, good people.........good times!! Who%26#39;s with me?





June Roll Call


We are going that weekend also. Don%26#39;t know if you know it but there is a zydeco fest that weekend. The link is http://www.jazzandheritage.org/cajun-zydeco. It will be down by the French Market. Should be fun.



June Roll Call


Hi bcla,



I found out about the fest 2 days after booking, and I%26#39;m glad that I booked the right weekend, I would have been bummed had I booked then found out the fest was on the weekend before or after......my usual luck. Should be a great time, looking forward to it. The other couple really has no idea what they are getting themselves into.




Hi!



We%26#39;ll just miss you guys, my 40th birthday is June 8th and my husband is taking me to my favorite place in the world for it!! If I had known about the zydeco fest, I might have changed my birthday to the following week! Have a great trip and please post your TR.




i%26#39;ll be down that exact weekend! v.excited about the zydeco fest. perhaps we should arrange a mini TA get together? i%26#39;ve got myself, my husband and sister in law (all frequent visitors) and three newbies! it%26#39;s so amazing to introduce someone to new orleans for the first time!

Three Sisters Restaurant

Does anybody know of a restaurant called Three Sisters..They had a fantastic breakfast buffet years ago and I was wondering if they are still around?



Three Sisters Restaurant


Are you referring to the Court of Two Sisters jazz buffet? They are still around, but the food is pretty mediocre!



Three Sisters Restaurant


Maybe the third sister ate the food there...seriously I also find the food mediocre.




I have friends who are part time residents and they love it...they eat there on holiday particularly, i.e. Easter brunch was their latest visit.




I just came back from my trip. I had sunday jazz breakfast there. I travel alone, and loved the samll table by the wishing well that they gave me. Had a great view of the band, plus the courtyard. I thought the food was great. Lots of choice. Great bacon, and never had seen such plump shrimp in my omelett before. Tasted pretty much everything that was there. Except for some dried out sausage.. I thought it was all perfect. Coffee was good too. Service was great. Got there right at 9:00am so everything was plentiful and pretty. I admit 28.00 plus tax plus tip can be a bit pricey for breakfast.. but as a treat to yourself I think it was more than worth it. I did think the band took too many breaks... but other than that. LOVED the Court of Two Sisters.. and I am glad I went. If you go, go early and get a great table.

Trip Report Day 1 and 2 Very detailed

Day 1 - We finally made it to MSY- there were 5 of us. I remember last time it cost around $35 for a cab ride - this time it was $12 per person. Plus tip- forget it, we went to Enterprise and rented a car for for $44. We needed to rent a car for the next day anyway!



Since our plane was late, we went straight to dinner at One. Not impressed! MBH liked his, I think he%26#39;s crazy, he had the puppy drum fish- it was so fishy tasting- just awful! I had the ahi salad- that was good. Son one had the spaghetti with calamari. I didn%26#39;t try it, he said it was just ok. Son two had the slow cooked rib and loved it! Son three also had the rib and hated it-sat with a sulking face - so while the others were finishing their meal, I took S#3 around the corner to the Camilla Grill - smiles abound! Love that place- I tried the gumbo- it was good!



Checked into the Renaissance Arts Hotel on Tchoupitoulas- great hotel! Nice rooftop pool and hot tub, generous sized work out room. King suite was roomy and comfortable. Two bathrooms :) Nice happy hour from 5-7 with 12 oysters for $7. Good deal! Hotel was about 4 blocks from the French Quarter - an easy SAFE walk! My kids loved the antique guitar store next door. We liked Lucy%26#39;s Surfer Bar across the street.



Walked over to Bourbon Street - glad it was a Thursday! Even then it was riskay for the kids - so we didn%26#39;t ever repeat that route!



We took the kids to Cafe du Monde, no waiting- got a seat right away. Then back to the hotel for some sleep before our Airboat tour! Took the young ones to the pool/hot tub/workout room.



Day 2



Woke up, got the car and took some wrong turns to start on our way to Lafitte. Called Cajun Style to let them know where we were, they said they needed to move us over to the noon tour. About that time, I noticed Pho Tau Bay off the freeway in Gretna, and remembered Emeril saying how good it was. Being a fan of Pho (seriously, just check my facebook :) I pulled over for some Vietnamese Breakfast. It was really good, I highly agree with Emeril! I had the shrimp pho and wished I%26#39;d ordered the bigger bowl. I talked for a while to the owner, he said that Steven Seagal is also a regular. Five stars!!!



11:30 made it to Cajun Style to learn it is no longer Cajun Style, Airboat Adventures bought them out - but they honored the discount we had with Cajun Style- that was nice. They have an albino alligator inside -that was interesting - I hear she%26#39;s a mean one. The shop also had a racoon and and lots of baby alligators. If they find an abandoned baby, they will bring it back to the shop, nurse it and then release when it%26#39;s big enough. Captain Cory took us for a great ride through the swamp/bayou. We saw cranes, egrets, huge turtles, lots of gators, Spanish Moss, Cyprus Stumps :) and other birds and flowers that no one knew the name of. One alligator had babies with her on a nest. That was cool to see. Then in the marsh, Cap%26#39;t Cory ';knew'; a gator since it was a baby- he called him Scooby. We pulled up and waited for Scooby to visit us- he didn%26#39;t disappoint. After having some marshmallows (swamp crack they jokingly call it) Cap%26#39;t Cory got out on the floton and did some tricks with Scooby. Scooby likes chicken!



We tried to find an old gator called Hercules - but he didn%26#39;t show up. This was the 3rd and best swamp tour I have been on! Five Stars!



Lunch at Sal%26#39;s - this was recommended by the airboat people - we wanted a good crawdad boil, or crawfish as they say in LA. This place was great! I think they were $3.75 per pound. We also had some shrimp. S#3 ate fried catfish - it was also very good. This is a local%26#39;s place where everyone knows each other. I wish I had room for some of their desserts - they looked so good! They have sort of a take-out counter. Great food, five more stars :)



Dropped off the car at Enterprise, they gave us a ride to the Riverwalk.



Headed to the French Quarter Fest for some music. Lots of food and drink stations, I didn%26#39;t see any major lines and wondered if maybe that was because it was the 1st day. Had some fun and then headed to dinner.



Star Steak and Lobster for dinner. The lobster was small, but only cost $31. It was perfectly cooked. We also tried the Redfish Amer and Filet and Blackened Ribeye Chelsea. Everything was very good, I%26#39;d go back. Four stars.



S#2 really likes banana foster - so we went to Brennans - even though it was late! The doors were open, howeve they closed at 9 pm. I guess they saw the sad face on the kids - we told them we just wanted bananas foster. So he said to give him a few minutes. About 5 minutes later he came back and took us in. What a show! And a special treat - I have a great photo of the flame going up - will post later. We ordered two. It was the best dessert of the trip! Five stars!



Off for a walk around Jackson Square where an old guy had wine glasses set up with different levels of water. He was amazing, played several tunes. Had a difficult time keeping the young sons from tipping him all their money :) He let them ';play'; a glass.



Back to the hotel too late for the kids to go swimming, Fell right to sleep!



Trip Report Day 1 and 2 Very detailed


Thanks for your report! Very few non-locals get to try our awesome Vietnamese cuisine, so I%26#39;m glad you found Pho Tau Bay! Next time, you%26#39;re gonna have to try Tanh Dinh and Nine Roses - even better!





Also, Sal%26#39;s is pretty good, but they overcharged you for crawfish at $3.75/pound. It%26#39;s high season, so you should have gotten $2 or under/pound. I%26#39;ll yell at them next time on your behalf ;)



Trip Report Day 1 and 2 Very detailed


Thanks Worldtraveler - for yelling at Sal :) we knew when we pulled into the parking lot they%26#39;d know we weren%26#39;t from around here! Everyone else had SUV%26#39;s - - we had a sedan :) Sal was behind the bar having fun with the locals - still, the FQ was charging $8/lb - so we think it was a good deal anyway.




It always bothers me with how much the restaurants charge for boiled crawfish but then I buy it roadside or fishhouse at bargain rates and bring it home something a tourist doesn%26#39;t have the option to do. Pho is so good-When I can I grab some at the Saigon Noodle House in Slidell. I%26#39;ve heard very little about ONE so it was good to have your report. Keep reporting.

Trip Report: Part 1

Ok folks, here it is.





Thursday, April 9th: Arrived at my hotel, Place D%26#39;Armes hotel, around 9:15pm after a very long day of planes and airports. I was sooooooooo excited!!



When I got into the cab, I put the window down and I got a sniff of that warm, humid air, aaaaaaaaaah. Holly cow, people drive like maniacs in NO!! At least on the highways. 4 to 5 lanes of traffic, people going at least 80 miles an hour and weaving from one lane to the other like there%26#39;s no tommorow. I was 1/2 scare out of my wits by the time we got to the French Quarter!! :)



Check in at the hotel was fine. I get to my room and open the door to a king size bedroom with a balcony overlooking St Ann street, room 302. PERFECT!!! Was a large room with 2 ';doors';, only the one going to the balcony actually opens, but very light and bright. Room itself was fine, clean and no musty smell or anything. I was quite pleased.





After litterally throwing my stuff on my bed, I head down to Bourbon St. WOW!!! A blind person could have seen I was a tourist, 1st time on Bourbon. I was walking around looking at everything, big grin on my face, in awe. I couldn%26#39;t believe I was finally there!! I was starving but didn%26#39;t want to go sit down anywhere%26#39;s, so my 1st meal in NO was a Lucky Dog hot dog. Boy was I surprised when the guy said 4.50$...for a hotdog?!? But then I told myself, you%26#39;re on vacation in NO, who cares!! So I walked around looking and listening to everything, munching on my doggie for a bit. Finally, the 22hr day got to me so I headed off to bed.





Friday, the 10th: Woke up earlier than I expected, probably around 7amish. Was still feeling tired from the day b4, so I decided not to go to the Jean Lafitte Ctr free tour at 9am. I also decided that having breakfast on my balcony would be a fine start to my vacation, so I went down for the continental breakfast. Tea, coffee, juice (which was excellent), danishes and croissants. If they would add maybe peanut butter, boiled eggs, and fruit to it, it would make a fine breakfast. I grabbed some coffee, juice and a croissant, brought it back to my room and sat outside listening to the Quarter waking up. It was sooooo lovely. It was warm and a bit humid. Some little birds even came by to say hi (and steal crumbs).





After taking my time getting ready and what not, I headed out. My 1st stop was Rouse%26#39;s as I wanted to get some water for my room (I%26#39;m a big water drinker). I also picked up some strawberries and a jar of peanut butter to have on those mornings I%26#39;d be having breakfast at the hotel. Back to my room to put that stuff away and I went exploring. I decided since I didn%26#39;t do the walking tour that I%26#39;d do the carriage ride that 1st morning.





I enjoyed it, a great way to see the city when u 1st get there. I saw a lot of the places, restaurants, etc that I wanted to see during my trip. The driver was very kind, forget his name though. I%26#39;ll tell you all right now, I%26#39;m terrible with names and forgot pretty much the names of all tour guides.





Afterwards, I went back to Rouse%26#39;s for snacks and ';beverages'; for the room. I picked up a ham %26amp; cheese poboy as it was lunch time, and I planned on going on the cemetery walking tour at 1pm, so didn%26#39;t chance going to a restaurant and being late.





I did the cemetery tour with Historic New Orleans tours which meets at Royal Cafe Beignet. The guide was very informative and you can tell he really cares about preserving the tombs and whatnot. Tour lasted about 2hrs. We walked to the church which is accross the street from the St Louis#1, he explained about the church and it%26#39;s significance, then we went into the cemetery. There was a lot of people around, we saw at least 3 other tour groups, plus people looking on their own. It was so interesting to see everything, the old tombs, the newer/restored ones, the explanation on how they used to bury people %26amp; how they do it today, etc. It had been cloudy in the am, but the sun came out shortly after we started the tour, and the sun was just beating down on us. I had burnt shoulders by the time I got back to my hotel.



After the cemetery, we walked over Congo Square, and he pointed out where the temple was accross the street. We didn%26#39;t go over though cause you could see the place was packed with other tours. I don%26#39;t think anybody minded really cause we were all getting tired from the tour and being out in the sun.





Went back to the hotel. By then, I was really hot as it was very warm and humid, so I decided to go for a swim in the pool and lie in the sun to work on my tan (I%26#39;m a sun worshipper). The water was a tad cool when u 1st got in, but felt great in no time, very refreshing. After relaxing by the pool for awhile and having a drink or 2, got ready to head out again. Went to the Old Absinthe House to meet up with some TA folks, but we missed each other. I was pretty hungry by then and since Remoulade was close by, decided to go there for supper. I had the crawfish pie which came with fries. Meal was fine, though I did fine the crawfish pie not dry, but the inside mixture wasn%26#39;t exactly what I thought it would be. But I still ate everything, so it certainly wasn%26#39;t bad.





Afterwards, I just started walking down Bourbon St, listening to music in doorways until I heard something that really grabbed my insterest. I ended up going into the Maison Bourbon for their houseband. Excellent!!!!! Highly recommend them!! I ended up staying there most of the evening. It%26#39;s traditional, old jazz, just what you picture when you think of New Orleans jazz.





The long day and all the walking started to get to me, so off to my room to relax, put my feet up cause they were aching, and off to bed. What a great 1st day!!!!!





More to come!!



Trip Report: Part 1


Thanks for the report! I agree with you about the music at Maison Bourbon.



Trip Report: Part 1


I agree about Maison bourbon and also another good one close by is Fritzels. The drivers are wild actually you get a life lesson at each traffic light. When it turns green..don%26#39;t move..count to three and then proceed. And that is a great room at the Place D%26#39;armes.




Yay, porelly. Thanks for writing. I can relate to the excitement you must have felt as you LIVED NO for the first time.


We%26#39;ve stayed in room 302 at the Place before, you got a GREAT room. And I have to admit, all the times we%26#39;ve stayed there, I have NEVER been in the pool. Yay for your Maison Bourbon experience on your first day.



Looking forward to more stories....



';Do you know what it means ....';?




can%26#39;t wait to read the rest!!! How%26#39;d you like that Lucky Dog...we thought they were the worst thing ever-one of the girls tried the Bourbon st vendor, the rest of us tried the airport one-just awful!!!




We are leaving early in the morning so your TR was a good start to my trip!




I find that the depth of enjoyment I get from a Lucky Dog depends on how many drinks I%26#39;ve had. It%26#39;s remarkable how good they taste after a few too many drinks.




Been waiting for that first reaction- not disappointed. Was it as you expected? I am glad you got that Lucky Dog out of the way- that is one NOLA treat I won%26#39;t be trying- never eat hot dogs- esp. on vacation. Can%26#39;t wait to hear more!




Yay! I%26#39;ve been waiting for your TR! Your room at the Place is a great one - the epitome of why I feel the need to have a balcony room - to sit outside and watch New Orleans waking up. Takes you to another century, doesn%26#39;t it?



New Orleans drivers are giving Atlanta drivers a run for their money, I%26#39;ll take Spaghetti Junction anyday rather than I-10 near New Orleans, LOL!



Can%26#39;t wait to hear more!




BTW, I have to tell you that I will always remember the first time I went to New Orleans. I was a teenager and my dad took me there on vacation. When we got there, all my teen-angst melted away. It was like my soul said ';Oh baby, you are home now, relax.'; It will stand out in my mind as the first time I was completely comfortable in my own skin. I wandered around (with Dad%26#39;s supervision) and I can remember just laying my cheek on old warm brick buildings and feeling the history.



I%26#39;ll be 40 soon, and I don%26#39;t live in New Orleans because my husband and my family don%26#39;t want us to live there because of the distance and the crime.



But, I visit whenever I can, and I still feel the same old euphoria each time.



Was it like that for you?




Wow, cerelife, your description of how New Orleans affects you, that%26#39;s exactly, I mean, exactly how New Orleans makes me feel. It%26#39;s like you got inside my head!

Road trip - need suggestions

I would like to plan a budget road trip (with 2 toddlers) for the near future (next couple months) and I was wondering if anyone could suggest some reasonably priced destinations to stay on or near the beach (not swamp) that would be close enough to do a day trip to New Orleans. ANy help would be greatly appreciated!

Road trip - need suggestions

The Mississippi ulf Coast-Biloxi, Gulfport, Long Beach-is close enough to make a day trip to New Orleans. I have not been over there since the hurricane wiped that area out, but surely they have some hotels back up by now.

Road trip - need suggestions

can%26#39;t find the edit option. The ocean trip has been nixed. :( thanks for your suggestion though. Some day soon I hope to make it out that way!

  • lotion cream
  • connecting database
  • TR - 4/16-4/19 - Highlights of FQF, Bourbon St, Food

    After about 6 long years I finally made it back to New Orleans! This will be mostly just highlights of things that come to mind...





    Last time I was there was with a few friends for Mardi Gras in %26#39;03 and this time it was with my wife and another couple for French Quarter Fest. My wife was a NOLA virgin and the other couple had one NOLA virgin and one who had been once, but didn%26#39;t stay in the French Quarter too much since she was with a friend who lived outside the city. The oldest me, is 36, and the rest a couple to a few years younger. However, the way we put away hurricanes, hand grenades, Abita%26#39;s, and other concoctions you would think we were a bunch of college kids! This is also our first leg of our ';drinking world tour';, we are going to Oktoberfest in Germany, then Prague, and then Austria later this year. So lets say we like to put them away with the best of them and we figured we better do it now before we/our livers can%26#39;t do it much longer…which is coming fast :)





    We left Boston at the crack of dawn and was in New Orleans and at our hotel by around 2pm





    We stayed at the Prince Conti and had a good experience there. My review should be posted shortly for those who want further info.





    FOOD:





    ACME Oyster House (twice) - there was a line each time, as always, but we never waited too long since there were 4 of us. The oysters were amazing, so tender and fresh! We had grilled oysters for the first time too and they were amazing as everyone says. Love the cocktail sauce there! There other food is equally as good.





    Cafe Du Monde - stopped twice...amazing! A favorite obscure Jimmy Buffett song about sums it up...



    ';...Well the coffee is strong



    at the Cafe Du Monde,



    And the donuts are too hot to touch;



    But just like a fool, when those



    sweet goodies cool, I ate %26#39;til I ate way too much...';





    Speaking of Jimmy...



    Margaritaville - stopped in for an app of ';gator bites';. I had them once before but had to let the wife give them a go. My wife thought they tasted like chicken...go figure...





    Coop%26#39;s Place - had to eat here after all the great reports. There was a line here too for dinner but we ended up with seats at the bar pretty quick. Not the friendliest of folk, or at least the 1 bartender of the 2 that night, but the food was good. I had the sampler plate and I enjoyed it although all the tastes kind of all blended together.





    Central Grocery - Had to get a muffaletta. My wife has been wanting one since I told her about them and we waited in line for about 10-15 mins. There was a line there every day. Wife and I got a Half to share but could have eaten a Full no problem. We wanted to save room for some other FQF food samplings. Actually, I had Frank%26#39;s Muff at the Fest tent the same day to compare. Tough call on the better one...more meat in Frank%26#39;s, better olive salad at Central Grocery.





    Oceana - Stopped here for an appetizer one night. Had some more oysters (very good, regular cocktail sauce) and alligator sausage. Alligator sausage was really good and the spicy sauce made it!





    French Quarter Fest Food Tents - So many to try and I so wish I could eat more!! We each had a couple of dishes and each one was very good to amazing. I had some grilled shrimp with cheesy bacon grits that was very good. I can%26#39;t remember what everyone else got but from what I got a bite of it was amazing. I also got a order of crawfish that I have been wanting at one of the tents near the US Mint building. They had crates and crates of them! I ended up with a good amount (guess was about 1 1/2 - 2 pds) with a potato, corn, and a piece of sausage which was $7. They were very good and nicely spiced, not too spicy but a nice flavor. I would love to do it like I knew a lot of you do…boil%26#39;em up and dump it out on a newspaper covered picnic table with a keg of ice cold brew. I will trade a New England Lobster Boil for a ';real'; crawfish boil…hahahaha.





    I think that about sums up the food…will post more soon...



    TR - 4/16-4/19 - Highlights of FQF, Bourbon St, Food


    I enjoyed your report and await the %26#39;rest of the story%26#39;. The Prince Conti is a great new orleans hotel and good location and its so much fun to stroll and eat and stroll and drink and be entertained at the Festival. I combine the New England boil and LA. boil..I get a couple lobsters steamed at Rouses, five pounds of boiled crawfish, three pounds of boiled shrimp, a packet of boiled sausage, corn, and potatoes. At home I throw it in a big boiling pot for a couple minutes and its like fresh made Yankee-Cajun boil.



    TR - 4/16-4/19 - Highlights of FQF, Bourbon St, Food


    Thanks Cajunyank, your Yankee-Cajun boil sounds fantastic. The best of both worlds!





    Conti was very good, perfect location. Caught the 2nd Line parade Friday morning just steps from the hotel. I will touch on that soon.





    Of course, after being back to work afer a fews days plus an extra day of detox I guess I should do some work :)




    Thanks for your report! I believe you were at the Rouse%26#39;s tent for the boiled crawfish. Rouse%26#39;s (local Louisiana supermarket chain) usually does a great job with boiled crawfish, and they have some of the best prices around too!




    Yes, it was Rouse%26#39;s tent. They certainly tasted good and it seemed like a fair price to me.





    In fact I thought all the prices were decent ($4 for beer, $2 for water, $4-7 for most food)





    Up here if they had something like that you would expect to pay $7-8 for beer and $5 for water and you would probably have to pay to get in. Then if you wanted a beer you would only be able to be in some roped off area with a million other people.








    Loved your report. I too like the muffs at Frank%26#39;s.




    I guess the last of my report is just a misc. listing of things that happened, thoughts, etc





    We caught the 2nd line parade to open the French Quarter Fest and I%26#39;m glad we did. Everyone looked like they enjoyed themselves and it was just cool in general to see.





    We only listened to a few FQF bands in passing. Not really our type of music but while in New Orleans it is infectious.





    The crowds were not bad until mid afternoon Saturday. For the most part we didn%26#39;t wait in any long lines at the food/drink vendors. The longest lines we saw all weekend were at ACME.





    Ah, Bourbon Street, now this was where we spent most of our time after dinner.





    Hurricane%26#39;s at Pat O%26#39;Briens - first drink and since my first trip is now sort of a tradition





    Lafitte%26#39;s Blacksmith - Went there one night and thought it was pretty cool. It was very laid back compared to many of the other places. All in candle light was definitely different. The only thing, and I am not sure what it was, but after a half hour or so my allergy asthma really acted up and my chest tightened up. I very rarely ever have that happen, usually only when dust/mold is really stirred up. It is an old place so that may be why. Anyway, after a drink we needed to leave. A hit off the inhaler back at the hotel and I was good to go again.





    Old Absinthe House - stopped in to try some Absinthe and it wasn%26#39;t bad. Tasted like sweet, watered down, Sambuca. So I don%26#39;t think it was really the real stuff, plus it was pretty expensive at $17. When I am Prague later this year I am going to try and have it there. It is suppose to be terrible but the curiosity has gotten the best of me.





    Tropical Isle - of course had a couple hand grenades. I think they are pretty good, although a little sweet. The last night we hung out there, the one that is linked to another bar next door. They had an acoustic guy playing and a few guys playing popular songs for tips. It wasn%26#39;t too busy, we wanted to hear some live (non-jazz/non-pop) music, and we wanted a seat. We had a great waitress there too who kept our drinks filled!





    We tried to go to the Funky Pirate to catch Big Al for a couple songs but since we had drinks already they wouldn%26#39;t allow us in. We moved on and never made it back.





    We ventured into quite a few other places in our 3 nights there. Bourbon Rocks being one and a few others that escape me. Almost all were advertising 2 for 1 and 3 for 1 drinks up to 9pm. Some would encourage bringing in outside drinks, it was just the Trop Isle places that seem to be the ones who didn%26#39;t allow ';outside'; drinks.





    Always have to buy at least one ';Huge A$$ Beer';. That marketing cracks me up every time and I even got to hold the sign!!





    Almost forgot, also stopped in Napoleon House twice for a Pimm%26#39;s Cup. Love those things, nice and refreshing.





    Overall the Bourbon St crowd was much more tame then the Mardi Gras crowd. An older crowd and it showed and there was barely any female flashing, I think I only saw it once. We did see one fight in the middle of Bourbon between 4 guys though. It was around 5-6pm and it lasted for a good minute or two. No cops in sight yet and, I believe, a store owner came to break it up. They went in opposite directions and that was it.





    I would say Bourbon is no place for kids when you get down to the area where the strip joints are or after 5-6pm There was almost always a stripper hanging out front of ';Little Darlings'; from about 6pm on. And almost everything was hanging out...and I mean everything. I don%26#39;t know where they got the ';Little Darlings'; name from but the girls standing there certainly did not fit that billing.





    We would of liked to have done more but FQF took up most of our days. Next time I will try to get down to the Garden District, take a tour, etc. With everything going on with the fest we found it hard to do much else. Plus when American moved up our flight on the last day that didn%26#39;t help either.





    So that is about it and in closing...



    New Orleans is a fantastic city. I don%26#39;t see how anyone couldn%26#39;t have a good time there. It is such a unique place with amazing food that everyone should visit at least once. I encourage everyone that hasn%26#39;t been to NOLA to go! Ignore some of the reports, do your research, and go see for yourself. Any foodie, art lover, music lover, history lover...anyone should visit. It does truly have something for everyone.





    Lastly, thanks to everyone on this board that gives such great advice. Especially Worldtraveler786 who gives some of the best advice on any forum on TA that I visit.





    Party on NOLA, we%26#39;ll be back!






















    Nice TR srauhala!




    Nice TR srauhala I am taking notes bcause we leave on Friday!!!!!!!!




    Thanks all





    I also forgot to mention that we tried going to the Carousel Bar but didn%26#39;t have any luck getting a drink. We were there on Saturday and every seat around the bar was full and the bar was pretty crowded.





    While the concept of the bar is unique there is no place to squeeze in an get a drink if it is full. We tried to sit at one of the tables for a drink but it took forever to get any service. So we just ended up leaving.





    So advice, avoid going there at prime times. We were there around 6-7 on Saturday night and it was too busy, probably with the before dinner drink crowd.




    Loved the report and your part about Little Darlings had me rolling. Hilarious!

    Bus Service from Dallas To Shreveport

    Anyone know what the bus service is called and how do I find out the time and rates from Dallas to Shreveport



    Bus Service from Dallas To Shreveport


    Amtrak does a service from downtown airport to downtown shreveport via train and changing to a passenger van in Longview. The service was very easy and clean, takes about 4 hours in all - at $22 you can%26#39;t beat it! I%26#39;ve just recently done that trip and will be doing it again for sure.



    Bus Service from Dallas To Shreveport


    Call the Isle of Capri Casino in Bossier City. They will be able to tell you the bus information. Its 10.00 from the MetroPlex to the Isle of Capri. I beleive that the charter bus is sponsored by that establishment.




    Hi there - Did you happen to get the right information on this? I%26#39;m trying to plan a trip myself and got three different noumbers from the Isle - not of which work.




    The bus line to Hollywood Casino in Shreveport is Coach USA. It is a charter bus and leaves at different times from 3 different locations in Dallas. The first stop is at Montfort and LBJ. It leaves at 7:40 and gets there about noon and then leaves at 5:00 and gets back about 8:15 or 8:30. There is supposed to be a night bus that has the hours reversed. I have been 5 times. The cost is $10 but when you buy your first $10 worth of coins, you get an extra $10. So the trip is free. The only problem with the bus is the three stops it makes. Also, there is a Fort Worth bus going at about the same time. If they don%26#39;t have enough people in one or the other, they combine buses. This is a real hassle. You can bring things on the bus and they sometimes show a movie. When you get there, you can leave your items (food, books, magazines) on the bus. The phone number for reservations for this bus is 1-877-450-0005. There was a bus to Isle of Capri but we heard that they stopped running it. I am not sure why. It was proveided by Escapade bus lines. We got a brochure from someone on our last trip that Aventura Tours has a bus to Horseshoe. There was also a bus to Boomtown but we heard it was no longer going there. That busline was VIP Express. I guess if you call the casinos or can find these buslines online, you can contact them to see if they are going.




    The number for Aventura Tours is 214.677.7840


    I could not understand much of what the gentleman was saying. He also could not give me information on what they would do if the bus broke down. He just told me that it happens sometimes. The cost is $850 for the entire bus that holds 50 something people. THen you get a meal ticket or something. Again I was unclear.



    If anyone has found any other options I would really appreciate the help.




    Coach USA leaving from Dallas to Shreveport. Does it leave from The Big Town Mall in Mesquite and how much does it cost. I also need the time it leaves. That%26#39;s where it used to leave from. Please let me know if it has changed.



    Thank you.




    I found a link with locations/schedules:



    http://dallas.coachusa.us/casinotours.cfm




    what is the link for bus schedules to shreveport from dallas area?




    I too was looking for bus service from Dallas to Shreveport; however, much to my surprise, there is nothing in the Travel Section of the Dallas Morning News. There used to be advertisements, coupons, etc. advertising trips to Shreveport. Not any more. I found this website and noticed the last entries from everyone was in 2005. Well, this is July 2006 -- I%26#39;m posting a current listing. Coach USA goes every day from Dallas, Fort Worth, Mesquite, Oak Cliff, and other metro cities to Sams Town and Eldorado casinos. The cost is $20.00 per person. Eldorado and Sams Town will give you $10.00 upon your arrival. Coach USA%26#39;s phone number is 1-877-450-0005.




    Does anyone know if you take the bus, could you stay over night and pick up on the bus the next day?

    Trip Report: part 4

    Monday the 13th: I%26#39;d been having the continental breakfast at the hotel since I%26#39;ve been in NO, so finally made it someplace for a good old greasy meal. Went to Clover Grill. Was sharp seeing it live as I%26#39;d seen in Brad Pitt%26#39;s Benjamin Button movie. Place was just what I thought it would be: another neighborhood, hole in the wall type place. I loved it!!!



    Since I was being picked up around 12:30 for my city/Katrina tour, decided to just walk around the French Quarter to take pictures and sightsee. That%26#39;s what I don%26#39;t like about doing tours in the afternoons, you don%26#39;t dare do too much or go do something else in the morning if you%26#39;re not sure how far or how long it%26#39;s going to take. Walked around Royal and Chartres St, took lots of pix of the different buildings and architecture.





    Lunch was at Yo-Mamma%26#39;s, another great place!! I know they are known for their great burgers, but wasn%26#39;t in the mood for more red meat, so had a bbq chicken burger instead (real chicken, not a deep fried patty) with a side salad. It was actually quite good, I really enjoyed it.





    Tours by Isabelle picked me up right on time. Had a lady tour guide who used to live in the lower 9th ward (and no, I don%26#39;t remember her name). The vans were a bit smaller than I thought they would be, and we had 13 people so it was packed, too packed really. I was lucky at least I got to sit next to the window, so was able to take pixs through it (they seem to have come out fine). Tour lasted about 3hrs, with a 20min break. It%26#39;s almost 4 years later, and most places are still practically empty lots, no stores, no schools, no nothing. About an hour into the tour, I started feeling really bad about sight seeing people%26#39;s devastations and taking pictures. I got teary eyed a couple of times. To see those houses with the x%26#39;s on it on tv is one thing, but to see it in real life is sooo different.





    You%26#39;d see house after house after house that are gutted %26amp; abandonned, then all of a sudden, a pretty house all fixed up with flowers in the yard. It must be so sad in a way for those people living there. When they look out of the window, they only have bad memories to look at. Let%26#39;s face it, people got screwed!!



    Anywho, the lower 9th was the last part of the tour. We saw were Brad Pitt%26#39;s foundation is rebuilding, the house that Mike Holmes did (fellow Canuks will know who I mean. He%26#39;s a guy on tv who fixes/rebuilds houses for people who got taken), and also Musician%26#39;s Row. It ended the tour on a bit of a higher note, that some people are able to go back if they want to (but such a small#).



    Even though I did feel guilty a bit, I really enjoyed the tour. The lady was very informative and you can tell she really cares about the subject.





    It was such a nice afternoon, I decided to take the Algiers ferry over to have supper at the Dry Dock Cafe. Now, I know you all mean well, but for those people who suggest to tourist to take the Algiers ferry instead of doing the Natchez tour, they%26#39;d be getting the ';same idea'; just a shorter version of it, don%26#39;t. It%26#39;s like comparing apples and steak. They are both foods, but that%26#39;s it. Both things happen on the water, but the Algiers ferry only takes a couple of minutes, and unless you go down where the cars park %26amp; then it%26#39;s really loud, you can%26#39;t really see anything.





    I had a cajun poboy with sweet potato fries. It%26#39;s basically a spicy roast beef poboy which was alright, but my fries were on the cold side, so meal was only so so. Another great neighborhood place to go for a drink though. And they did bring out warm appetizers. Not to many places do that anymore. Stayed for about an hour and then took the ferry back.





    Was pretty tired from the day, so decided to spend the evening on my balcony. Was a very pleasant evening, having a beverage listening to the music from Jackson Square, hearing the horses and mules go by down on St Ann street, sooooo relaxing. And the hotel is part of the evening haunted tours they give, so I got to listen to the various stories they tell a few times during the week. The Place%26#39;s ghost is a fisty little fellaw. As per the stories I heard, he sometimes approaches people in the courtyard, sometimes in the elevator, sometimes in the hallway. I was not fortunate enough to get the pleasure. :-)











    Trip Report: part 4


    I%26#39;m glad that you got a Katrina tour. I was hesitant at first too, but I think everyone who visits NO should venture out and see for themselves. We had a rental car so did a self tour of the 9th Ward, but on the cab ride back to the airport, our cabbie asked what time our flight was. When we told him he says ';Well, you%26#39;ve got time, you want a little tour, no charge?';. He took us around Lakeside and the 17th St. Canal, and described in detail what used to be there and what was being resurrected. Told us of stories how he rescued people with his boat, and showed us the on ramp of I-10 where he dropped them off on higher ground, only to return and bring back more.



    I admire the pride of NO residents, and the love and determination they have for their city. They care for her deeply and are happy to tell you of their city.



    It is heartbreaking to see what remains 3-1/2 years later, yet survival is paramount. Everyone should witness it for themselves. I glad that you did.



    Trip Report: part 4


    I was in New Orleans just six weeks after Katrina and have been back several times since. I literally felt sick to my stomach seeing New Orleans in October of 2005. Now, even though the Ninth Ward is still pretty deserted, at least you can seem signs of hope, like Brad%26#39;s houses, the Musician%26#39;s Village, etc.





    I%26#39;m glad you liked Clover Grill, it is one of my favorite places to eat and I loved seeing it in Benjamin Button!




    The Clover Grill, hamburgers cooked under a hubcap (for that true hubcap flavor), and a SHOW! Also a good stop at around 3:00 AM.




    Clover Grill-burger with mushrooms, onions, and chile and don%26#39;t breathe at anyone for three hours..so good. The only food I%26#39;ve had from the dry dock was at a special event for Blaine Kern and they had the shrimp bisque and crawfish monica and both were quite good. And although I don%26#39;t think the river cruise is much it sure beats the cargo boat feel of the ferry crossing but each has its elements.



    In my over 20 stays there I%26#39;ve never been spooked by the ghost either.

    Trip Report: Part 2

    I forgot to mention, I also stopped at the Funky Pirate Friday night to listen to Al Carson. The place was packed and you can tell he%26#39;s quite popular. I stayed for only about 3 songs which were very nice. I planned on going back, but never ended up doing it. Ran out of time (common feeling throughout my trip, not enough time!!)





    Saturday, the 11th: I was up and ready early cause I had a reservation for the City/Katrina tour with Celebration Tours, pick up between 10 and 10:10am. I had reserved it, and was confirmed about 3 weeks earlier. So I%26#39;m in front of the hotel a few minutes b4 10 waiting for my van..... by almost 10:25, still no pick-up. I knew there was the marathon that morning and they might be a few minutes late, but my gut was telling me something is wrong. So I called from the front desk and the guy%26#39;s like I don%26#39;t have your name on the list. I told him about the email confirmation and whatnot. He was quite apologetic and offered to pick me up and give me a 1 on 1 tour. I was so surprised that I said sure, but then called back a couple of minutes later and declined. I wasn%26#39;t too comfortable being alone with a stranger for 2 hrs all over the city.





    By the time all this was done, it was almost 11am and most of my morning is gone and wasted. I was not impressed needless to say. So not wanting this to happen again, I called Tours by Isabelle to confirm my plantation tour (and now make a reservation for her city/Katrina tour) as I still hadn%26#39;t heard anything. She%26#39;s like I%26#39;ve been calling your cell trying to reach you. I told her since I don%26#39;t have a cell, yes you%26#39;d have a hard time. She had my home phone# down as my cell. She says she left messages but there was nothing on my machine when I got back. Anyway, she%26#39;s like I can%26#39;t do the plantation tour on Monday (which was my preference) but can do Tuesday afternoon (I wanted morning). Figured I%26#39;d better take it, and she was able to do the city/Katrina tour for Monday afternoon, so booked that.





    Now that was all out of the way, made a new game plan for the rest of the day. Since it was close to lunch time, I thought I%26#39;d go to Coops. And of course I ordered the fried chicken and jumbalaya. It was as great as you all said. And what a great place!! I loved the hole in the wall, neighborhood type feel. I got there around 11:30, and it was already packed (they open at 11). And the cat that lives there is too cute. I have to admit the washroom facilities leave a lot to be desired, but when u gotta go... :-)





    After lunch, went to the French Market for souvenir shopping. I love those types of places, so I had a blast looking at everything. You need to go there with time though, you can%26#39;t rush. While I was there, a brassband came by out of the blue, and played some songs for tips. I love NO!!! :)



    I bought t.shirts, shot glasses (I collect), stuff for family. I also bought coasters. They are tile/porcelain with different pixs of NO on them. What a great way to remember a trip when u%26#39;re back home. I got one with the Bourbon St sign, Cafe du Monde, the Preservation Hall sign, and ... for the life of me I can%26#39;t remember the 4th right now. I think it%26#39;s a streetcar though.





    After shopping, thought it was high time for a drink!! So headed over to Pat O%26#39;s, after dropping all my stuff at the hotel, for my 1st Hurricane. I got one at the ';to go'; bar. Now, I have to admit, the 1st couple of sips weren%26#39;t that great, very sweet. But give the chance for the ice to really mix in with the beverage %26amp; properly chill it, and they become quite tasty. ;-)



    I wanted to sit in the courtyard, but there was no room so I wandered into the dueling piano room. Oh my God!!! What a fun afternoon. I ended up staying for like 1h %26amp; 1/2. There were 3 ladies who rotated on the 2 pianos, great singers and every entertaining. Boy did I bust a gut when I heard their version of Kenny Roger%26#39;s ';Lucille'; (those of you who have heard it know what I mean).





    After a very entertaining afternoon, I left Pat O%26#39;s with a hurricane glass in hand (I%26#39;ll figure how to get it home later)and a light buzz going. I stopped by Maison Bourbon again when I saw that same band from the night b4 were playing. I stayed for awhile, royally enjoying the music, even bought one of their CD%26#39;s. Then it was off to the hotel to rest up and freshen up.





    I decided to go to the Cajun Cabin for a late supper as I wanted to hear some Cajun/Zydeco music. I get there no band, but thought maybe they hadn%26#39;t started yet. I get seated at a table, ordered and asked what time does the band start. They don%26#39;t have music anymore! They stopped about 2 months earlier (their website still says they have live entertainement). Again, not too impressed. So I ate my meal and left. I just ordered a burger and fries. Burger was really good. If you%26#39;re looking for a burger and you%26#39;re in the area, worth stopping.





    The rest of the evening, I walked around Bourbon just people watching, listening to music at different doorways. The long day of walking and drinking was getting to me, so headed off to bed.





    Minus the mix-up with the tour in the am, a great day!!!!





    Trip Report: Part 2


    I just got back as well, haven%26#39;t had chance to do up a trip report. I am really enjoying reading them though. I hope you post part 3 soon. I would have killed to have gotten the chance for a private tour of the Katrina areas. I went on a tour with grayline. It was great, and very informative.. but on a private tour I bet you would get so much more detail/closer look. I respect your sense of safety, but I am jealous of what you passed up on. Regarless, seems like you did plenty of great stuff. Please post part 3



    Trip Report: Part 2


    Oh, we LOVED thost tile%26#39;s with the NOLA pictures! They inspired us to do a cool project in our kitchen. I am fortunate that I work at a photography company that has the equipment to make those. I gathered a collection of our own photo%26#39;s from our travels. I had our company transfer them to the tiles and we glued them to our walls above our soffits in our kitchen. It turned out really cool, and of course there are several pic%26#39;s from our recent trip to NOLA. My company liked them so much, that they are now thinking of adding them to our product line.




    When we go to Pat O%26#39;Briens its always only to the piano bar and it seems to be always alive. I do not rec. the Cajun Cabin and if you want a burger in that area just go down St. Peters to Yo Mama%26#39;s rather than the Cajun Cabin. With the difficulty in having fully trained personnel in tourism and restaurants post Katrina it seems slip ups do occur on all levels.




    I did go to Yo-Mamma%26#39;s as well, but wasn%26#39;t in the mood for a hamburger, so had a bbq chicken (real chicken) burger instead with a side salad. Was surpringly good.




    I%26#39;m vicariously enjoying your reports. I also got four of those tiles from that guy in the French Market, (one of Preservation Hall sign, too). He was really friendly and we talked of his Katrina woes. I have them on my coffee table and really enjoy them. I%26#39;m sure you will, too.





    Glad you liked Coop%26#39;s. Hard not to like, actually.





    I see you posted part 3, on my way there, now.




    Thanks for your report! That%26#39;s too bad about the mix-up with Celebration Tours, but I guess it%26#39;s a lesson for future visitors to always confirm day before/morning of.





    I love the dueling pianos too :)

    route from new orleans to blue ridge

    hi could anyone tell me the quickest way to get from new orleans to blue ridge georgia? all the map sites tell me i should go through atlanta, however, it seems to me the traffic will be bad. we%26#39;ll be driving in on saturday. i looked at going through birmingham then to chattanooga then blue ridge and about 30 minutes longer but wouldnt i avoid traffic. any suggestions would greatly help!

    route from new orleans to blue ridge

    New Orleans to B%26#39;ham and then onto Chattanooga is relative traffic free. Exceptions, Meridian, MS, B%26#39;ham, AL and Chattanooga, TN. Once you leave Birmingham, headed north on 59 up until you reach Chattanooga, there will hardly be any traffic.

    From Meridian, MS to Birmingham you%26#39;ll share the interestate with a lot of 18 wheelers. But from New Orleans to Meridian and then B%26#39;ham to Chattanooga they thin out drastically.

    None of the above mentioned areas compare in traffic to Atlanta. So, I%26#39;d recommend the Chattanooga route versus the Atlanta one.

  • handling exceptions
  • New Orleans for my daughters 21st birthday

    We live in Tampa, FL. My daughter will be 21 in May. She is in College and works hard in her studies and her boyfriend works hard at two jobs. My husband and I want to do something special for them.



    We were thinking about New Orleans.





    We have a lot of Marriott points, How is the JW Marriott on Canal Street, or should we splurge and pick another hotel.





    My daughter loves Anne Rice. Are there any Anne Rice tours. We are open on the dates.





    What are the best quaint restraunts. My daughter and boyfriend like all kinds of foods. They love lots of atmosphere. what would you reccomend?



    New Orleans for my daughters 21st birthday


    The Marriott is nice but it sounds like your daighter loves atmosphere. To really get the New orleans experience you%26#39;ll want to stay at an older hotel in the quarter. Trust me on this. Many have nice balcony rooms where they can wake up and have their breakfast on the balcony. The unique, old hotels are one of the things we love most about NOLA.



    New Orleans for my daughters 21st birthday


    Annie wants to use Marriott points to pay for her stay. This being the case, the JW Marriott is a great choice. Ditto the Renaissance Arts but it%26#39;s a bit farther from the Quarter.




    I would suggest using your marriot points, and eating at the Acme Oyster house. She%26#39;ll have a blast just hanging out around bourbon street. I was there for my 22nd birthday and had a great time. Now that I am older and wiser (aka 24) I still frequent bourbon, but spend a little less time boozin it up.





    I believe there are vampire tours they can take as well. Also in many guide books they point out where anne rice%26#39;s house is. They might also like to take a tour of Oak Alley Plantation since they filmed quite a few scenes from Interview with the Vampire there. I believe it was Louis%26#39; plantation in the movie.




    You may want to eat at the Desiree Oyster Bar. We really like the place, plus you have the Anne Rice (Queen of the Damned scene) tie in. :)




    Whoops, actually it was Tale of the Body Thief. But connection remains. ;)




    Wow. What great information. The idea of a more quaint hotel is great, but I think I will use my marriott points so I can spend more money on tours, great restaurants etc.



    Thanks for the Info.




    The JW is a great hotel, in a great location- it is walking distance to everything, and a very close and well lit walk back from Bourbon st. after a late night. The beds are really comfortable, and you can also request a mini fridge-which is a nice little extra. If you have the points, you might as well use them, and save your money for all the great food, drinks and tours:)




    I agree with the JW. A very nice hotel, very close to the Quarter. Use your points, and invest in food and drink.




    i%26#39;m a big marriott points fan as well, and would choose the renaissance arts over the JW anyday. the rooms were overall bigger at the ren arts, and the staff is amazing. i%26#39;ve stayed there four times in the last two years (returning for my fifth stay in two months). Whenever i call ahead to let the staff know it%26#39;s a special occasion (it%26#39;s always a special occasion...::smirk:::) we%26#39;ve been upgraded to a larger room. i also like the rooftop pool (literally open 24 hours..i%26#39;ve hot tubbed at 4 AM) and the fun location in the warehouse district (great restaurants, fun local bars, walking dist to the french quarter). check it out...it MAY even require less points and i believe it gets better reviews anyhow!





    -kelly




    oh and you can%26#39;t go wrong with booking your daughter and the rest of y%26#39;all on a Bloody Mary tour. Her private rates are pretty reasonable and she%26#39;ll tell you background on history as well as fun facts about local characters (Anne Rice included).



    my trips aren%26#39;t complete without a visit with her.







    Quaint restaurants? I love Muriels for it%26#39;s haunted history and excellent food (lots of interesting dishes as well). Coops for a laid back local vibe, and I can%26#39;t wait to try EAT next time i%26#39;m there. it seems small and intimate-and really service oriented www.eatnola.com

    NOLA in early December

    Just returned from my first trip to NOLA earlier this month and want to go back right now. Would love to spend my 50th Bday there in early Dec. What%26#39;s the weather like and are there any festivals or activities taking place. Is Dec. a good month to visit?



    NOLA in early December


    December is a wonderful time of year to visit! The weather can be unpredictable, it might be very pleasant or very cool, so be prepared for either.





    What makes it such a good time to visit is that Creole Christmas is celebrated during December, with special hotel rates and many different free and/or inexpensive events going on during the month. The French Quarter Festival organization sponsors the activities. Their website is:





    fqfi.org





    just click on Christmas New Orleans Style 2009 on the right hand side of the screen. I doubt if they have a lot of info this early but you can look and see.





    December is a great time to visit!



    NOLA in early December


    I also enjoyed New Orleans in Dec, but wow, I really wasn%26#39;t prepared for the extreme change in weather. The day we arrived it was really cold (I%26#39;m from Canada, so I know cold :) ) it even snowed!!! My husband really wasn%26#39;t prepared for it, we wore our winter coats (coming from our cold Canadian winter) gloves, and he even had a hat on...it kinda felt like we were home, which wasn%26#39;t a good thing, cause we wanted to get away from the cold! Fortunately, the rest of our trip was beautiful, we wore jeans with t-shirts and a sweater in the evening-which was great.





    One thing we really enjoyed doing while we were there in Dec was the Holiday Home Tour...we were very fortunate to be down while the event was going on. It was great, you get to tour inside 7 beautiful Garden District homes decorated for the holidays-we really enjoyed it, and are planning another Dec visit around it...which will be held the weekend of Dec 12/13...if you%26#39;re interested :)





    I%26#39;ve been to Florida in Feb (not sure what part you live around, but we were in the Orlando area) and we experienced some unpredictable weather ourselves, much like NOLA, so maybe it won%26#39;t be too unpredictable for you :)




    December is great, and many restaurants will have special Reveillon menus to celebrate the season! Weather is generally pleasant, though New Orleans is notoriously unpredictable when it comes to weather. The snow this year was a fluke, but with global warming, who knows? It could happen again!




    Keep checking that french quarter site you were given or even keep checking at www.louisianatravel.com and order the christmas book that details whats going on. Its a great time in the city and the restaurants have their price fixed reveillion meals going. But being at the Gulf we are prone to extremes in weather.




    There is also a French Quarter Tour of Homes, and free concerts in the Cathedral, as well as cooking demos from the great NOLA chefs...they show you what, how, etc. and then you get to sample. Cna%26#39;t beat NOLA at Christmas time.




    We%26#39;ve been in New Orleans in Dec for the last 2 years and had great weather both trips. We were wearing short and cropped pants during both trips. This past year%26#39;s snow was a freakish cold snap so odds are Dec of 2009 shouldn%26#39;t have another freakish cold snap.





    The FQ has many homes and businesses decorated. The Celebration of the Oaks, home tours, concerts and more are all great and free to affordable options.

    Cheapostay

    Can anyone write in and let me know if they%26#39;ve used this site and what their experience was like? I am finding some really good rates on there but have never used them before as they are new. Thanks.



    Cheapostay


    I%26#39;ve haven%26#39;t but if you backout to the TA U.S. in general forum or search area you can lookup if anyone has posted any where in the TA website about it.



    Cheapostay


    I tried. Evidently you%26#39;re the first.




    While you are waiting try bookit.com or kayak.com. Also hotwire does good sometines and priceline.




    Apparently, Cheapostay%26#39;s site does not like my computer. Don%26#39;t know of anyone else who%26#39;s used it though!




    I have not used cheapostay either, but was seriously considering it due to the great rates I was finding. After a little more research, I think I will definitely NOT book with them. They are run by cheapoair - check the air travel forum on this site and search cheapoair. Though I have not found anything negative (or positive) about cheapostay (yet), there are lots of horror stories about cheapoair - enough to scare me off of using cheapostay. Hope this helps.




    I compared cheapostay%26#39;s rates against hotel.com%26#39;s rates for the same hotels on he same dates. In most instances, the rates were the same. In a small number of instances, cheapostay%26#39;s rates were just a few dollars per night (less than $5) lower than hotel.com%26#39;s rates. In my opinion, the risk isn%26#39;t worth your saving a few dollars.




    Actually the cheapostay rate was $20/night less than hotels so I called the hotel direct and they honored the cheapostay rate.

    Traveling June 20-25

    Know it%26#39;s going to be HOT and really muggy. Will it be bearable? Going with friend and new Tulane student. Will have my teen girls (16 and 19) with me and a lot of free time to explore. Any suggestions? Staying at edge of French Quarter at JW Marriott. What%26#39;s a must do/see with our limited time? Suggestions for GREAT local food? I%26#39;m a foodie, but not necessarily a ';fancy foodie,'; since I%26#39;ll be with the kiddos. THANKS!! :)



    Traveling June 20-25


    Not sure how we will know what%26#39;s bearable for any other person but I can safely say that no one spontaneously combusts in late June. :-)





    Seriously, it is hot and muggy. No way around it. Since you%26#39;re from Idaho it may feel doubly so. (My friends from Houston maintain New Orleans is actually COOLER in the summer).





    You%26#39;ll be doing lots of indoor things (aquarium, museums, shops, etc.) during the day and even more indoor things (restaurants) at night.





    Review previous posts for hundreds (thousands) more ideas on places to see and great restaurants.



    Traveling June 20-25


    We are from Ohio and I gotta say I%26#39;ve never felt heat like I have when visiting New Orleans in the summer. Like others will say there are lots of places with AC so when you%26#39;re walking around be sure to take little breaks. If you go on a walking tour like we did in late May drinks lots of water. To us though the heat just adds to the NOLA experience. We love it.




    It%26#39;s bearable as long as you keep well hydrated and seek air-conditioning when you can! New Orleans summers can get pretty humid, but it%26#39;s not as bad as late July/August, so I guess that%26#39;s an upside :)




    We try to go in and out of the most air conditioned places to get refreshed when walking around...sometimes its nap or pool time for the afternoon to beat the heat. Use the search feature here on trip advisor with your key words and you will find a wealth of current information to help you.




    If you%26#39;ll be wearing sun dresses in restaurants, bring something to cover your shoulders. The air-conditioning in some of those places in the summer is cold enough to freeze ice.




    Been 3 times with my teens daughters(15 and 18) and guy friends.They loved trolley to the french market to look around and buy cheap stuff. did the aquarium which they all loved and got lots of good pics.For food I aimed it at what my teens chose and we ate at Bubba gumps twice, hard rock, NOLA by Emeril(this was my daughters gift to boyfriend for graduation),also cafe du monde(just to say we went and got coffee and beignets).We all really just liked walking down Decatur street. Oh also went down Bourbon and took pics under the sign.It was a weekday. Would not have done it on a weekend.Anyway, its a great place and we are going again this summer. We stay at Country inn and Suites and they are 66 a night when we are going.Also take trolley away from FQ, through Garden district, and you will go past Tulane and beautiful houses. I think it takes you to zoo, but did not when we were there because they had not gotten all the tracks running yet, but do now.Oh and Rock and Bowl was also fun for old fashioned bowling with cajun music in background.



    One thing I would reccomend is taking 2 outfits for each day.We went in June and it was hot and sweaty walking around during day, so we would go back to hotel, shower,rest, and change, then go out for evening fun.



    One other thing I have learned about since coming to this forumn is Preservation Hall for music. Have not done but it sounds like we will do it this summer. Did not know about it when we went.



    Have fun! Its a wonderful city.




    Oh , I forgot Jackson Square and the beautiful church. Also we did a haunted history tour. They loved that,too.




    Just one correction - the St. Charles Ave streetcar won%26#39;t take you directly to the Zoo, but it will take you to Audubon Park, which is right across the street from Tulane University. If you get down at Audubon Park, there is a free shuttle there that will take you to the Zoo. Alternatively, you could walk through the park to the Zoo, which is alongside the river.




    Thank you, worldtraveler. It was the park not the zoo. Thanks for clearing that up. Did the ferry go from the park to the zoo??? There was something going to the zoo that was not back to normal when we were there. Thanks for the update, because I truly love your city and my daughters do as well. We will be back this summer and can not wait.




    No problem! Actually, there was a ferry that ran from the Aquarium to the Zoo, which is still not operational. It closed after the storm, and there are plans to bring it back this year through the Steamboat Natchez company, but I%26#39;m not sure about the status of the project.


  • lotion cream
  • Trip Report Day 3/FQF

    Second day of the fest, 3rd day for our being in New Orleans.

    Everyone wanted to sleep in, except me - so I went to find a good latte. Ended up at PJ%26#39;s on Camp %26amp; Girod. Grabbed some chocolate muffins for the kids - got there just before the crowd - had to use the back exit to get out-this seems to be a local favorite.

    Didn%26#39;t want to go back to the hotel yet - so walked around the warehouse district. I noticed some plants on the sidewalks that I hadn%26#39;t noticed before, and people with dogs! You have to understand, in Napa, you%26#39;d be hard pressed not to see dogs being walked. This was the first time I noticed canines in NO - anyway, I digress, the building with the plants turned out to be a local Farmers Market. Boy, I wish I had a kitchen to use! I could%26#39;ve had my own seafood boil! The only thing I could really buy was honey - my dad has bees, so I thought it would be a fun gift. There was an old couple selling their honey= 16 hives in Algiers. Their honey is a lot darker than ours, am curious to try it, but my dad still hasn%26#39;t opened it :)

    I went back to the Renaissance Arts and woke everyone up. My friend was picking us up for lunch. We went to Lil %26#39;Dizzy%26#39;s on Poydras. It%26#39;s the 2nd location, inside the bank. Very cool location. Beautiful building. The service, well, it was just plain bad - and it literally cracked us up, we had a hard time not laughing. The waiter was ';tired'; and wanted to go home. Not sure what time they start serving, but it was only noon. We were being seated at separate tables (there were 8 of us) so we asked them to move tables together, we kind of wanted to eat together. After a hard stare and rolled eyes, we were finally seated. There were two other tables in the place that were full. We noticed our host/server was also the omelette cook. We felt bad ordering one. We could see why he was so tired, not sure why he had chest pains, we all tried to help him determine if he was having a heart attack, turns out he was just tired. Maybe a few people called in sick that morning? When they finally took our order- he asked what kind of dressing for the salad - ';you want ranch!'; We%26#39;ve never been told before what kind of dressing we wanted! MBH asked what other dressing there were, the other choice was Italian. He had Italian, I was afraid the guy would have that attack, so I ordered ranch. My main dish was Shrimp Grillades - it was delicious! S#1 had the french toast (which he said was very good)- and a side of sausage- which they forgot. We mentioned it to several bus boys and our server, and they finally brought him one piece of sausage on a huge plate. Said the rest would be out later. And it was, about 10 minutes they were able to cook the other two pieces. They forgot the toast for an omelette, and not sure what else! We ordered the bread pudding for dessert. You have two choices of bread pudding, two of us ordered Kevin%26#39;s Bread Pudding- it had some sort of a cake inside it? Like a Hostess pie, but I can%26#39;t remember the name as we don%26#39;t have them in California. We were jokingly wondering if they ever go across the street for Hostess if they run out of the other pies. When they served the pudding, I asked to make sure I got Kevin%26#39;s ';no, y%26#39;all have the regular, we%26#39;re out of Kevin%26#39;s.'; I didn%26#39;t want the ';regular'; as it is made with fruit cocktail. However, it was really good :) A memorable meal, to be sure. The fried chicken was good, too. I%26#39;d go again, for the food. Three stars.

    After lunch we said our good-bye%26#39;s to our friends and walked the FQF. I loved the kids band that was playing on the stage by the Aquarium. Proud parents all around, people dancing in the middle - what is it with the umbrellas and dancing? That seemed to be a theme throughout. One little kid couldn%26#39;t have been more then 7 - he%26#39;d puff his cheeks out and blow that trumpet like there was no tomorrow! So cute! Just two round half balls on a tiny face.

    Listened to some more bands and waited for our Katrina Movie to start at IMAX. I%26#39;ve seen what hurricanes can do, so I opted not to do a 9th ward tour and to watch in on screen instead. Good documentary. I enjoyed seeing the marshes and canals again, it reminded us of our airboat tour yesterday. Seeing the boats plunked on the highway touched the young sons.

    After the movie we took the ferry to Algiers - what a cute little neighborhood! My oldest was already there, met us at Dry Dock for drinks. Then we set out for a tour of the beautiful houses, church, park, etc. We decided to stop for a quick bite at Gulf Pizza. I didn%26#39;t want pizza, but S#3 is so picky, I wanted him to eat before our dinner. It was a tiny old gas station turned into a pizza shack. The pizza was ok, thin crust. We walked around some more and caught the ferry back.

    Back to the hotel via the riverwalk mall. Ah- this is where the kids discovered the other Cafe du Monde. Their beignets were a little better, according to S#2. I think it%26#39;s because they sift the powdered sugar- so it%26#39;s very fine and there aren%26#39;t huge chunks falling off the beignets.

    Went back to the hotel for some rest. By this time it was about 8 pm. MBH wanted to go to Mulates for dinner - he insisted he%26#39;d never been. I tried, to no avail, to remind him of the place, yes, we%26#39;ve been, it%26#39;s not that great! But he was adamant, So we went there. Most expensive meal of the trip. Crazy to pay that much for diner food!. I can%26#39;t even remember what I ordered for the main course, just that it wasn%26#39;t good. And you know what they say! A bad meal in New Orleans means you missed a good one! The service was spotty. We ordered the alligator appetizer - blackened - that was actually very good - so I can%26#39;t say it was all bad, just mostly. We also had the fried crawfish and BBQ%26#39;d Shrimp apps. Come to think of it, the apps were ok, it was the main dishes that were bad. Oh, now I remember- I had the fish, it was not fresh, and the jambalaya they served with it was cold. The baked potato was cold. I think this is mass production food here. The band playing was pretty good. As we%26#39;re walking back to our hotel, I threw some darts at MBH - oh yeah, now he remembers the place!! One star- for the alligator %26amp; band. Will NOT go back again, not matter how bad someones memory is!

    All in all, a pretty good day. Had a glass of wine at the hotel to make a good ending :)

    Trip Report Day 3/FQF

    You haven%26#39;t seen canines in NOLA before? Surely ye jest? NOLA folks love their animals and those of us who have lived here know to clean up after them. Some of the new residents don%26#39;t.

    At any rate, one can see canines walking their humans almost any time of day or night in the Quarter. It is even considered appropriate to accompany humans to bars and sit in the doorway to watch tourists, or wait patiently on the sidewalk at Rouse%26#39;s or Croissant D%26#39;Or for ones%26#39; human to come out.

    Trip Report Day 3/FQF

    After Saturday morning I saw dogs everywhere!- big ones in convertibles, old ones with street people, little ones in the palms of hands. I thought maybe I didn%26#39;t see them before because I was there on weekdays and folks were working? I was happy to see so many out walking their people at the FQF too :)


    And don%26#39;t forget about the Blue Dog - a sure testament of the importance of canines in N.O.


    Thanks for your report! PJs is a local favorite coffeehouse, and there are branches all over the city, but personally I prefer Rue de la Course and CC%26#39;s - gotta love that coffee with chicory!

    Whenever I see a line at the French Market Cafe du Monde, I always head to the Riverwalk branch - usually never crowded and great views of the river.

    I haven%26#39;t tried the Lil Dizzy%26#39;s in the downtown area, but I%26#39;ll be wary!


    I too was surprised on how many dogs I saw during my trip! All the tourist seem to bring their pooches, and they are all being pushed around in strollers!! After seeing like the 4th or 5th one, I had to take a pix. Toooo cute!!

    And locals all seem to have at least 2 dogs. The next time I%26#39;m going to NO, I%26#39;m bringing my sister%26#39;s shih tsu, he%26#39;ll have a blast!!! :)

  • pets
  • Steamboat tours to planations?

    Does anyone know if there are any steamboats that leave from New Orleans and go to any of the planations? I seem to remember reading a post that there was a boat landing accross the Oak Alley Plantation. Thanks in advance for any help!



    Steamboat tours to planations?


    There are none at this point that I know of.

    help-swine flu

    hi,we are flying into atlanta on thursday then driving to n.oeleans on friday,we are getting loads of reports that we should not travel to usa due to swine flu! is there any reported cases in your area and what guide lines are being given to yourselfs? we have checked on airline site [no details given]so i will call to find out what is happening,is there any other uk folk travelling out that know anything? thanks peter

    help-swine flu

    You should not worry about traveling to the US. If you are traveling to Mexico then I would worry. I live in ohio and we have a population of 11 million people. Of that entire population 1 case has been announced. I would not let it affect your travel plans.

    help-swine flu

    Since there have now been reported cases of swine flu in Europe, I wouldn%26#39;t worry too much about travel to the U.S. The cases have been isolated, and it hasn%26#39;t turned into a major epidemic affecting all urban areas.

    No cases in New Orleans so far!

    Just remember to wash your hands as often as possible! You should be just fine!


    Absolutely no reason to be unduly concerned. Because of airplanes, there%26#39;s about as much chance a UK tourist visiting Mexico could bring it back to London!


    The cases in the US have been mostly in New York, with a few in Kansas and Ohio, and have been mild. Come on over and enjoy your vacation!!


    The case up here in Ohio is about 10 miles from me. It%26#39;s an 11 year old boy who was on vacation with his family in Mexico. Hopefully it will be contained.


    I flew to Boston last night and sat next to a doctor. He told me ';not to kiss any pigs'; but otherwise he wasn%26#39;t overly concerned at this point.


    I%26#39;m at Tulane%26#39;s School of Public Health, and we just had a ';briefing.'; And by briefing, they told us to wash our hands...

    Nothing major to report.


    We%26#39;ve been traveling to other countries for many years, and we always take small bottles of anti-bacterial hand cleanser. We use the stuff frequently, and we always use it just before meals and after using the restroom.

    The outbreaks in Mexico have been confined to the areas in and around Mexico City and the northern border with the USA.

    We%26#39;ll be heading to Playa del Carmen in early June with our anti-bacterial cleanser in hand. If you%26#39;re concerned about the Swine Flu, I suggest that you purchase a bottle or two and use it frequently.

  • appreciate your dog
  • What's the Story on Bike Week - First Week of May?

    We%26#39;re visiting the first week of may and i see that one of the events at that time is an innaugural bike week. Anyone know what this event is all about? Is it supposed to be similar to a Sturgis event? Are there bands, etc?





    Anything else going on the week of May 4th??





    thanks!!



    What's the Story on Bike Week - First Week of May?


    Here%26#39;s a listing of some events in May: 鈥ola.com/festivals/2007/12/louisiana_area_f鈥?/a>

    Harrah's hotel and casino

    Does this hotel have a swimming pool? None of the pictures show one?

    Harrah's hotel and casino

    No Harrah%26#39;s New Orleans does NOT have a swimming pool, but the Riverside Hilton, just across the street, as well as the ';W'; New Orleans does.

    Harrah's hotel and casino

    No swimming pool, but you can get SOAKED in the casino. Sorry, I couldn%26#39;t resist!

    Bill


    Soaked, choked, and stroked. When I left my name was Jerry. Just Jerry. Even lost my last name there too...


    There is a river nearby. You may want to ask the locals where it is safe to go for a swim.


    Unless you want this trip to New Orleans to be your last ;), I%26#39;d skip the river, and go with the Monteleone%26#39;s rooftop pool or the Hilton Riverside%26#39;s pools.


    Harrahs%26#39; doesn%26#39;t want you lolling by the pool...they want you in their casino losing your loot...NO POOL...but they have agreement with other hotels to use their pools I believe.

  • control panel buttons
  • Habitat for humanity - still need help?

    I was thinking of going to new orleans for a week, and volunteerign with habitat for humanity to help rebuild some houses. I did a search on tripadvisor, but all related posts were from 2006. Is there still quite a need for volunteers, or am I three years too late?





    The HFH site states that camp hope is closing end of May- I was thinking of going early May. So...should I stay in camp home, or get other accomodations? I did see 1930 canal st guesthouse, which is $150 a week- but might not be the best location to volunteer. Especially since I%26#39;ll mostly only have nights to visit the city. Should I expect to get a car, or would it be ok to rent a bike and ride around New Orleans? I could bike up to an hour each way :) I%26#39;m training for a bike ride from Vancovuer to seattle, so it would be great practice (but I don%26#39;t want it to get stolen!!)





    Any other tips for a solo female? Will If I go sat-sun, volunteer 5 days, will I have enough tiem to experience NO for the 2 free days and evenings? Probably not !



    Habitat for humanity - still need help?


    There%26#39;s definitely still a need. I would recommend contacting Habitat to see exactly what skill sets are in demand these days.



    Habitat for humanity - still need help?


    After some research, it looks like the st bernard project might be a better choice, as they allow input from home owners. They also have volunteer housing at a minimum cost.





    I will look into this one. Any more input would be appreciated.




    Both are great organizations. Also, I know a lot of colleges work with the St. Bernard Project for alternative spring break trips, so you can%26#39;t really go wrong.




    Habitat is also still strong in the Slidell and Mandeville areas. No matter which one you choose, you are very close to N.O. to be able to visit the city and have fun.





    Let me say THANK YOU on behalf of the people in this area for choosing to volunteer your time to aid others.





    Regarding biking. No I would not bike from St. Bernard to the FQ as you would travel through some rough areas.




    There is a need and will be for years to come. Churches in Slidell and Mandeville are still official sites for Disaster Relief for Habitat for the gulf coast region and if you hook up with a group you get assigned areas and transportation there and back to your lodging.




    Just returned from Jazz Fest but we volunteered with Habitat on 4/24 and were sent to New Orleans East. There is still a need %26amp; will be for a long time. I would not bike there. Can%26#39;t help with accomodations, we had a hotel room in the quarter. We took a cab there %26amp; hitched a ride back on a bus that was chartered by a large group that was working at the same site. I would recommend anyone who loves New Orleans try %26amp; spend at least 1 day of your vacation helping out. It was a great experience %26amp; we will be doing it again next time we are in town.

    Spa day in NOLA

    Any recommendations for affordable massages/Spa Day in NOLA after a long day of business conferences near French Quarter? The big hotel chains charge a small fortune. Thank you for sharing.





    Spa day in NOLA


    I love Belladonna Day Spa on Magazine St in the Garden District, a short cab ride away from the French Quarter. I also like Earthsavers and Spa Isbell on Magazine too. http://www.belladonnadayspa.com/





    There%26#39;s been some talk on this forum of Ofadean Spa in the French Quarter. I don%26#39;t know much about that place, but you might want to check it out.

    Maison Madeliene in Breaux Bridges

    We are thinking of staying in Breaux Bridges, at the Maison Madeline. It looks beautiful from the website. Does anyone have any experiences with the B %26amp; B?

  • clear my labtop
  • 1st Trip to NO: final thoughts

    So yes, you can add me to the list of people who loves New Orleans. It was everything I thought it would be, was hoping it would be, even more.



    The music, the street performers, the artist, the food, the ambiance, just great!!





    How anyone can be bored on vacation in NO is beyond me. I was there for a week %26amp; 1/2, and I didn%26#39;t have a chance to do everything I wanted to do (even without getting sick), let alone everything there is to see and do. And I only made it through 1/2 of my list of restaurants I wanted to try, there%26#39;s just not enough hours in the day.





    Bourbon St: I enjoyed it very much. Where else can you get 5 different kinds of music in a 1 block radius. I didn%26#39;t see anything rude or disgusting or anything like that.



    And nobody ever mentionned that for every 2 bars on Bourbon, there%26#39;s a souvenir shop. :)





    Speaking of souvenirs, yes wait to buy them at the French Market. Everything is cheaper. Exception: those souvenir t.shirts you see 4 for 20$, they are the same price at the souvenirs shops or at the market. I even saw them 5 for 20$ a couple of times at the stores.





    Souvenirs at stores: if you see something you really like, especially if it%26#39;s something a bit on the expensive side, make a note of where you saw it and the price and keep checking. Most stores have the same items, but at different prices. I bought a couple of glasses, and I saw those same glasses 5$ more each just 2 doors down. Same thing with a picture frame I bought.





    Getting around: it is true that you can walk everywhere%26#39;s in the French Quarter, everything is close to each other. Fixing the sidewalks would be nice though, at least start with filling in the holes, never mind cracks. You gotta watch



    you%26#39;re step as you%26#39;re looking up at buildings. Walk slowly. :)





    Safety as a solo female traveller: I never felt unsafe, or even uneasy. I was never approached with malice or even by drunk people. Granted I was never out later than 11, 11:30pm but still. I stayed on the major streets in the light when walking after dark, had no problems what so ever. There%26#39;s always people around.





    Funny thing: I was going back to my hotel one day, it was late afternoon, with a Pat O%26#39;s hurricane in my hand. A guy approached me very nicely and asked if he could maybe have a sip or 2 of my drink (he had an empty cup in his hand). I was so surprised and burst out laughing so hard that I did give him a bit. You%26#39;d expect something like that at night, but in the afternoon??? Too funny.





    Oh, almost forgot. I bought a fabulous painting on my last Sunday at Jackson Square, so I have a permanent reminder of my trip on my living room wall.





    Will I be back?? DEFINITELY!!!! When, as soon as possible. I do feel cheated out of the FQF as I missed 2 days, but I%26#39;m sure it would be great fun to be there for halloween too, soooo..... Gotta look at the budget, make some cuts somewhere%26#39;s so I can save up more money as fast as possible. :-)





    Now I know what it means to miss New Orleans.



    1st Trip to NO: final thoughts


    I enjoyed reading all of these. Thank you.



    1st Trip to NO: final thoughts


    Thanks so much for your very detailed and awesome to read TR! I especially appreciate the feedback about being a solo female traveler, since I%26#39;m going on my first solo trip anywhere soon. I%26#39;m already thinking about getting some friends together for Halloween, though. :) Hmmmmmm...I think I%26#39;ll do some searching on the forum for that next!





    Thanks again, Porelly!




    Awwwwww porelly, I am so glad your trip was everything you wanted it to be. Except for the getting sick part. We really wanted to meet you, so I am sorry you didn%26#39;t make it to the M%26amp;G.





    And to think, we were in the parade that passed right by your hotel! If I had known to look up, I would have seen you then!





    Time to start planning your next trip. In the meantime, get the little book ';Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans,'; by David Rutledge. It will mean a lot to you now.





    We%26#39;re already planning next years trip to the FQF. And my husband and I are going down this fall too.I just can%26#39;t stay away long.




    I enjoy reading these reports-Its always a learning experience. Anyone buying the souvenier t-shirts please take a look at the quality of the t-shirt and usually 100% cotton and a brand name helps-and first time washing have the shirt inside out. Some of the real bargain shirts just don%26#39;t last and some bargains are truly bargains.




    Thanks for your lovely trip report series! There%26#39;s still a lot left for you to do here, so come on back soon!




    porelly, I%26#39;m so glad that you enjoyed New Orleans and are planning on going back. You are right about the potholes in the street, I had a sprained ankle that hurt for 3 months after my last trip to New Orleans.





    I hope you are able to make it back for Halloween, that is always a great time to be in New Orleans!




    Porelly, I%26#39;m missing NO after reading your report. Thanks for sharing.




    thanks for these thoughts! I am so glad you bought some local art. Come back soon! :)




    Great reports, some of the best I have ever read. I%26#39;m glad you had a great time and that you%26#39;ve fallen in love with the city. Hopefully you will get to come back again soon.




    Loved reading your reports and I%26#39;m going to miss having a new chapter. I was so glad that you New Orleans met your expectations....I fell in love with it on my first trip, too. Thanks for sharing the fun!

    Best Night of the Week - Frenchman St.

    We%26#39;ll be in NO Wednesday, May 6 through Saturday, May 9. Just wondering if any certain night of the week or another is better on Frenchman St.



    Best Night of the Week - Frenchman St.


    I prefer Friday and Saturday nights on Frenchmen St - usually that%26#39;s when my favorites perform at Snug Harbor - but there%26#39;s always good music abound. The other days of the week I prefer the Uptown scene.



    Best Night of the Week - Frenchman St.


    Thanks for your quick reply....I was quessing that the weekend was best....I know we%26#39;ll hear great music no matter when or where we go, but just didn%26#39;t want to miss out...




    Thursday is pretty good too.




    Thursday night head to Vaughn%26#39;s (Bywater) or Le Bon Temps Roule (Uptown) :)




    I think Thursday- Saturday are the best nights - Frenchman is such a great area that so many tourists miss completely!




    I dunno, Supreme. I think the tourists have fully discovered Frenchmen. We went out Saturday (granted, it was Jazz Fest) and the street looked like Mardi Gras on Bourbon.




    Thanks for all the tips!!!!




    Walter Wolfman Washington places at D.B.A. on Wednesdays.




    Are places open on Frenchman on Sun/Mon nights? Any music on those nights?




    Yup, you%26#39;ll find music on Frenchmen pretty much all seven nights of the week i.e. Snug Harbor, etc...

    Best Wine Shop

    Coming in for Jazzfest and looking for best wine shop in terms of selection in city. Would like nice selection of wines in the $40-$80 retail price range. Anyone have any leads?

    Best Wine Shop

    I guess I%26#39;d try Martin Wine Cellar at 3500 Magazine.

    Best Wine Shop

    If you are staying in the FQ, Vieux Carre Wine and Spirits is in the 400 block of Chartres. Good prices and extensive selection.

    As mentioned, Martin (Metairie and Magazine Street locations) is also a great wine store.


    Thanks for input--you triggered my memory--although Martin%26#39;s is physically larger we liked selection better at Vieux Carre.

    Much thanks


    Anyone have any experience with the New Orleans Grapevine Wine Bar %26amp; Bistro right near Jackson Square?

  • Parameter.Add()
  • Zoo to Jacques Imos

    Would Jaques Imos be walkable from the Zoo? Directions?



    Zoo to Jacques Imos


    I guess it%26#39;s possible to walk but it%26#39;s quite a hike. You can mapquest the two places to get an exact distance.





    From the zoo, I%26#39;d walk through Audubon Park to St. Charles Avenue and then take it to Carrollton to Oak.





    IMHO, a cab is a far superior option.



    Zoo to Jacques Imos


    I would also take a cab, especially since there is ongoing construction at the intersection of Oak St and S. Carrollton that extends a few blocks, so you%26#39;d have to walk down some side streets to get to Jacques-Imo%26#39;s.

    New Orleans Antique Shops

    anybody ever been to any of the antique shops? Which ones are the best to go to? Also has anyone took a large package back home out of State on an air plane? Is this too expensive to do, rather then just having it mailed?



    New Orleans Antique Shops


    If you`re into antiques, you can easily lose your mind in New Orleans.



    Simply window shopping along Royal Street is an unbelievable experience. There is a vast assortment of fantastic items, both in size, scope, and price.



    Magazine Street has fine antique shops that are more affordable, but also lovely.



    Most shops do ship their items, I`m sure a lot more reasonably that you could ever take on a plane.



    I hope you enjoy your antiqueing!



    New Orleans Antique Shops


    wow thanks for the wonderful input and advise. Figured they would have an array of antique stores. I am sure alot better then what they have in California. Seeing that the City has the look to go with it as well. I am super excited to bring something old, home with me.




    I agree with Nawlins%26#39; post. The shops on Royal and Magazine streets were great to browse around . However just because an item is in an antique shop, it doesn%26#39;t necessary mean it%26#39;s old per se or the price tag is justified.




    Royal St. is known worldwide for the antique shops. Most of the ';real'; antiques are expensive, but rare, unusual and the street is an antique lovers%26#39; dream. There are also a couple of ';junk';/antique stores on the lower end of Decatur that have some interesting items. Magazine St. antique stores are good, but spread out....it is a long street. AND if you do buy something and have it shipped home, you will not have to pay sales tax on it.