New Orleans, Louisiana, USA

The Muse of the Great American South


French Quarter vs Canal Street
Tujague's
Waiter at Tujague's, an emblematic restaurant-bar in New Orleans.
Steam
Ronnel Johnson
Musician Ronnel Johnson after a performance at the unmissable Preservation Hall
Barely Legal
Jazz It Up
1st Line
Saint Louis Cathedral
Maison Jazz
Madison Street
Streetcar on Canal St.
Lafitte Bar
Richard Piano Scott Band
Richard Piano Scott and his band liven up Fritzels Bar, Bourbon Street.
Muriels
Passers-by pass in front of Muriels, one of the oldest and most renowned restaurants in New Orleans.
General and former President Jackson
Creole Queen
The steamboat Creole Queen sets sail for the Mississippi.
Bourbon Street
Secular Homes
Almost Night, Jackson Square
Pure Burlesque
One of the New Orleans Jazz House's frequent burlesque showings
New Orleans stands out from conservative US backgrounds as the defender of all rights, talents and irreverence. Once French, forever Frenchified, the city of jazz inspires new contagious rhythms, the fusion of ethnicities, cultures, styles and flavors.

The members of the House of Bourbon would turn in their graves if reports reached them from the other world of what became the street named in their name, in the recently founded Nouvelle Orleans.

Dusk after dusk, as the sky darkens above the skyscrapers and pioneering streetcars of Canal St., the lush neon lights of Bourbon Street accentuate.

A horde of revelers who want to decompress and celebrate life invade it, even if it means damaging their health. Little by little, a cannabis aroma spreads.

The bars serve drinks after drinks, from simple beers to New Orleans' most famous cocktails: the Sazerac, the city's official drink.

Os daiquiris locals, the Ramos Gin Fizz and the centuries-old Absynthe Frappes, invented at the Old Absynthe House, one of the city's unmissable “drinking fountains”.

Bourbon Street: the New Orleans of Endless Night

On Bourbon Street, not all drinks became popular due to their elegance and subtlety.

We come across passers-by drinking Hurricanes. Others, sip from Hand Grenades.

Legally served in a mere five French Quarter bars, this blend of vodka, rum, gin and melon liqueur generates a euphoria befitting the surrounding atmosphere.

On Saints game days – the local American football team – the city dresses in gold. As we witnessed in the festive “Upper Quarter Bar”, drink, toast and celebrate with the cadence of each touchdown got.

From bar to bar, dozens of bands and musicians create a growing communal intoxication.

We found a little bit of everything. Piano duets, piercing hard-rock, country music, exhibitions of drag queens in rainbow bars.

And, a short distance away, at The Jazz Playhouse, an even more naked and daring burlesque.

The musical amalgam is renewed. It's back to shuffling around in the bars and stages of the new popular nightlife in Orleans, Frenchmen Street.

Located on the edge of the French Quarter, with its elegant colorful villas, equipped with cast iron balconies and terraces, and interior patios set between walls.

The Cradle and the American Home of Jazz

If we stick to Bourbon, we can still travel through the XNUMXth century jazz of New Orleans.

This is the “old” style that we watch Richard Piano Scott and his band play at the Fritzels Jazz bar, inspired by many of the renowned bands that passed through Preservation Hall during the XNUMXth century.

In an era in which racial segregation was legalized after the American Civil War, this emblematic room hosted performances by pioneers such as Louis Armstrong, Buddy Bolden, and bands, some multiracial, that performed to an enthusiastic mixed audience.

They are also praised by the National Historic Jazz Park, created side by side with Congo Square.

The latter is the open, green space where, during the XNUMXth century, colored inhabitants, whether slaves or already free, met, traded with each other, danced and played drums considered the precursors of jazz.

There they also carried out African rituals later linked to voodoo, another of the cultural esotericisms in which New Orleans became prolific and which the new tourist agents integrated into a panoply of tours. Themed:

those of haunted New Orleans, those of gastronomic, story, de architecture and so many more.

New Orleans, Musician Loading Zone

But, let's return to Preservation Hall.

This hall of winds and percussion has survived segregation and time. It has become a jazz temple of integration and multiculturalism.

This, in the same context in which, in the second half of the XNUMXth century, thousands of musicians other parts of the US., they began to see New Orleans as a safe haven for their talents.

One of the theories behind the nickname “The Big Easy” from the city argues, in fact, that it came from the ease with which musicians found jobs.

The other, still current, resulted from the feeling of relaxation, hedonism and creativity transmitted by residents.

Flagboy Giz and the New Music of New Orleans

Emerging talents like Flagboy Giz immortalize old New Orleans, who makes all his songs celebrations of his indigenous ancestry, the genuine life of the city, the spectacularity of Mardi Gras

and the moving musicians of the First Lines, entertainers of events and events, from birthdays and weddings to funerals.

As Flagboy Giz sings “I fell in love at the second line".

The most famous of the Flagboys fell in love in a procession that followed one of these walking bands.

New Orleans Street Artists

For all purposes, the category includes “entrepreneurs”, and craftspeople and Bourbon Street opportunists.

The masked Darth Vader who plays Céline Dion.

The man with the pin dressed as a pirate, accompanied by a skeleton, who massacres his neck while posing upside down.

The couple who own Burmese pythons who offer them for selfies and petting.

Children playing percussion on sets of buckets. A group of breakdancers who, between performances, practices American football passes.

Another talent to recognize is that, when old people enter, they ask for 20 dollars to tell dirty jokes.

These are examples.

On any given night, Bourbon Street and the surrounding area host countless performances of the most diverse styles.

New Orleans, Bourbon Street, Duet Piano

As does Jackson Square, the riverside heart of New Orleans.

French, briefly, Spanish: the Colonial Genesis of New Orleans

Above all, in front of its Cabildo, the most exuberant Hispanic building, erected between 1763 and 1803.

During this period, as a result of unusual negotiations, the Spanish governed Louisiana. The British had just recovered the colony from the French, after defeating them in the Seven Years' War.

Soon, as compensation for Florida's integration into the British Empire, they ceded it to the Spanish Empire.

In addition to the Cabildo, the Spanish rebuilt the French church of St. Louis, destroyed by the Great Fire of 1788. After half a decade, the church was promoted to the cathedral diocese of New Orleans.

It is one of the oldest churches in continuous use in the USA

Challenging the catholicity of the place, a community of palm readers, tarot readers and the like settles there.

On days of excessive competition, they even extend their convenient prophecies to sections of Bourbon Street.

Andrew Jackson, Jackson Square and the Sweet Magnetism of Café du Monde

On a historical rather than a futurological level, the equestrian statue of General Andrew Jackson stands out in the adjacent garden.

Jackson earned the status of a controversial American hero, praised by admirers for his role in the territorial expansion and consolidation of the United States.

He was elected the seventh president of the USA. He held the position from 1829 to 1837. He died in 1845.

Less than two decades later, a few dozen meters from the monument that honors him, on the edge of the Mississippi, the “Coffee of the world”, another of the Frenchized brand images of Old Carré from New Orleans.

For the convenience of your “beignets” accompanied by coffee-chicory, we adapted it as a favorite stop when recovering from the several dozen kilometers we walked in the city. Apart from the traditional snack, the “Coffee of the world” captivate us with delightful expressions of social harmony.

Typically, a street artist there entertains customers with interpretations of famous North American songs. The unexpected comes from the special appearances.

When less busy, employees offer to replace you and sing one or two of their favorite songs, at times, accompanied by customers.

But the beignet is also an expression, with a rich sugary flavor and texture, of the prolific gastronomy of New Orleans.

The Gastronomy and Prodigious Restaurants of “The Big Easy”

Unlike so many other areas of tasteless, too-fast food in the USA, the Mississippi Crescent City assimilated successive recipes brought by the French, the Spanish, African slaves, Creole and Cajun people – descendants of French-Canadians settled in the areas bayous – of Italians and many others who later migrated there.

Thus, gumbo, jambalaya, stewed crayfish and well-garnished sandwiches such as Po-Boys and “Sicilian” sandwiches were improved. muffalletas.

While it is true that dozens of establishments advertise them, only a few, with an age and spaces befitting the historical richness of New Orleans, serve them perfect or almost perfect.

These include the restaurant elders Muriel's, located in a mid-1856th century building, and Tujague's, a restaurant established in XNUMX and long renowned.

The Mississippi Crescent City

Like everything else, settlers, traders, raiders, and immigrants arrived at the city via the winding Mississippi.

We admired it from the Vue Orleans panoramic top, from the riverside and on board the steamship “Creole Queen”, one of three that delight outsiders with the experience of sailing the Mississippi the old-fashioned way.

Situated just above the mouth of the United States' main river artery, New Orleans occupies the same pivotal position.

Reason for dozens of battles and conflicts, before and after the American Civil War, whose outcome made the end of Slavery possible, as well as libertarian progressivism that continues to favor The Big Easy.

DESTINATION FORM

1 – Miami

2 – New Orleans

HOW TO GO

Book the flight Lisbon – Miami (Florida), United States, with TAP: flytap.com for from €820.

From Miami, you can take the connection to New Orleans (1h30) for, from €150, round trip.

Where to stay:

The Mercantile Hotel:

themercantilehotelneworleans.com

Tel.: +1 504 558 1914-1914

Miami, Florida, USA

The Gateway to Latin America

Not only is the privileged location, between a lush ocean and the green of the Everglades, with the vast Caribbean just to the south. It is tropical, climate and cultural comfort and exemplary urban modernity. Increasingly in Spanish, in a Latin American context.
Kennedy Space Center, Florida, United States

The American Space Program Launch Pad

Traveling through Florida, we deviated from the programmed orbit. We point to the Atlantic coast of Merrit Island and Cape Canaveral. There we explored the Kennedy Space Center and followed one of the launches that Space X and the United States are now aiming for in Space.
Everglades National Park, Florida, USA

Florida's Great Weedy River

Anyone who flies over the south of the 27th state is amazed by the green, smooth and soggy vastness that contrasts with the surrounding oceanic tones. This unique U.S. marsh-prairie ecosystem is home to a prolific fauna dominated by 200 of Florida's 1.25 million alligators.
Miami beach, USA

The Beach of All Vanities

Few coasts concentrate, at the same time, so much heat and displays of fame, wealth and glory. Located in the extreme southeast of the USA, Miami Beach is accessible via six bridges that connect it to the rest of Florida. It is meager for the number of souls who desire it.
Saint Augustine, Florida, USA

Back to the Beginnings of Hispanic Florida

The dissemination of tourist attractions of questionable taste becomes superficial if we take into account the historical depth in question. This is the longest inhabited city in the contiguous US. Ever since Spanish explorers founded it in 1565, St. Augustine resists almost anything.
Miami, USA

A Masterpiece of Urban Rehabilitation

At the turn of the 25st century, the Wynwood neighbourhood remained filled with abandoned factories and warehouses and graffiti. Tony Goldman, a shrewd real estate investor, bought more than XNUMX properties and founded a mural park. Much more than honoring graffiti there, Goldman founded the Wynwood Arts District, the great bastion of creativity in Miami.
Key West, USA

The Tropical Wild West of the USA

We've come to the end of the Overseas Highway and the ultimate stronghold of propagandism Florida Keys. The continental United States here they surrender to a dazzling turquoise emerald marine vastness. And to a southern reverie fueled by a kind of Caribbean spell.
Little Havana, USA

Little Havana of the Nonconformists

Over the decades and until today, thousands of Cubans have crossed the Florida Straits in search of the land of freedom and opportunity. With the US a mere 145 km away, many have gone no further. His Little Havana in Miami is today the most emblematic neighborhood of the Cuban diaspora.
San Francisco, USA

The City ​​of Fog

inspired by the past hippie and rocked by cable car trips up and down its hills, the population of San Francisco has become one of the most creative and artistic of the United States. Under the fog, this California metropolis has matured free from prejudice and endures as the great muse of North American socio-cultural innovation.
Florida Keys, USA

The Caribbean Stepping Stone of the USA

Os United States continental islands seem to close to the south in its capricious peninsula of Florida. Don't stop there. More than a hundred islands of coral, sand and mangroves form an eccentric tropical expanse that has long seduced American vacationers.
Las Vegas, USA

World Capital of Weddings vs Sin City

The greed of the game, the lust of prostitution and the widespread ostentation are all part of Las Vegas. Like the chapels that have neither eyes nor ears and promote eccentric, quick and cheap marriages.
Key West, United States

Hemingway's Caribbean Playground

Effusive as ever, Ernest Hemingway called Key West "the best place I've ever been...". In the tropical depths of the contiguous US, he found evasion and crazy, drunken fun. And the inspiration to write with intensity to match.
tombstone, USA

Tombstone: the City Too Hard to Die

Silver veins discovered at the end of the XNUMXth century made Tombstone a prosperous and conflictive mining center on the frontier of the United States to Mexico. Lawrence Kasdan, Kurt Russell, Kevin Costner and other Hollywood directors and actors made famous the Earp brothers and the bloodthirsty duel of “OK Corral”. The Tombstone, which, over time, has claimed so many lives, is about to last.
Grand Canyon, USA

Journey through the Abysmal North America

The Colorado River and tributaries began flowing into the plateau of the same name 17 million years ago and exposed half of Earth's geological past. They also carved one of its most stunning entrails.
Mount Denali, Alaska

The Sacred Ceiling of North America

The Athabascan Indians called him Denali, or the Great, and they revered his haughtiness. This stunning mountain has aroused the greed of climbers and a long succession of record-breaking climbs.
Juneau, Alaska

The Little Capital of Greater Alaska

From June to August, Juneau disappears behind cruise ships that dock at its dockside. Even so, it is in this small capital that the fate of the 49th American state is decided.
Monument Valley, USA

Indians or Cowboys?

Iconic Western filmmakers like John Ford immortalized what is the largest Indian territory in the United States. Today, in the Navajo Nation, the Navajo also live in the shoes of their old enemies.
Talkeetna, Alaska

Talkeetna's Alaska-Style Life

Once a mere mining outpost, Talkeetna rejuvenated in 1950 to serve Mt. McKinley climbers. The town is by far the most alternative and most captivating town between Anchorage and Fairbanks.
Las Vegas, USA

Where sin is always forgiven

Projected from the Mojave Desert like a neon mirage, the North American capital of gaming and entertainment is experienced as a gamble in the dark. Lush and addictive, Vegas neither learns nor regrets.
Navajo nation, USA

The Navajo Nation Lands

From Kayenta to Page, passing through Marble Canyon, we explore the southern Colorado Plateau. Dramatic and desert, the scenery of this indigenous domain, cut out in Arizona, reveals itself to be splendid.
Jabula Beach, Kwazulu Natal, South Africa
Safari
Saint Lucia, South Africa

An Africa as Wild as Zulu

On the eminence of the coast of Mozambique, the province of KwaZulu-Natal is home to an unexpected South Africa. Deserted beaches full of dunes, vast estuarine swamps and hills covered with fog fill this wild land also bathed by the Indian Ocean. It is shared by the subjects of the always proud Zulu nation and one of the most prolific and diverse fauna on the African continent.
Yak Kharka to Thorong Phedi, Annapurna Circuit, Nepal, Yaks
Annapurna (circuit)
Annapurna Circuit 11th: yak karkha a Thorong Phedi, Nepal

Arrival to the Foot of the Canyon

In just over 6km, we climbed from 4018m to 4450m, at the base of Thorong La canyon. Along the way, we questioned if what we felt were the first problems of Altitude Evil. It was never more than a false alarm.
A Lost and Found City
Architecture & Design
Machu Picchu, Peru

The City Lost in the Mystery of the Incas

As we wander around Machu Picchu, we find meaning in the most accepted explanations for its foundation and abandonment. But whenever the complex is closed, the ruins are left to their enigmas.
Totems, Botko Village, Malekula, Vanuatu
Adventure
Malekula, Vanuatu

Meat and Bone Cannibalism

Until the early XNUMXth century, man-eaters still feasted on the Vanuatu archipelago. In the village of Botko we find out why European settlers were so afraid of the island of Malekula.
Correspondence verification
Ceremonies and Festivities
Rovaniemi, Finland

From the Finnish Lapland to the Arctic. A Visit to the Land of Santa

Fed up with waiting for the bearded old man to descend down the chimney, we reverse the story. We took advantage of a trip to Finnish Lapland and passed through its furtive home.
fortress wall of Novgorod and the Orthodox Cathedral of Hagia Sophia, Russia.
Cities
Novgorod, Russia

Mother Russia's Viking Grandmother

For most of the past century, the USSR authorities have omitted part of the origins of the Russian people. But history leaves no room for doubt. Long before the rise and supremacy of the tsars and the soviets, the first Scandinavian settlers founded their mighty nation in Novgorod.
Singapore Asian Capital Food, Basmati Bismi
Meal
Singapore

The Asian Food Capital

There were 4 ethnic groups in Singapore, each with its own culinary tradition. Added to this was the influence of thousands of immigrants and expatriates on an island with half the area of ​​London. It was the nation with the greatest gastronomic diversity in the Orient.
Culture
Jok​ülsárlón Lagoon, Iceland

The Chant and the Ice

Created by water from the Arctic Ocean and the melting of Europe's largest glacier, Jokülsárlón forms a frigid and imposing domain. Icelanders revere her and pay her surprising tributes.
Swimming, Western Australia, Aussie Style, Sun rising in the eyes
Sport
Busselton, Australia

2000 meters in Aussie Style

In 1853, Busselton was equipped with one of the longest pontoons in the world. World. When the structure collapsed, the residents decided to turn the problem around. Since 1996 they have been doing it every year. Swimming.
Composition on Nine Arches Bridge, Ella, Sri Lanka
Traveling
Yala NPElla-Kandy, Sri Lanka

Journey Through Sri Lanka's Tea Core

We leave the seafront of PN Yala towards Ella. On the way to Nanu Oya, we wind on rails through the jungle, among plantations in the famous Ceylon. Three hours later, again by car, we enter Kandy, the Buddhist capital that the Portuguese never managed to dominate.
Basotho Cowboys, Malealea, Lesotho
Ethnic
Malealea, Lesotho

Life in the African Kingdom of Heaven

Lesotho is the only independent state located entirely above XNUMX meters. It is also one of the countries at the bottom of the world ranking of human development. Its haughty people resist modernity and all the adversities on the magnificent but inhospitable top of the Earth that befell them.
Portfolio, Got2Globe, Best Images, Photography, Images, Cleopatra, Dioscorides, Delos, Greece
Got2Globe Photo Portfolio
Got2Globe Portfolio

The Earthly and the Celestial

Champagne Beach, Espiritu Santo, Vanuatu
History
Espiritu Santo, Vanuatu

Divine Melanesia

Pedro Fernandes de Queirós thought he had discovered Terra Australis. The colony he proposed never materialized. Today, Espiritu Santo, the largest island in Vanuatu, is a kind of Eden.
colorful boat, Gili Islands, Indonesia
Islands
Gili Islands, Indonesia

Gili: the Indonesia's Islands the World Calls “Islands”

They are so humble that they are known by the term bahasa which means only islands. Despite being discreet, the Gili have become the favorite haunt of travelers who pass through Lombok or Bali.
Sampo Icebreaker, Kemi, Finland
Winter White
Kemi, Finland

It's No "Love Boat". Breaks the Ice since 1961

Built to maintain waterways through the most extreme arctic winter, the icebreaker Sampo” fulfilled its mission between Finland and Sweden for 30 years. In 1988, he reformed and dedicated himself to shorter trips that allow passengers to float in a newly opened channel in the Gulf of Bothnia, in clothes that, more than special, seem spacey.
Cove, Big Sur, California, United States
Literature
Big Sur, USA

The Coast of All Refuges

Over 150km, the Californian coast is subjected to a vastness of mountains, ocean and fog. In this epic setting, hundreds of tormented souls follow in the footsteps of Jack Kerouac and Henri Miller.
Intha rowers on a channel of Lake Inlé
Nature
Inle Lake, Myanmar

The Dazzling Lakustrine Burma

With an area of ​​116km2, Inle Lake is the second largest lake in Myanmar. It's much more than that. The ethnic diversity of its population, the profusion of Buddhist temples and the exoticism of local life make it an unmissable stronghold of Southeast Asia.
Sheki, Autumn in the Caucasus, Azerbaijan, Autumn Homes
Autumn
Sheki, Azerbaijan

autumn in the caucasus

Lost among the snowy mountains that separate Europe from Asia, Sheki is one of Azerbaijan's most iconic towns. Its largely silky history includes periods of great harshness. When we visited it, autumn pastels added color to a peculiar post-Soviet and Muslim life.
Okavango Delta, Not all rivers reach the sea, Mokoros
Natural Parks
Okavango Delta, Botswana

Not all rivers reach the sea

Third longest river in southern Africa, the Okavango rises in the Angolan Bié plateau and runs 1600km to the southeast. It gets lost in the Kalahari Desert where it irrigates a dazzling wetland teeming with wildlife.
improvised bank
UNESCO World Heritage
Ibo Island, Mozambique

Island of a Gone Mozambique

It was fortified in 1791 by the Portuguese who expelled the Arabs from the Quirimbas and seized their trade routes. It became the 2nd Portuguese outpost on the east coast of Africa and later the capital of the province of Cabo Delgado, Mozambique. With the end of the slave trade at the turn of the XNUMXth century and the passage from the capital to Porto Amélia, Ibo Island found itself in the fascinating backwater in which it is located.
View from the top of Mount Vaea and the tomb, Vailima village, Robert Louis Stevenson, Upolu, Samoa
Characters
Upolu, Samoa

Stevenson's Treasure Island

At age 30, the Scottish writer began looking for a place to save him from his cursed body. In Upolu and the Samoans, he found a welcoming refuge to which he gave his heart and soul.
Cable car connecting Puerto Plata to the top of PN Isabel de Torres
Beaches
Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic

The Dominican Home Silver

Puerto Plata resulted from the abandonment of La Isabela, the second attempt at a Hispanic colony in the Americas. Almost half a millennium after Columbus's landing, it inaugurated the nation's inexorable tourist phenomenon. In a lightning passage through the province, we see how the sea, the mountains, the people and the Caribbean sun keep it shining.
Hikers on the Ice Lake Trail, Annapurna Circuit, Nepal
Religion
Annapurna Circuit: 7th - Braga - Ice Lake, Nepal

Annapurna Circuit – The Painful Acclimatization of the Ice Lake

On the way up to the Ghyaru village, we had a first and unexpected show of how ecstatic the Annapurna Circuit can be tasted. Nine kilometers later, in Braga, due to the need to acclimatize, we climbed from 3.470m from Braga to 4.600m from Lake Kicho Tal. We only felt some expected tiredness and the increase in the wonder of the Annapurna Mountains.
white pass yukon train, Skagway, Gold Route, Alaska, USA
On Rails
Skagway, Alaska

A Klondike's Gold Fever Variant

The last great American gold rush is long over. These days, hundreds of cruise ships each summer pour thousands of well-heeled visitors into the shop-lined streets of Skagway.
Tsukiji fish market, Tokyo, Japan
Society
Tokyo, Japan

The Fish Market That Lost its Freshness

In a year, each Japanese eats more than their weight in fish and shellfish. Since 1935, a considerable part was processed and sold in the largest fish market in the world. Tsukiji was terminated in October 2018, and replaced by Toyosu's.
the projectionist
Daily life
Sainte-Luce, Martinique

The Nostalgic Projectionist

From 1954 to 1983, Gérard Pierre screened many of the famous films arriving in Martinique. 30 years after the closing of the room in which he worked, it was still difficult for this nostalgic native to change his reel.
Asian buffalo herd, Maguri Beel, Assam, India
Wildlife
Maguri Bill, India

A Wetland in the Far East of India

The Maguri Bill occupies an amphibious area in the Assamese vicinity of the river Brahmaputra. It is praised as an incredible habitat especially for birds. When we navigate it in gondola mode, we are faced with much (but much) more life than just the asada.
Napali Coast and Waimea Canyon, Kauai, Hawaii Wrinkles
Scenic Flights
napali coast, Hawaii

Hawaii's Dazzling Wrinkles

Kauai is the greenest and rainiest island in the Hawaiian archipelago. It is also the oldest. As we explore its Napalo Coast by land, sea and air, we are amazed to see how the passage of millennia has only favored it.