Bourbon Street

Don’t Leave Man’s Best Friend at Home!

Don't Leave Man's Best Friend at Home!

Don't Leave Man's Best Friend at Home! New Orleans is Dog Friendly!

So you’re here in New Orleans for vacation and of course, you’ve brought along the whole family — including Fido! You aren’t going to leave him in the hotel are you? You might have to do that in lots of cities, but not in New Orleans. It is one of the most pet-friendly cities in the country.

Often you will find locals and their four-legged friends enjoying a meal together at many of the city’s restaurants. How do you know if a bar or restaurant is going to welcome Fido as a guest? Here is a list of some of them:

Lafitte in Exile at 901 Bourbon Street is the oldest gay bar in America and the home of New Orleans’ Barkus Parade, the Mardi Gras parade for dogs! It is pet-friendly year-round, however, and a fun and welcoming place to bring Fido (regardless of his orientation!)

Cafe Amelie, at 912 Royal Street, is a lovely restaurant serving brunch, lunch and dinner. It is famous for its beautiful courtyard featuring bubbling fountains and night-blooming jasmine. Well-behaved pooches on leashes are more than welcome to enjoy the fine dining experience of Cafe Amelie with you.

Cafe Beignet, at 311 Bourbon Street, has a huge courtyard featuring live jazz music all day. Coffee and beignets of course, as well as a nice selection of sandwiches make this a fine place for you and Fido to relax, tap your foot (and paw!) and take in a little culture.

Dogs are the stars in the Krewe of Barkus Parade during Mardi Gras season!

Dogs are the stars in the Krewe of Barkus Parade during Mardi Gras season!

Best known for their artisan gelato, La Divina Gelateria, located at 621 St. Peter Street, also boasts a nice breakfast menu as well as a fine selection of paninis for lunch. With tranquil courtyard seating right off historic Pirate’s Alley, you and Fido can spend some time people-watching. They even offer Dessert for Dogs!

After you and your pet have enjoyed the fine cuisine that New Orleans has to offer, head down to the corner of Barracks and Dauphine, where you will find the dog park consisting of open fields and a shelter for shade. New Orleans ordinance officially says that dogs must be on a leash — just between us — locals don’t pay that any mind. Dogs run at their leisure, but owners are required to pick up after their four-legged friends. The entrance is on the Dauphine Street side and water is provided. Maybe Fido will meet some new friends!

There is no reason that you should be the only one in your family to enjoy your New Orleans vacation — Fido can come home from his vacation with some new experiences as well!

 

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Don’t Look Like a Typical Tourist

Try Not to Look Like a Typical Tourist

Try Not to Look Like a Typical Tourist

There are plenty of times when I am walking around the French Quarter and I see people looking at maps and trying to figure out where they are and where they are going, or walking down the sidewalk while looking at the Google Maps on their phone. They may as well be wearing a sign that says “Hey! I’m from out-of-town! I’m vulnerable!”

New Orleans isn’t much different from any city in that you need to have a little street-smarts in order to get around. As much fun as it is, you don’t want to fall into the mindset that it is a grownup version of Disney World. It’s a city, and the French Quarter is a neighborhood where people live and work.

Find Yourself a Local

Locals, especially French Quarter locals, are generally friendly and willing to help out visitors find their way. Here are a few ways to spot a local:

  1. It may need to go without saying, but your server or your bartender are surely locals. Ask them for directions, or recommendations and you will learn some things that the guide books won’t tell you. Hotel concierges, while very helpful, are often college students on a Hospitality Degree internship, and many are not “from here.”
  2. The check-out girls at Rouses’ are all locals, and are very familiar with the French Quarter. Rouses is the Quarter’s supermarket and it is small and often very crowded. If the checkout lines are long, then obviously don’t ask questions. Find someone who is shopping for things like toilet paper, cat food, and Windex. That person is surely headed back to their apartment in the Quarter and will often help you find your way.
  3. Locals walk down the sidewalk with purpose. They don’t tend to stroll much. They might be carrying a newspaper, or a Rouses bag, or walking a dog. They won’t be carrying a bag full of beignet mix from Cafe Du Monde.
  4. Street musicians and performers are working. They may be local, but they tend not to give out information. They survive on tips, however, so a well-placed dollar bill will often go a long way toward getting the information you need. Same goes for cab drivers, buggy drivers and pedicab drivers.
  5. While the hotel concierges are often college students on an internship, Doormen are almost always local and have typically held their jobs for a good long while, often for many years. They are a wealth of information but again, will usually share more with you once you slip them a buck.

New Orleanians are known as a quirky but friendly bunch, and most will go out of their way to help you as long as you ask respectfully and politely. We tend to be very proud and protective of our town, so make sure when you ask a local for directions or advice that you do so with that in mind. Take the time to talk to the locals — you won’t be sorry. We have the information you are looking for, and more as well!

 

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Where’s the “Good Music”?

Where's the "Good Music" in New Orleans?  Frenchman Street!

Where's the "Good Music" in New Orleans? Frenchman Street!

Ask a local in New Orleans where to go to hear some good music, and you will undoubtedly hear “Frenchmen.”

Frenchmen Street is light-years away from the neon lights, cover music and glow-in-the-dark drinks on Bourbon Street, but it is merely walking distance from all the chaos.

It is a two-block-long strip where you can hear a wide variety of live music, often from well-known New Orleans musicians.

Head down Decatur Street through the French Quarter, cross over Esplanade Avenue and there you are. Don’t look for bright lights and street barkers to draw you into the clubs — there aren’t any. Within these two blocks you can hear anything from blues to jazz to reggae and everything in between.

The drinks here are usually less expensive than they are on Bourbon, and admission to most of these clubs is free. Sometimes, depending on the artist, there may be a cover, but it is generally minimal. Most of the time, you are only expected to tip the band — generously. You will enjoy the music so much that you won’t mind.

Some of the More Famous Frenchman Street Places

 

Sometimes There's Street Performers on Frenchman Street

Sometimes There's Street Performers on Frenchman Street

The Blue Nile Nightclub at 532 Frenchmen is colorful both inside and out. Some of the acts that perform there are Kermit Ruffins, Big Sam’s Funky Nation and Trombone Shorty. Cocktails here are strong and fairly priced and this is a non-smoking venue.

Cafe Negril at 606 Frenchmen features reggae music most nights and sometimes the blues. They serve food here too, with excellent Jamaican cuisine on the menu.

Checkpoint Charlies is located at 501 Esplanade and is one place where you are sure to find plenty of local French Quarter residents. There is a laundromat in the back, so you can do your laundry while enjoying a cocktail. The musical acts they book here are always diverse and interesting. One local writer famously said that the atmosphere here is so casual he once walked around in his boxers while his laundry was drying!

DBA is at 618 Frenchmen and offers music geared toward local music lovers. They boast a wide variety of beers and it is the home base for the Palmetto Bug Stompers, who host incredible swing dancers on Sunday nights, and offer free swing dance lessons as well.

The Spotted Cat, down at 623 Frenchmen is a small club with huge acoustics. On any given night, you might hear performances from Washboard Chaz, the Phister Sisters, Nathan Kirk and the New Orleans Cottonmouth Kings. I can’t vouch for the Men’s Room here, but I can tell you that the Ladies’ Room even has a piano!

Snug Harbor is possibly one of the most well-known of the Frenchmen Street clubs. At 626 Frenchmen, you can find Ellis Marsalis on most Friday nights, and Charmaine Neville on most Mondays. They also have an excellent restaurant with great burgers and a nice ribeye. They schedule their shows, usually one at 9pm and another at 11pm.

Once you find Frenchmen Street and enjoy everything it has to offer, you will surely begin to think of New Orleans in a whole different light. There is a reason the locals go there when they want a night out. It will only take one visit to this gem of a street to realize what that is.

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St. Patty's Day Parades

St. Patty's Day Parades

With Mardi Gras behind us, New Orleans starts looking forward to the next holiday, namely St. Patrick’s Day.

As you can imagine, New Orleans does St. Pat’s up right. There are parades and parties and everyone is Irish for the day.

Start Your Irish Day Off Right

Start your day off with breakfast at The Irish House. Located at 1432 St. Charles Ave, it is conveniently located right on the uptown streetcar line. Chef Matt Murphy’s menu is Irish cuisine with a twist. Their flagship breakfast item is a full Irish Breakfast, consisting of two eggs cooked sunny side up, rashers, Irish sausage, black and white puddings, baked beans, roasted mushrooms and grilled tomato-potato hash. At $11.75, this is enough food to keep you going for the rest of the day. Breakfast is served daily from 7-11am, lunch from 11am-3pm, and Dinner from 5pm-10pm. They also offer a Bar Menu from 3pm-close. Reservations are recommended but not required. 504-595-6755

After breakfast, you will want to head back to the French Quarter so you don’t miss out on any of the festivities.

There are several Irish bars you will want to visit. The Kerry is located at 332 Decatur St. and is a truly neighborhood bar serving up not only the best pint of Guinness in the Quarter but a stellar lineup of live music as well. The St. Patrick’s Day parade will go right by the Kerry, so this is a good place to be for parade watching.

Finnegan’s Easy, at 717 St. Peter, is a little more upscale, but still casual, despite being located just off Bourbon Street. The atmosphere here is miles away from the typical Bourbon Street bar, however. The drinks are fairly priced and the staff is friendly. This is also a place where you will find a great deal of locals. Their beautiful courtyard is a lovely place to sit and relax and Finnegan’s has a tasty bar menu as well and is known as a great place to watch any sporting event.

Watch the St. Patrick's Day Parades in the French Quarter

Watch the St. Patrick's Day Parades in the French Quarter

Are You Ready for the Irish Parades?

Once you have found your “home base” bar for the day, get ready for the parades. There are two, the Molly’s at the Market parade and the Downtown Irish Club parade.

Molly’s Parade will roll this year on March 11 at 6pm, and will leave from Molly’s at 1107 Decatur St. and will feature the Storyville Stompers, the New Wave Brass Band, the Celtic Highlanders and several marching groups.

The Downtown Irish Club parade begins at the corner of Burgundy and Piety and proceeds up Royal, across Esplanade to Decatur then up Bienville to Bourbon. This parade rolls on St. Patrick’s Day at 6pm.

St. Patrick’s Day is always a party wherever you happen to be, but since New Orleans throws the best parties in the country, why not plan to have your next St. Patrick’s Day right here in the Big Easy?

 

 

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The Original New Orleans Movie Tours

The Original New Orleans Movie Tours

With so many movies and television shows being filmed in New Orleans lately, the city has been dubbed “Hollywood South.”

While I am reluctant to advocate canned driving tours in any city, and would much rather just walk around and see what there is to see, The Original New Orleans Movie Tour is one tour that is worth taking.

In their comfortable ten-passenger van, you are taken through the Garden District, the Warehouse District, the French Quarter, the CBD, Treme and more, visiting over thirty different locations where famous scenes from well-known films had been shot.

[click to read more…]

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Lucky Dogs: An Iconic New Orleans Experience

by Christine Achille February 15, 2012

Anyone who has strolled down Bourbon Street knows that if you’re hungry, or need a little food in your belly before heading out for a serious night of indulgence, you want to head for the nearest Lucky Dog cart. Lucky Dogs, with their ubiquitous hot dog-shaped cart, have been entwined in the French Quarter experience [...]

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Mardi Gras Do’s and Don’ts: How To Have A Great Time & Stay Out Of Trouble

by Christine Achille February 13, 2012

  Mardi Gras in New Orleans is a time when people let their hair down, release their inhibitions and engage in all sorts of revelry. But, despite what MTV would have you believe, there is a limit to what is permitted and what isn’t. Here is a list of Do’s and Don’ts that should help [...]

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New Orleans Offers Plenty Of Family-Friendly Mardi Gras Entertainment

by Christine Achille February 11, 2012

  Mardi Gras in New Orleans brings to mind for many a wild time of revelry and debauchery. You can certainly find plenty of that among the crowds on Bourbon Street, but what do you do if you find yourself vacationing in New Orleans during Mardi Gras with your children? Never fear — there are [...]

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Welcome to Fun in New Orleans (NOLA)

by New Orleans Pirate Girl June 28, 2010

Who Dat?! Well this is Fun in New Orleans a site all about the fun one can have when they visit the crescent city, the true city that never sleeps, New Orleans, Louisiana.  From the French Quarter to beautiful Garden District there’s a lot to see and a lot to experience that can please all [...]

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