Keith enforces an early start
today. Forbidden to dawdle over our breakfast of grapefruit from the Laura Plantation,
we head out to Pearl. We find the
weather cold, 52°. Shivering, Keith
retrieves our winter coats from Pearl’s hat. We had fantasized about not
needing our winter gear again before returning to Colorado. Complaining and
moaning, we enter our chariot. How did we become so wussy so fast?
Heading for Baton Rouge, we
continue the Huey Long audiobook, listening to his political melodramas. We learn that Long’s impeachment arose from
his attempts to tax Standard Oil. (Not that he was innocent of the impeachment
accusations—he replaced corrupt government people with his own set of different
corrupt people, loyal to him, of course.)
We drive up I-10 from New
Orleans to Baton Rouge, keeping the Mississippi on our left and Lake
Pontchartrain to our right. Lake
Pontchartrain, 600 square miles of water, scares us, shimmering portentously as
we drive beside it. What if the dikes fail?
The lake, perched ominously above the city, overshadows New Orleans, the
proverbial sitting duck.
After cruising for half an
hour, with a sigh of relief, Pearl leaves Lake Pontchartrain behind. Collectively we ponder. Does Louisiana intend to write off New
Orleans and the incredibly drunken violent people and the desperately poor
homeless populating it? (New Orleans’
murder rate remains legendary, close to the rates in drug-torn South America.) But really, a sinister master plan? That
sounds like way too much effort, but think:
just move up the river as needed, making Baton Rouge the new industrial
New Orleans. Let the ocean drown all of the Crescent City’s problems.
Approaching Baton Rouge, we again
smell petrochemicals. Looking out Pearl’s
windows, we see tankers, barges and container ships lining the river.
After only a bit of
misdirection, Pearl delivers us to the Louisiana Rural Life Museum. The museum’s
only visitors, we meander slowly, enjoying having the place to ourselves. The museum elucidates how the other half, the
common people, lived. We visit some of
the 32 buildings spread over 25 acres. We see tiny slave cabins, a sugar house,
various dilapidated outbuildings and a well. A reconstructed church prompts
Barkley to commandeer the pulpit and begin preaching. Perhaps half of the outbuildings
have placards explaining their purpose. After
a bit, somewhat confused, we enter the main buildings, deciding to devote most
of our time to wandering through the massive barn and visitor center.
Barkley preaching |
Random buildings |
I have never seen so much
stuff accumulated in one location. Is the entire government of Louisiana secretly
run by massive packrats? This place makes my hoarder aunt’s house look
positively sparsely furnished, goat paths and all. We first discover numerous antique
wheelchairs. Sven puffs with pardonable
pride, as none of the old chairs looks the slightest bit comfortable and all
lack batteries for self-propulsion.
“You’re lucky you have me, Beaver!” Sven proclaims. Carriages share pride of place with the
wheelchairs. Amongst the clutter we find
an old horse-drawn hearse. The hearse has curtained windows. The windows confuse me. I understand taboos
about viewing the dead, so why the windows? And curtains? Do the curtains prevent mourners seeing the
dead rise, vampire-like, and look out at them? Better mind your Ps and Qs!
Venturing on, we discover
sugar mill equipment, as well as other areas stuffed with sewing machines,
dairying paraphernalia, or cooking gear.
One area holds stacks of quilts complete with the frames needed to
create them. Another boasts a working
demo of old tractors. In the farming room we notice a boll weevil catcher,
definitely the most entertaining and whimsical thing we encounter.
The museum disappoints us
with its sole half-empty space dedicated to slavery. The only bright spot is a
prominently-displayed, first-edition signed copy of Solomon Northrup’s Twelve
Years a Slave.
Moseying along, we encounter cotton
seeping out of a displayed bail standing in a corner. We touch it, marveling at
the incredible softness. Cotton brings us comfort. Look at your clothes—even now we drape ourselves
in it. Imagine the wonder of cotton having
lived your life dressed only in stiff, scratchy, ever-wrinkled linen. Yet cotton fueled the vile plantation
economy. Today the plant’s cultivation consumes
massive amounts of water and pesticides.
The plant generates amazing profits, fostering numerous sweatshops throughout
the third world. When we closely examine
our universe, we discover that everything exists in a state of gray, both good
and bad. Could just one thing be completely good for once? Like cotton?
Putting our four heads
together, we decipher the purpose of about half of what we see. This museum contains everything our
grandparents attempted to carefully describe to us when we never understood
what in the world they were talking about. I ruminate about my mother-in-law
Bernadine and the knowledge that died with her and her generation. She would have
told us each implement’s purpose, scoffing while laughing at our ignorance.
Walking through the museum, I hear her laugh and miss her lots.
We visit the gift shop on our
way out the door. Unfortunately, they don’t sell the unique and iconic boll
weevil catchers. We depart empty-handed.
Leaving the museum, Pearl
cruises ten miles over to the state capitol building. The infamous Huey Long,
governor of Louisiana in the late 20s and early 30s, strove to create a modern
masterpiece to show the world that Louisiana, under his leadership, had finally
escaped the dark ages. Rejecting the traditional dome and rotunda look, Long
erected a thirty-four-story Art Deco masterwork, still the tallest state capitol
building in the States.
We enter the building, a
fantasy world of marble, murals and high gold-leaf ceilings. Two bronze chandeliers, weighing two tons
each, hang from the ceiling. Flags from
every country that held dominion over Louisiana line one side of the high
walls. The opposite wall contains large multi-paned windows that don’t really
admit a lot of light, but it is a rather dim day.
Finding the capitol surprisingly
accessible for 1930, Sven and I investigate the building. We roll over to the legislative chambers. A
kindly guard shows us the site of Huey’s assassination, right outside of the
chambers, near the Governor’s Office. Huey died from gunshot wounds; five bullet
holes scar the capitol building walls. Over the years, a series of administrators
has filled in every bullet hole, save one. The guard shows us the secret
remaining bullet hole, hidden behind a column. Huey inaugurated the tradition
of walking about surrounded by heavily armed, machine-gun toting bodyguards.
Reflecting history’s delight in irony, many believe Long to have been shot by
his own men as they defended him.
We take a rickety elevator up
to the twenty-seventh floor observation deck. Looking out, we see formal
gardens, Baton Rouge, and the Mississippi with a lone barge floating by. Flowing below
us for once, holding only one ship, the river here resembles the Mississippi
we’ve pictured in our heads for so long, as opposed to the massive commercial
jumble we found down south.
Descending, Sven leads as we
motor out to the capitol building grounds.
We tour the garden graced with low circular hedges and a huge statue of
Huey Long, of course. Long’s statue and his body face the capitol building,
guarding Louisiana for all eternity.
Long remains controversial to
this day. He holds a sainted status amongst many of the common people. People
aren’t fools, they know he was a sleaze ball, but Huey brought Louisiana
schools, textbooks, and roads, things the prior planter-class rulers never had
bothered to do. Others, including our Lafayette Airbnb host, hate Long with a
passion for both his arrogance and his venality.
Driving back to Baton Rouge,
we complete our Huey Long CD, his assassination on the audiobook paralleling
perfectly with today’s tour of the statehouse.
We arrive home ready to
launch into dinner, only to discover, horror of horrors, we have run out of
both butter and olive oil. Bear grumbles,
“I don’t want to drive all the way over to Whole Foods. I’m sure I can find
butter at the local grocery store.” He
walks out the door, list in hand, intent upon a wee bit of shopping in the
‘hood. He returns shortly. “The local
bodega is full of horrid petroleum-based quasi-food! They don’t even sell butter!” he roars,
brandishing his list and a small bottle of what he believes may be olive oil. “And!” he shouts, stomping his feet and
working himself into a full-fledged Bear rant, “some kid tried to sell me
edible marijuana claiming that it was legal in New Orleans the same as
Colorado!” Discretion being the better part of valor, I remain silent, but
begin to think. Hmmm, I recall, we
learned on our Laura Plantation tour that Creoles only obey the laws they agree
with. So perhaps edible marijuana is legal in New Orleans, at least in people’s
minds. I wonder if Cole Porter composed Anything
Goes after staying in this city.
(Nope—Paris)
“Ah!” Bloodroot exclaims, ignoring the pot question,
“we’re in a food desert.” Ensconced in my middle-class world, I must
embarrassingly admit that previously I actually doubted the existence of food
deserts, considering the noise a marketing ploy. Darn!
Reality once again cruelly quashes my eternal optimistic belief in
American equality and opportunity.
Following the abortive
shopping trip, Keith starts dinner, creating yet another culinary wonder work.
We eat slowly, enjoying every morsel, every sip of wine. Is this our last supper? Do we fear an
impending execution? We’ve enjoyed six
nights of healthy, delicious food, but tomorrow we leave our Airbnb nest for
five nights in hotels. Ugh! I solemnly promise to attempt not to complain overmuch. I swear off ranting about the Sysco truck,
the truck delivering heavily-salted, corn-syrup laden foodstuffs to all
restaurants, responsible for creating that signature restaurant flavor: GROSS!
Ugh, an impending week of lousy food, heavy on salt and sugar.
Following our relaxing
dinner, Barkley and Bloodroot decide to venture out into New Orleans. They desire
to visit someone Bloodroot met in Paris. We charge them with discovering all
the dirt on this person—where he works, sexual preference, who he’s dating,
etc. The boys roll their eyes at me, disgusted by their assigned mission.
The boys consider themselves
nerds, tending to carry their laptops with them. Off they go, exploring this brave new world,
post-Katrina New Orleans. They return a bit later, sans gossip, excitedly
reporting that they had been approached and offered both drugs and sex! Charitably,
I wonder if this actually represents a desperate nadir in the sex workers’ and
drug pushers’ lives. Has working the Mardi Gras tourist trade become
unprofitable? Are the other tourists just too trashed? Or does everyone come to
New Orleans to act irresponsibly, even nerds?
Perhaps the entrepreneurs sense a golden opportunity here.
Grateful that boys resisted
the dual temptations of both sex and drugs, we turn in for the night.
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