Picture Time! New Orleans Edition

I finally got around to selecting some photos to share from our trip to New Orleans. The Partner and I both took our cameras; I haven’t gotten the ones off of his camera yet so these are ones that I took. From over 600 photos, I’m posting 52 of them here. When I find myself with extra time, I’ll post more to my Flickr.

If you’re on broadband or higher, expand the entry to view the photos.

We’ll start from the beginning.

This is at a gas station in either Tennessee or Alabama (or maybe even Kentucky), I don’t remember. I just thought it was punny.

gas station in either Tennessee or Alabama

I think this is in Tennessee (but I’m not sure). I noticed that we hadn’t seen any traffic in the other lane, but before I could remark to The Partner about it we came upon stopped/inching traffic.

stopped traffic on interstate

You can’t tell that well from the picture, but we’re on the incline of a hill. The traffic in our lane went up and over the peak. We were slowed for probably half an hour, with a horrible back-up building behind us:

stopped traffic on interstate version 2

When we finally made it over and down the hill a bit we saw why: a car from our lane went into the north-bound lane, hitting one car head-on and causing a small pile-up. Sorry for the blurriness. Don’t drive and take photos, kids.

The north-bound lane was backed-up for a good mile or two.

accident detail

This is later into the early evening: the car we rented had a nifty feature that told us how many more miles we could drive on the current tank of gas. When the gauge read half-full, the meter told us we could drive another 450 miles or some such bullshit. We were hoping we would be able to make it across the Louisiana/Mississippi border before having to fill-up again; as the gauge crept down toward empty, the meter was still telling us we could drive more than 100 miles. We didn’t buy it, but none of the exits we were passing had signs for gas stations and damn if we were going to get off in the middle-of-nowhere-Mississippi. So we kept driving.

We pulled off onto Exit 1 in Mississippi, seeing Louisiana just up the way, puttering into the gas station ON FUMES.

Empty gas tank on road trip

We probably stopped five or six or seven times on the way there, making the ride about 15 hours. I was the only driver, because insurance was cheaper that way. Next time, we’re spending the extra money so that The Partner can drive. The last two times we stopped was to allow me to rest my eyes, which had started twitching and going blurry on me. The drive there and back home were made possible by Crack in a Can:

Monster energy drink made this road trip possible

Oh, we also had to stop shortly after crossing into Louisiana because WE DROVE ONTO THIS THING AND ALMOST DIED:

Road hazard 1

Road hazard 2

Road hazard 3

We were in the left-hand lane with no one in front of us, but traffic was on our right and behind us. The speed limit in LA is 70mph and I had on the cruise control, set to 73mph. We saw something reflecting our headlights, but we couldn’t move over without running the other person off the road. So I say, “FUCK!” and hit the breaks, hoping the cars behind us don’t crash into us. We hit it probably going about 50-60mph. We hear metal crunching, the steering wheel starts vibrating, I turn on the hazards, and I’m having visions of the damn thing throwing sparks, puncturing the gas line, and sending us to a fiery death. I pull over as far as I can (still in the left lane) and put the car in park. “FUCK FUCK FUCK” is the only thing escaping my mouth and I’m shaking. I put the car in reverse and press on the gas. The car jitters and shakes. “FUCK FUCK FUCK!” The Partner says, “I’m going to go check it out,” and gets out of the car. Now I’m having visions of him being hit by a car; of our car being hit and slamming into him, pinning him between the car and the concrete divider.

He gets on the ground and tries to pull the thing out; it doesn’t move. “You’re going to have to gun it. Just fuckin’ gun it.” I look in rear-view mirror and a huge fucking semi is heading towards us. I tell him to look out (where’s he going to go?), we might get hit, and the semi starts honking and swerves into the other lane mere inches from our bumper. I put the car in reverse and fucking gun it, gun it until I get off the thing. The Partner grabs it, throws it into the backseat, and gets in. “At least we have an AWESOME souvenir!”

Two minutes after getting back on the road, we pass a truck with a trailer pulled off to the side. There are two guys with flashlights, looking at the end of the trailer. It seems one of their fenders got loose and we ran onto it. So hey, if you were driving in Louisiana and lost a metal fender off your trailer: contact me! We’ve got it!

We made it to the condo about a half-hour later, around 1am, having had to call Anna for directions on how to navigate the French Quarter. We got into the parking lot and I stumbled out of the car, shaking and needing comfort/alcohol. Luckily, the condo was only three blocks from Bourbon Street.

We put our bags inside and Anna took us to Glorious Bourbon Street, where we got some highly liquored-up slushies and walked until my nerves had settled.

The rest of the photos are from throughout our stay; don’t ask me what day is which. We’d wake up, sometimes with a hang-over and sometimes not, eat breakfast, and go outside. During the day, we walked around the French Quarter, seeing the sights, taking photos, eating food, drinking liquor. At night we walked around, ate dinner, went to Bourbon Street, drank more liquor. Rinse, repeat.

This is the view we had from our back balconies, left-to-right:

Our view from the balonies

Click here to see a larger version.

This is some of the art we had in our bedroom:

The title of this one is, “Blue Balls”:
Blue Balls

The title of this one is, “Sleaze Balls”:
Hooters bullshit

Here’s a whole bunch of us walking around during the day:

Walking around in the French Quarter New Orleans 1

Walking around in the French Quarter New Orleans 2

Walking around in the French Quarter New Orleans 3

Walking around in the French Quarter New Orleans 4

This is me holding a cup of alcohol, on the street, just walking around. Me. Drinking in public. Drunk in public. On the street. Out in the open.

Me drunk in the French Quarter New Orleans

Walking around in the French Quarter New Orleans 5

Walking around in the French Quarter New Orleans 6

Walking around in the French Quarter New Orleans 7

Walking around in the French Quarter New Orleans 8

Walking around in the French Quarter New Orleans 9

Walking around in the French Quarter New Orleans 10

Walking around in the French Quarter New Orleans 11

Walking around in the French Quarter New Orleans 12

Walking around in the French Quarter New Orleans 14

Walking around in the French Quarter New Orleans 15

Walking around in the French Quarter New Orleans 16

Almost every building had a courtyard, most hidden from our spying eyes behind gates.

Gates of the French Quarter New Orleans 1

And hidden behind gates you wouldn’t dare climbing:

Gates of the French Quarter New Orleans 2

Especially ones like this — these crazy-ass folks put GLASS SHARDS on the ledges (human- and bird-proof):

Gates of the French Quarter New Orleans 3

One of the bars we went in had free condoms on the counter:

Free condoms in a bar
“Are you having sex with more than one person without a condom? Then take one of these, it can save your life!”

Walking around the French Quarter New Orleans 17

Walking around the French Quarter New Orleans 18

I thought this was funny, because that black thing to the right of the door is a doorbell and there are no stairs.

Door in the French Quarter New Orleans

Street performers in New Orleans

I guess they have issues with their postal workers:

Mail slot sign in the French Quarter New Orleans
“POSTMAN: Please push all mail through this mail slot. Please do not throw any mail into the alleyway. Thank you.”

The Partner and I were able to visit the New Orleans Museum of Art, on Wednesday I think, to see the Femme femme femme exhibit. We also spent a couple hours walking around the rest of the galleries. We didn’t know just how massive the museum was: three floors and a ton of art. We only made it through part of the second floor before our feet could not take it anymore.

New Orleans Museum of Art

And now, the moment you’ve been waiting for: some night shots of Bourbon Street.

Bourbon Street sign

Bourbon Street drinking is okay roadsign

Drunks on Bourbon Street 1

Drunks on Bourbon Street 2

Drunks on Bourbon Street 3

One half of Bourbon is a red-light district, with strip clubs and “live sex acts” clubs.

Drunks on Bourbon Street 4

Drunks on Bourbon Street 5

Drunks on Bourbon Street 6

Here are two of my favorite shots:

This dude was fucking trashed but seemed so very happy:

Drunk dude on Bourbon Street

Closeup of drunk dude on Bourbon Street

And of course, with all this SINNING going on, you’ve gotta have some godbags somewhere. We found them, reading in unison from the Bible.

Godbags on Bourbon Street

The dude in the red shirt was holding up his liquor, but I was drunk, too, and didn’t get the full shot.

Our last night there we went to Philip Chan’s Asian Cajun Bistro for dinner and stuffed ourselves on delicious food:

Asian Cajun Bistro sign

Then we went to Bourbon one last time and got shit-faced.

—————–

Even though the drive there was hellacious and we almost died, and the car we were in was a piece of shit as far as sleeping in it on the way home went, this was the best vacation I’ve had.

Anna, I thank you so much!

EDITED 07-24-08: Link to Femme Femme Femme information expired.

Comments

9 comments

  1. 1
    Anna says:

    Hey, you are welcome wherever I am, anytime! Glad you had a good time! As for the prof., if it were me, I would suck it up until evaluations come around. I don’t know about PU, but here at IUPUI, profs have to read their evals in a meeting with the whole department present (*including the dept. chair). Especially this close to commencement, you don’t want someone with a grudge forcing you into an appeal hearing; those aren’t fun. Wait till May, then write everyone at the University…and say fuck ‘em on your way out the door!

  2. 2
    patricia says:

    Eventful trip. Glad the thing on the street didn’t cause serious damage. Seeing the photos makes me want to go back to New Orleans except, damn, not drinking I think does cut into the fun. :D Or so it seems.

  3. 3
    Anne says:

    not drinking I think does cut into the fun

    You don’t drink alcohol? I remember reading something about that over at your site, but I’m not sure.

    I don’t think one has to drink in order to have fun in NOLA; you could always go to Bourbon and be highly entertained by the drunkards while staying sober.

  4. 4
    patricia says:

    I occasionally take sips but completely out of curiousity, not any desire to drink or find a drink. Usually the only thing I taste in anything is the alcohol. The only time I ever had a sip of anything that I liked was on Bourbon Street actually. The Hurricane was like cherry Kool-Ade I thought.

  5. 5
    Anne says:

    If you’re ever in a position to where you’re contemplating a drink, ask the barkeep for something fruity, or to have them add grenadine to it. I’m the same way: I hate the taste of alcohol.

    In NOLA we got a drink called a “191″ or something (the number being the proof) and it tasted just like an orange popsicle. It went down really fast and really smooth and hit me 15 minutes later.

  6. 6
    Chuck says:

    Man, one time on 65 driving back from Chicago, I was like “What the fuck is that?” and it was a seat cushion, like from a recliner or whatever. It was bizarre, and I managed to swerve around it — and then just as I was laughing about that, there was the rest of the chair in the road.

    I also succeeded in missing that, but a big old fat 911 call was in order after that.

    I’m glad to hear your ordeal left you none the worse for the wear.

  7. 7
    Anne says:

    Ha!

    Driving is so dangerous. Every time I get on the interstate/highway, I think about all the stories I’ve heard about cars going into the other lane, or cars flipping over into the other lane, or semis jackknifing. Really. You’re just driving and looking out as best as you can and BAM! a car flies on top of your car out of nowhere.

  8. 8
    TheCanadian says:

    Regarding your prof: You can probably go directly to the Dept. Head with no worries of retribution – I highly doubt they would release your name to the prof. It would also probably be more effective than a student evaluation – in my experience, they aren’t all that effective and aren’t taken too seriously b/c so many students do such a half-assed job on them. It probably differs among departments, but the Dept. Head or teaching committee may not see all the actual student comments from the evaluations, but might only see the overall rating. So, I say go straight to the head of the department.

  9. 9

    [...] the circumstances, this was a good trip and we didn’t hit anything, die, or get a speeding ticket. [...]

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