Picshas!

As promised, here are pix of our French Quarter excursion from Saturday.

We started out in the flea market at the edge of the Quarter, looking for cheap sunglasses and funny T-shirts. We batted .500 on that one.

The Cafe Du Monde will reopen tomorrow.

We’re getting married up in that building, with its great view of the river and the square.

Bourbon Street’s never a pretty sight by the light of day.

We ate at Cafe Amelie.

It was a cliche, sure, but I went to Preservation Hall when I was a student down here.

A couple of musicians were performing near Jackson Square.

The Square was pretty haunting, because it was so empty, I guess. I don’t recall ever walking through the middle of it before. It looks unreal to me, like a perfectly manicured Disneyscape.

Bonus picture: My breakfast partner contended that I am “cool, awesome and handsome”, but three-year-olds’ standards are pretty low.

Safe landing

Got in safe and sound, but rush-hour traffic’s a bear, so the official VM fiancee & I have hit a mall (with a Mac store) in NJ before we try to make it into NYC to drop her off.

Homegoing

We’re about to head out to the airport, and we’ve packed away a couple of MREs for next weekend’s photoblogging session. Once we’re settled in, I’ll get my French Quarter photos posted up here, so you can see that it’s not THAT bad.

Sorry if my long post about Saturday’s trip sounded too depressing. Seeing all the (re)construction going on down here, I’m pretty optimistic about the city’s immediate prospects. I’m concerned about how it’ll deal with the long term, of course, but I’m concerned with how you’ll deal with the long term too, dear reader.

In all, I’d say it was a good trip, insofar as I gained a better understanding of the after-effects of the flood, along with loads of funny stories about Amy’s family members.

Redemption story

In the Times-Picayune this morning, there’s a neat (lengthy) article about Jabar Gibson, the 20-year-old kid who stole a school bus to evacuate his neighbors during the post-Katrina flood. Turns out he was a convicted car thief, is awaiting charges for possession of crack, had never driven a school bus before, and may have changed the direction of his life.

Read the story (not sure how long the Times-Pic keeps these links active).

Drawn and French Quartered

Got back from the French Quarter a few hours ago. During the drive in, we wondered what areas were hit badly by the flood. Then we passed over the 17th St. Canal, and realized what it really looked like. The landscape was gray-brown. It was as if the floodwaters took the color with them when they were pumped away. Amy sez it was like going from Oz back to Kansas.

We came in via I-10, and got off at the Poydras St. exit, the Superdome looming before us. The roof was half-tarped, the rest looking rusted and corroded. Off the highway, the first few traffic lights were shut down for lack of power. Closer into the central business district, the lights were active. There were a few lane-shifting detours on Poydras, but the drive was pretty smooth. Amy said that it was the easiest drive in to New Orleans that she’d ever seen.

We drove past the French Market on Decatur, parked on the edge of the Quarter, and started walking around. Our first challenge was to find funny T-shirts about the storm in the section of the marketplace that was operating. Unfortunately, there wasn’t a good selection of really good ones. A few were variations on the Survivor logo. One was a collegiate-looking design about being part of the relief team. The best was one that read, “FEMA: Federal Employees Missing Again.” I guess I should’ve mentioned that, down here, “FEMA is a four-letter word,” as Amy’s dad said after we got off the plane.

So we checked out the selection of cheap T-shirts, sunglasses and other junk, because nothing says French Quarter to me like a selection of cheap T-shirts. Well, drunken frat boys and momentarily topless girls are a close second, but I’m all about the cheap novelties.

We started walking toward Jackson Square, which is across the street from Jax Brewery, the building where we’re having the wedding. The square was utterly empty, a sight I’ve never seen, including the time in 1999 I got locked out of my hotel room and had to walk around the city all night long. There were tourists around, but not many. They were interspersed with military and police, as well as some locals and some indigents.

Amy had some trepidation when she noticed several cockroaches lying dead on the pavement. “Looks like natural causes,” she said. “I didn’t think cockroaches had natural causes to die from.”

Jax Brewery was sealed up; a couple of the restaurants and stores had signs up saying they’d be open for business on Nov. 1. Across the street, Caf� Du Monde–which Amy was really hoping to hit so she could score some beignets–said that it’ll reopen on Wednesday. There was a sort of anticipatory air in that section of the quarter, as shopkeepers talked about which locations would soon open, and what it took to get their own locations up and running.

We headed over toward Bourbon Street, figuring we’d find an open restaurant for lunch, and also to scope out the bar scene. Pat O’Brien’s is still closed, so I’m afraid you won’t find any photos of me drinking a Hurricane. We checked out Johnny White’s, which was the only bar to stay open through the entire hurricane and its aftermath. It wasn’t distinguished, but that’s Bourbon Street for you.

We thought of stopping in at the Tropical Isle for a Hand Grenade, but we discovered an interesting phenomenon about Bourbon Street: If you remove the reek of beer and tourist-piss, the street and environs smell overwhelmingly of ass. I guess there’s some strange gestalt at work, with a stable, less-offensive smell emerging from the grotesque odors of those streets.

Given the out-of-balance smell, the scene really wasn’t conducive to eating or drinking. We got lunch a few streets over at Caf� Amelie, which was pleasant and overpriced. There were about 10-12 customers in the courtyard, brunching away on the limited menu. We sat inside where it was cooler and split a muffaletta and a roast-beef sammich. Looking outside, I noticed how utterly clear and blue the sky was today. I told Amy that it reminded me of the days after 9/11, which were cruelly lovely. If you’re sitting in a city of ghosts, shouldn’t it be dark and foreboding?

We got back to meandering, and approached Jackson Square from the other end, by the state building and the church. Pirates Alley, home to an eponymous bookstore, was all shuttered doors. I couldn’t remember which doorway was that of the bookstore, and that depressed me a little. I hope it comes back, but that brings me back to the issue of how they’ll bring the city back to life.

There was a pair of musicians playing on the corner, getting tips from the few tourists for their Beatles medley. That square is usually crammed with musicians, psychics and painters, but now it’s bare bones. Dying or sleeping? When will we know?

We talked about how much progress the city’s going to make in the next few months and how our friends who come in for the wedding won’t believe our descriptions of this weekend. If it sleeps, can it dream?

Keep walking:

Muriel’s, with a limited dinner menu for the next few weeks

military Hummers parked up on sidewalks

a couple walking into the Square, the woman photographing the man in front of the statue of Andrew Jackson

an open door in the Jax Brewery building, entryway for the elevators to the condos, a relief of air conditioning in the well-appointed hallway

horse-drawn carriages waiting at the Square, an occasional guest climbing in for a tour of the empty town

refrigerators on the sidewalk, covered in magic-marker scrawls against the White House

the pigeons devouring bread, a gift

We drove home. When I got in, my only NO,LA-based buddy wrote to me. He’s been relocated to Houston, and he’s getting along.

Heading in

We’re heading for NO,LA in a few minutes. We spent yesterday visiting Amy’s extended family, and hearing lots of stories about the last few weeks.

There were plenty of tales about the day-to-day disruptions, the massive lines at the Wal-Mart, the limited menus and lack of napkins at some restaurants, and the like.

On top of that, everyone has stories about people spending Red Cross or FEMA money on TVs and DVD players. Amy came back with a story about a woman who tried buying a TV with her Red Cross money issued on a debit card, then grew irate when told she couldn’t use the card to pay the sales tax.

Something I never thought about

The official VM father-in-law-to-be was suggesting various places we could go for lunch today, while the womenfolk are off doing womenfolkly stuff, like looking at dresses for the maid of honor. One of the hangups about getting a meal out here is that so many places closer to the city are closed, and the remaining sites are pretty busy.

We settled on “figuring it out once we’re on the road.”

So I sat out back to read some (it is a vacation for me, remember), when John came out and said, “Y’know, if you want a real treat, we could break out some MREs!”

Yup: The family actually received a couple of boxloads of Meals Ready to Eat after the flood. He said, “You’d be surprised at what they put in those. I tried a jambalaya one a little while ago, and it wasn’t bad! Came with a little bottle of tabasco, too!”

Now, I don’t know about you, but I assumed that MREs were insanely standardized, with carefully quantified ratios of whatever nurtrients their main consumers (the military) are likely to need. I really didn’t expect to hear that they were capable of sealing up an MRE jambalaya. I asked if they were the “local brand” or something.

He said that he didn’t know, but there aren’t any markings indicating that they’re only prepared for a certain region.

My curiosity running wild, I headed over to the garage to check out the MRE stash. There was one open box, with 6 remaining meals. Each one was sealed in a light brown plastic bag with an “entr�e” contents label (but no indication about the ‘extras,’ like tabasco or coffee). They all sounded pretty good:

Vegetable manicotti

Chicken with cavatelli

Beef teriyaki

Chicken with noodles

Chicken tetrazzini

Spaghetti with meat sauce

At least, they sounded better than that Jack Daniel’s marinade-in-a-bag experiment I tried a few months ago. If I try one out this weekend, I’ll photo-blog it.

Friday morning

Not much exploring planned for today. The official VM fiancee’s off (accompanied by her mom) to a salon where she’ll get a test-run of her wedding-day hair and makeup. For the daytime, I figure on chilling out, reading some Fitzgerald (Tender is the Night, which I evidently read in late 1992, but don’t recall much of), and watching/reading some local news.

The big stories were about how relocated kids may not be attending school in their new districts, how cases of identity theft are proliferating (really macabre story, but after reading about 9/11 identity fraud, nothing really gets to me), and how the bar owners in the French Quarter are protesting the midnight curfew by throwing a big ol’ party tonight.

One of the big questions I have, coming into this trip, is what New Orleans is going to try to rebuild itself as. Is the goal to return to its identity as a tourist destination and haven for drunken frat boys at Mardi Gras? It seems like that’s pretty much a recipe for going back to the socioeconomic messed-up-edness that left so many people stranded 7 weeks ago.

But what can you do to diversify the economic base here, after developing better protection against the weather? (As I read the Times-Pic this morning, I realize this is going to be a really difficult process, insofar as the exact dynamics of the floodwall failure are still unclear.) Is there some sort of industry they can build up here? What will it take to get companies to move down here (and induce employees to relocate)? The city’s been so focused on tourist dollars for so many years, I don’t understand where it can start to change.

The mayor’s short-term fix of adding casinos to several of the large hotels doesn’t seem like a viable plan to me. If you put your city in competition with Las Vegas on that stuff, you’ll get your ass handed to you.

I’m rambling. I’ll try to get a little more coherent once I’ve gotten out to see some more of the place and chatted a little with some people.

Followup

Sorry to cut out abruptly in my last post; the official VM brother-in-law-to-be walked in, so we talked about post-hurricane life for a bit. Now I’m being Uncle Gil for his three-year-old, whom I’ve previously noted sounds just like Meatwad from the Aqua Teen Hunger Force. I’ll show him a bunch of pix from the San Diego Comic-Con folder on my laptop, and try to explain to him that people actually try to make a living by drawing comics. That oughtta distract him.

Back to Thursday afternoon: When we got into the parking lot of the airport, I saw a mini-van that looked as if it had been lived in for weeks. It was the first real sign of what’s going on down here.

It was a pretty freaky experience to drive through some of the residential neighborhoods. From the highway, I saw some garden apartments with massive piles of debris outside, the contents of each home lying in heaps in the parking lot. Massive trees were uprooted and just about every sign and billboard was blown down or wrecked. Windows were blown out of office towers and hotels. I can’t wrap my brain around the idea that all these areas were underwater 7 weeks ago. The absoluteness of it depressed the hell out of me; the idea that nowhere was really safe.

That was compounded by Amy’s parents’ stories about various relatives and acquaintances down here. Some doctors have left the area, with no plans to return. Some have come back, but have almost no clients left. On the highways, there were millions of small signs posted, advertising reopened stores and restaurants, contruction / demolition / de-molding services, lawyers pursuing class action suits against the levees or something. Boarded windows everywhere.