I thought we might have a thread where everyone who has more than a passing familiarity with New Orleans explains what it means to them. Here's mine:
Years and years ago, I hung out on Usenet. I particularly posted a lot on alt.tv.pol-incorrect, the group for fans of Politically Incorrect, Bill Maher's old show.
Through that group I met (online only) a poster named Haele. After a few months of chatting, encouraged by other friends on the group, we realised we had a lot in common beyond politics. We both had vacation coming up that summer, and decided to take a risk and meet.
(Y'all know Haele, btw. She's a DUer.)
We chose New Orleans. I was in Alabama, she was in San Diego. We both liked the idea of the city (she had been there briefly during her Navy years), and the D-Day museum had just opened, something we're both interested in.
We stayed in a beautiful old bed and breakfast in the Warehouse/Garden District, walking distance from everything, including the Quarter. (I haven't had the courage to check and see if it's still there.)
And we had a wonderful week there, essentially falling in love on the spot. We were married within a year, and have been happily married ever since.
Fate was with us on that trip. We made it in late June. The D-Day Museum's grand opening had been 3 weeks before, so the crowds were down. June is muggy and not much of a tourist month, so the crowds were down. It was the first week of soft-shell crab season, one of my favourite dishes. No rain, the heat wasn't as bad as it normally is. I could go on forever about the neat little coincidences and things that happened that, in hindsight, look for all the world like the universe saying, "Hey, you two get together!"
For the last year, we've been planning to make a return trip to the Big Easy. Now we don't know when or even if that will happen.
(And fuck Bush for letting this happen, and fuck anyone who supports him. I just basically cut off a big chunk of my family because they're buying the spin about how it's all local government's fault.)
Laissez le bon temps roulet! They must roll again. No more talk of "low interest loans" or crap like that. We pretend we're rebuilding Iraq. Screw that, let's rebuild New Orleans, only nicer. Everyone gets an upgrade. Levees get an upgrade.
Move the Mississippi to where it wants to go, west of the city, and build a planned industrial area there for ports and such. Then rebuild the original city as a residential/tourist city. We could do it if we had a visionary President. Clinton could do it; Eisenhower could do it; heck, if someone told him about it, Reagan could do it.
Bush, not so much.
So this is what it means to me: Cafe' DuMont, with beignets and iced coffee; the Redfish Grill; Les Carillon on Camp St; Bourbon St.; the Aquarium, with its catfish and piranhas; the paddle wheel boats; my first muffeletta; and the Quarter, all made extra special because I was falling in love with both a city and a woman at the same time.
So why I don't finish this with a song. Leon Redbone's "Border of the Quarter", the best song about New Orleans ever, imo:
I come back to New Orleans
'Cause thats the only place I've been
Where the air's so thick and sweet
Feels like lovin' arms around me
lazy trees, ocean breeze
rainy evenings listening
The music oozing out of every door
its like my heaven made to order
Inside the Border of the Quarter
Lord, ain't no place like I've ever been before
I used watch and wonder at the ones who sing the blues
And try to find out why they'd want to get so low
But even tho I can't explain it now
I join in when they're singin'
And when the song is over ...Lord oh Lord!
There's something about the way the women walk in New Orleans
Or maybe its just me cause I'm love with all I've seen there
Bedroom by the balcony, laughter lifting from the street
Forgetting what my pocket watch is for
Its like my heaven made to order
Inside the Border of the Quarter
Lord, ain't no place like I've ever been before
I used watch and wonder at the ones who sing the blues
And try to find out why they'd want to get so low
But even tho I can't explain it now
I join in when they're singing
And when the song is over ...Lord oh Lord!
I come back to New Orleans
Cause thats the only place I've been
Where the air's so thick and sweet
Feels like lovin' arms around me
lazy trees, ocean breeze
rainy evenings glistening
The music oozing out of every door
its like my heaven made to order
Inside the Border of the Quarter
Lord, ain't no place like I've ever been before