That State

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I could not live there. Too flat, and high humidity summer heat 8-9 months a year. I hate having sweat running down my face and back all the time. Sweat enough here in SW MO in the summer as it is.
And then there are the fire ants. I refuse to live anywhere there are fire ants.
I prefer to live someplace where it gets cold enough for a few days each winter to kill most of the bugs and weeds.
If it weren’t for air conditioning, the population of TX, LA, MS, and AL would only be 20% of what it is now.
Houston and New Orleans are the two sweaty armpits of the United States.
 
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Never been to either one. Love them both.
 
Parts of Louisiana are like a foreign country. This is the interesting part. There is a mix of French, Spanish, African, Creole, American Indian, and a few folks from the British Isles and other parts of Europe. The culture and language are a little different and so is the food. Cajun food has spread and continues to spread to other parts of the country as people continue to learn how good it is. The heat and bugs don't bother me. I live about 100 miles from New Orleans in South Mississippi and my parents didn't put air conditioning in our house until after I went in the Navy in 1966. If I lived anywhere besides where I live now it would be somewhere in South Louisiana.
 
I could not live there. Too flat, and high humidity summer weather 8-9 months a year. I hate having sweat running down my face and back all the time. Sweat enough here in SW MO in the summer as it is.
And then there are the fire ants. I refuse to live anywhere there are fire ants.
I prefer to live someplace where it gets cold enough for a few days each winter to kill most of the bugs and weeds.
If it weren’t for air conditioning, the population of TX, LA, MS, and AL would only be 20% of what it is now.
True, but how do you explain the PI?
 
Other than a couple of weekend trips to NOLA my only long term experience with Louisiana was when I was part of a LE team that did a temporary duty assignment for a few weeks in Orleans Parish after Katrina. Overall, hurricane damage not withstanding, I was not impressed.
 
My only experience was in 1978 when I and a van full of long haired musicians headed to Mardi Gras for three days.

It was one of the best times I have ever had.

One of the guys with us had been there before and told us to take disposable shoes.

Sound wisdom.
 
But how do you really feel about Louisiana ?:D:D:D



I could not live there. Too flat, and high humidity summer weather 8-9 months a year. I hate having sweat running down my face and back all the time. Sweat enough here in SW MO in the summer as it is.
And then there are the fire ants. I refuse to live anywhere there are fire ants.
I prefer to live someplace where it gets cold enough for a few days each winter to kill most of the bugs and weeds.
If it weren’t for air conditioning, the population of TX, LA, MS, and AL would only be 20% of what it is now.
 
The few times I've had it, I really like creole (cajun?) food. Not fast food chain places. (Was at one in Denver a few years ago and it was plumb awful.) I'm talkin' independent restaurants. Per Charlie above, those folks know how to cook.

I"m not much for heat and humidity these days though. I find it wears on me more as I get older.

So, what's the difference between creole and cajun, food wise, ethnicity, and culture wise? Without any knowledge or experience, i kinda feel Cajun is country and creole is city...

Fort Polk La...Nuff said??

Polk. Salad. :)
 
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wife & I spent a week there this past October... mostly in Algiers and NOLA... was a grand time.. and we drove there from Nebraska... America is a beautiful country and people are good & bad everywhere... but the drivers down there need a little help... lol oh I miss the food & music
 
I once had a job (oil related) that required me to visit New Orleans and Cajun Country (Lafayette/Baton Rouge) fairly frequently. I can’t say I was taken with the state and was always happy to return to Texas. Once had a Cajun roommate in college. He may as well have spoken Chinese. I could never understand anything he said.
 
Way back in 1966 I was in Fort Polk LA. Was happy to get out of there when I left and have no desire to ever go back. I think LA's state bird is the Mosquito.
 
The few times I have been to NOLA, i have enjoyed the food and the music. I was there only once in the summer, an experience I am not eager to repeat. Most of what I know about the rest of the state comes from reading James Lee Burke.
As for Texas, I like the Big Bend area. As for the rest of the state, I don’t have anything nice to say about it, so I won’t say it.
 
My wife Wendy's family is Cajun on her dad's side. They are from the Cecilia and Breaux Bridge area on the Teche Bayou in Saint Martin's Parish. Fun place to visit especially for the grub and how if those Cajuns like you they are a good hearted folk and generous. When I met her family on visits I learned that she was not kidding that some living there could have been in the movie Southern Comfort from the early 80s. She did have a great uncle who could have done the one armed trapper character played by Brion James perfectly, same speech, attitude and look but he had both arms. She told me to just stay near her and nobody would skin me alive...she hoped. LOL
 

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