FOLLOWING THE MISSISSIPPI: A Cluster of Culture (Southern Minnesota)

LYRICAL EXAGGERATION & DONUT INDULGENCE

2014-07-03 11.07.23I’d gone to bed a bundle of nerves from pushing too far the day before, but woke feeling refreshed and excited. As an added bonus, I was surprised to discover by daylight that Red Wing was a lovely red brick town filled with towering churches, historically preserved storefronts, and converted warehouses, all nestled beneath a scenic bluff with a park on top providing a panoramic view of it all. I’d visited Allentown once expecting industrial ruin per the Billy Joel song and was shocked to find a bustling, refurbished downtown district. Similarly, the Dylan song had prepared me for Dickensian bleakness, yet Red Wing turned out to be one of the most charming small towns I visited.

2014-07-03 11.00.35I wandered the streets soaking in the sunshine and hometown vibe for a while—my favorite pastime when visiting a new place—before being lured into a bakery and coffee shop prominently featuring a banner proclaiming it had been voted Minnesota’s best. It had a comfy, rustic vibe and the long display case was packed so full of delectable confections that I instantly knew the low carb diet I’d clung to so stubbornly was about to take the morning off.

As I stared lustily at the menagerie of decadence, I asked the girl behind the counter to steer me to the best option, desperate to get the most bang for my buck with my nutritional sin, but she assured me everything was good. Well, that really narrowed things down!

2014-07-03 11.00.25Normally I steer clear of donuts, considering them the cotton candy of pastry. Krispy Kremes in particular dissolve on the tongue before I’m fully aware of what I’m tasting, yet shortly after that millisecond of indulgence my blood sugar spikes and I ache for bed like suffering a bad flu. These hearty round pastries, however, held a greater promise, and I asked about the day’s special— [Read more…]

FOLLOWING THE MISSISSIPPI: Recreational River (Central Minnesota & Western Wisconsin)

ALL-AMERICAN TOWNS & THE NOT-YET-MIGHTY MISSISSIPPI

2014-07-02 16.52.20

Little Falls

The shores of the Mississippi River straightened out south of Brainerd, and as I approached a string of pleasant small towns hugging its banks I realized I wasn’t going to reach Iowa before dark—not even close. As the sun dipped towards the western horizon I felt the stress of my own expectations; tomorrow would mark a full week in Minnesota, the first of ten states bordering the river. I’d built some flexibility into my trip but not enough to spend two months meandering back to New Orleans!

Bucolic Riverfront Park In Little Falls

Bucolic Riverfront Park In Little Falls

Despite my stress, I wanted to see as much as humanly possible so around 4 o’clock pulled into the small waterfront park at Little Falls—the next significant small town after Brainerd—to stretch my legs and snap a few pictures of the dam built upon its namesake. It seems ever town in Minnesota maintains such a pastoral park curled up against the river, and in the glistening later afternoon sunlight teens idly lounged about on summer break while cubicle bound professionals paused on their way home for a moment in the sun. Unfortunately, I didn’t have long to linger, wanting to get as close to the border as possible before nightfall.

2014-07-02 16.48.31I only made it an hour and two towns closer, however, (skipping industrial St. Cloud) before stopping again. Mike and Kelly Chase, friends from my Krewe of Rocckus adventure that kicked off this blog, had invited me to [Read more…]

FOLLOWING THE MISSISSIPPI: Veritas Caput (True Head)

A RIVER BY ANY OTHER NAME (OR BRANCH)

"I crush you with my fingers, great river!"

“I crush you with my fingers, great river!”

Identifying a river seems to be an obvious endeavor, but choosing which trickle of rainwater is the true source can be as tricky as determining which grain of sand begins a beach. Thus, it wasn’t until 1832 that the source of the Mighty Mississippi was established when a local Native American led Henry Schoolcraft—a geologist and U.S. diplomat on an Indian peacekeeping mission who decided to take a side trip after failing to find the source with previous expeditions—to the portage flowing from a lake that Schoolcraft named Itasca. As with any such claim, controversy quickly ensued and other ambitious explorers tried to refute his claim.

2014-06-30 16.33.15Modern scientists even question whether the northern branch of the great confluence should be considered the ‘true river,’ for the Missouri River, branching to the west, dwarfs the length of the entire recognized Mississippi while the Ohio River—branching to the east—contributes by far the greatest volume of water. Yet while debate may continue in scientific communities, Schoolcraft triumphed with historians, mapmakers, and vacationers seeking to stride the humble origins of the nation’s greatest river.

SEEKING TRUE HEAD

2014-06-30 17.06.07Schoolcraft created the name Itasca by combining the Latin words veritas (true) and caput (head), though he might as well have called it Lake Disappointment! Early writers and naturalists, eager to witness the birth of the Mighty Mississippi, decried this marshy, log and debris jammed outlet as an unworthy beginning for the nation’s legendary artery.

Rendering of Veritas Caput As It Was

Rendering of Veritas Caput As It Was

Although the modern aesthetic would tend towards preseveration, depression era work corpsmen decided to [Read more…]

Mardi Gras Marches On: The Gravitational Center of the NOLA Calendar

THE NOLA NEW YEAR

Me, Aimee, Reid, & Mark at the Morpheus Captain's Crawl

Me, Aimee, Reid, & Mark at the Morpheus Captain’s Crawl

I have written many time about how Mardi Gras is a year round event. Even though 2014’s Carnival Season ended with Ash Wednesday on March 5th, minds immediately turned to 2015’s festivities. In fact, only a handful of days into Lent my ever enthusiastic float mate, Don, posted the first of his now regular countdown updates on Morpheus’s Facebook wall: Only 342 days until we ride! Mardi Gras—not New Years or Christmas—is the epicenter of the New Orleans calendar, drawing all other days and events into its orbit.

In the opening pages of this blog I asserted:

Mardi Gras isn’t a few weeks of planning followed by a big blowout.  It’s a year of preparation and perspiration that unfolds over several weeks like a military campaign hell-bent on spreading heaven throughout the darkest months of the year.

This thesis was confirmed last summer during my visit to Mardi Gras World—a tourist attraction that provides the public a behind-the-scenes view of how Mardi Gras is built. During my tour I learned most krewes hand the facility’s conceptual artists their theme for next year’s parade on Ash Wednesday—or sometimes before. Even in the more informal and DIY Chewbacchus my sub-krewe of K.R.A.P. was bouncing around plans for a Jabba the Hut’s Barge float next year before the final parades had rolled. (Since I’d yet to embark on My Low Carb Lent to shed my ‘transplant twenty-five,’ I offered to play Jabba but co-leader Rachel Unger shot back that [Read more…]

Lundi Gras 2014: Putting The M In Orpheus & Cowboy Mouth Gets A Cavity

ALL GOOD NOT-QUITE-BELL-CURVES MUST COME TO AN END

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Chilling Out (Literally) At Orpheus

I’m tempted to describe the final weeks of My Year of Mardi Gras as a steep bell curve of excitement, but that wouldn’t be accurate. There were multiple peaks on this wild rollercoaster ride, not a steady ascent. One of my primary missions in moving here was to ‘imbed’ in at least one Mardi Gras krewe and I wound up both walking with an alternative krewe and riding with a traditional krewe, allowing me to compare and contrast. As expected, these were by far the highlights of my year here, although the entire  Mardi Gras 2014 season has been a blast.

The Crew At Krewe du Brew

The Crew At Krewe du Brew

Carnival actually began January 6th, and the prep and planning stretched far beyond that, leading to a slow build of anticipation. Then there were three weekends of parading starting with Krewe du Vieux which I was able to share with my Treme addicted brother. Even though my ride with Morpheus that Friday and walk with Chewbacchus the Saturday before were the culmination of my ambition, I still had guests in town so enjoyed all the aspects of Mardi Gras to it’s fullest. However, by the time we met up with Chip and Eloy for brunch at Krewe du Brew Monday afternoon where I was finishing a blog post before heading to the Cowboy Mouth Lundi Gras show at the Riverwalk, it was clear we were about to descend the final peak.

Not helping matters, the beautiful weather of the weekend had given way to a chilly Lundi Gras (Fat Monday) on the one Monday you actually care about the weather. So after warming up on coffee and pressed croissant sandwiches, we all piled into Eloy’s truck and bundled up in blankets as we looked for parking downtown.

DANNY CATTAN ABIDES

The Man, Danny Cattan! Lundi Gras 2013

The Man, Danny Cattan!
Lundi Gras 2013

Despite the weather, the downtown was packed so we wound up having to wind our way to the top of the Canal Place parking garage on the border of the French Quarter and the CBD. This put us right between [Read more…]

Mardi Gras 2014: Ancient Druids & Nyx in Pictures

ANCIENT DRUIDS & NYX: OSHUN & CLEOPATRA

 

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Nyx Grand Marshal Susan Spicer

Yesterday was rainy, cold, and wet. Even at a little after 5:00 as I rushed to Krewe du Brew, my favorite New Orleans coffee shop, to blog and try and beat the closing of St. Charles Avenue it was cold and drizzly.

2014-02-26 20.29.03

The K.R.A.P. Krewe Gathers

Ah, but the Gods of Carnival shined upon us. The ladies (and Pimp Daddy Bryan ‘Rocksteady’) from K.R.A.P. were gathering to watch two of our own parade in Nyx, the all female krewe that formed three years ago with Muses membership (the reigning sarcastic hipster queen of female krewes) and has quickly swelled to over 1,300 riders and rivals Muses for top diva–countering their custom shoe throws with hand decorated purses.

2014-02-26 19.43.59

The Purple Pirate Cradles Krewe du Brew Coffee On A Night When Ice Cream Wouldn’t Melt

K.R.A.P. co-founder and Thunderlord Rachel Unger was riding in float 21 and last-minute Mordor refugee Ann Thompson was in #12. A few others were mixed in as well. Their Chewbacchus compatriots made [Read more…]

Mardi Gras 2014: Oshun & Cleopatra (Flanking Armies Armed With Beads)

WHAT? PARADES DURING MARDI GRAS?

Which One Will It Be?!

Which One Will It Be?!

With Mardi Gras now in full swing, I’ve been running like mad (and slowed by either a cold or vicious allergy attack!), so yesterday–eve of my Chewbacchus parade debut–I was in a flurry making last minute touches to my costume. I won’t tell you what it is but, being a member of Krewe of Really Awesome Parodies, I came up with a really awesome parody of popular Star Trek character–and probably not one you expect! You’ll want to tune in for pictures! Yet, after spending the day finishing a post, making a sign for my costume, and following through with some promotion for Jeremiah’s Scrapbook, it was 4 o’clock before I headed out the door to the Salvation Army Thrift and Wal-Mart for an embarrassing self-fitting that perhaps I’ll detail later.

Arriving back home at 6:15, I tossed leftovers in the oven to warm, intending to go help with the set-up of the Chewbacchus after party. As I waited, I clicked on FB only to see my friend Daren (in Baton Rouge, no less), announcing the start of the first parades! Oshun would roll down St. Charles at 6:00 followed by Cleopatra at 6:30. I was so busy preparing for my own parade that I’d forgotten there was a whole weekend of revelry! Some job I’m doing of covering it. Doh! I’ll miss today’s parades as I hit the pre-party with K.R.A.P. as soon as this post is up (so excuse any rough edges!), so didn’t want to miss last night–the first wave of traditional parades rolling down St. Charles.

PHILLIP SEYMOUR SARRETT (SANS MY BUSTY HELEN HUNT)

One thing New Orleans taught me is [Read more…]

And So It Begins: Krewe du Vieux Goes ‘Where The Vile Things Are’ in 2014

THE TRUE START OF MARDI GRAS CARNIVAL SEASON

2014-02-15 19.08.01Although Carnival season begins on January 6th, the celebration truly kicks off just over three weeks before Mardi Gras when the bawdy and satirical Krewe du Vieux rolls through Marigny and the French Quarter, the first of nearly sixty processions that will roll through greater New Orleans area by Fat Tuesday. Thus, the excitement was palpable as my oldest brother (who’d flown in for this event) and I drove downtown Saturday afternoon through creeping traffic. Betweeen Krewe du Vieux and the NBA All-star Game nearly everyone had somewhere to be!

When we finally reached the far side of the French Quarter, however, Esplanade above Rampart was packed, as was all of Marigny, so we parked deep in a sketchy neighborhood past St. Claude and wound our way towards Frenchmen.

Jerry had decided to come this particular weekend after becoming intrigued by [Read more…]

Glacée Gras: Do You Know What It Means To Freeze New Orleans?

LIKE MARINES KEEPING ALOFT A FALLING FLAG

Mardi Gras flagNow that Mardi Gras prep is in full swing I had plenty to document this past week such as Set Your Phasers to Stunning, the Chewbacchus fashion/talent show and all out nerd blitzkrieg, as well as shopping at Plush Appeal for Morpheus throws. Alas, that insanely pervasive arctic blast had other plans. Have no fear, for this is New Orleans. Though your plans made fade quicker than NOLA city services in sub-freezing temperatures, some new and unexpected weirdness will rise up to take its place like Marines keeping aloft a falling flag.

Disclaimer: I am about to take the piss with NOLA natives and long-time residents for their freak out over a little almost ice, but considering the relish with which they gleefully correct newcomers for pronouncing Burgundy like the wine (uh, it’s bur-GUN-dee) and Calliope like the Greek god (it’s cow-LEE-ope, duh), a little turn-about is fair play!

A NEW WHO IN DR. WHOVILLE

dr_tom_baker_4 As fate would have it, my next older of two brothers flew into town this week (my oldest is coming for Krewe du Vieux weekend) to escape the frigid temperatures and licorice smelling chemical water back in West Virginia where we were raised. Sadly for him the cold weather followed on his heels and as for the water, well, despite a lack of recent known chemical spills I’m not about to vouch for the water supply in a city infamous for issuing boil advisories hours or even days after the fact.

Whoville-CreditThe weather already began running interference before he arrived, and his Saturday afternoon flight was delayed until during Set Your Phasers to Stunning. This was particularly disappointing since, whereas I grew up the quiet sci-fi geek, Kevin (after a rocky start) blossomed into Mr. Popularity by high school and was the athletic partier in the family. Suffice it to say that Kevin wouldn’t know Dr. Who from a Who in Whoville; thus I was looking forward to his reaction to a pageant of cross-gender Doctors rocking hula hoops, thundering and blundering speeches by frumpy Thors, and hip-hop Chewbaccas doing dance routines. Oh, but other weirdness awaited.

SHE-WOOKIE ANATOMY & LAST LAUGHS

DSCN0198Between Saturday night and Monday afternoon I introduced my NOLA virgin brother to many of the staples for first time visitors: red beans at Camellia Grill, a Ferdi’s Special at Mother’s, a muffaletta from Central Grocery, a Big Ass Beer on Bourbon, some cheap trinkets from the French Market, a ride down St. Charles. We also squeezed in a few firsts for me such as a Pelicans game and happy hour at Landry’s overlooking Lake Pontchartrain (he wanted to see boats). We fit in a lot in a short time but had to be home Monday night because I was hosting a K.R.A.P. craft night. This gathering had been rescheduled from Friday because everyone else was suffering from some sort of creeping crud (and somehow, despite not showing up, they still managed to give it to me!) but seeing as we’d missed Set Your Phasers to Stunning, I was now glad that it fell during my brother’s visit.

IMG_3542At first Kevin was a little skittish, hiding in the kitchen where I was simmering red beans and gumbo for the gang, but we soon coaxed him into the dining and had him assemble Wookie merkin panties. (I know my brother and what holds his attention!) Although I had to explain merkins to him three times he was quite amused at the whole affair, and soon the engineer in him emerged and he began fretting over correct placement of the furry patches. “It doesn’t matter!” the K.R.A.P.ateers jeered. “We’re throwing them to strangers we’ll never see again.” Besides, how do you know a she-Wookie’s anatomy isn’t irregular?!

THE QUIET CONFIDENCE OF COMPETENT CITY SERVICES

IMG_3543As we all worked at different tasks news of record cold and potential ice dominated the conversation. The temperature was just starting to drop yet schools and city government had already been shut down the next day. Radio personalities warned that ice could form on roads and sidewalks so only leave the house if absolute necessary.

IMG_3544As she screen printed bandoliers, Chrissy mused that northerners must be having the last laugh at New Orleansians who’d scoffed at their disorganized and panicked hurricane prep. Not that chatter from official channels was helping. Per Rachel, Entergy had already declared we’d probably lose power citywide and it would take them days for them to restore it. So much for instilling confidence.

MAJOR UPROAR OVER MODERATE WEATHER

DSCN0181Tuesday morning as we drank coffee the temperature still hadn’t dropped to freezing though it was falling fast. We decided to walk to Camellia Grill for a late breakfast but as we donned our coats a frigid rain began to fall. I grew up in the snow and have a 4WD if needed, so hit the road. It was fine but eerily still. At the Camellia Grill, instead of a line out the door there were only a handful of patrons and the normally lively staff seemed miffed at our arrival. They declared they were closing soon, though a few more customers trickled in after us and we managed to coax a delicious if subdued breakfast out of them.

Afterwards we drove down Magazine Street where everything was shut despite the fact that not a hint of ice had yet formed. Kevin wanted to see the casino so, despite the fact that I’m not much of a gambler I figured it would be warm and, more importantly, open. Downtown we parked just a few blocks away from Harrah’s though it felt further with a damp wind now cutting through our coats. Inside the afternoon crowd was sparse and conversation was all about the weather. The bartender at the video poker bar where we eventually settled was fretting over getting home while the tourist from Maryland beside us who taught my brother to play Jacks & Better was as amused as we were about the panic over temperatures in the 20s and 30s with a chance of ice. This would be moderate winter weather back north, and you’d have to shut everything down north of the Mason Dixon line from November to April in this case. Yes, I realize they don’t have salt trucks down here, but there wasn’t even yet ice on the roads. Still, if the roads did get slick I wouldn’t want to be driving past people who don’t know how to drive on slick roads!

WHEN A DOLLAR IS WORTH MORE THAN A DOLLAR

DSCN0317Upon arrival Kevin had been lured in by a Blackjack machine run by an animated woman with big boobs and a tight bustier (apparently the casino knows my brother too!) He’d walked away with a $2.50 credit that he kept alive at the video poker table for a couple of hours, scoring free drinks a long the way. Being a book nerd apathetic to the lures of gambling, I downloaded a free Kindle book of David Copperfield on my phone and read until out two hour meter ran out. Despite the city being shut down I was paranoid that meter maids would be the one exception but when I went outside I was stopped by heavy, frigid rain.  Any meter maid who would brave that deserved to snag a violator.

When I returned Kevin, tired of me watching, fed five dollars into my machine. I do enjoy cards—just not giving away my money—so the stakes were low enough for me to relax. After an hour and a half and three free drinks I cashed out at $10, gave Kevin back his five, tipped four to the bartenders, and walked away with $1. It was hardly a fortune, but anytime you go out drinking and leave with a dollar more than when you came it’s a win.

GLACEE GRAS GHOST TOWN

DSCN0336It was almost 5:30 when we left and the rain had stopped, but the wind was vicious. We tried to walk to Bourbon Street, just a few blocks away, but the bitter cold turned us back to the truck. Nearby Domenica, the Italian restaurant run by famous NOLA chef John Besh, was one of the few places open so we rushed over to try and catch their famous happy hour that ended as six. As we ordered a round of drinks, though, the bartender let us know, none too politely, that there was no room at the inn if we wanted food. That’s fine. There’s no room in my wallet for a tip, either.

DSCN0337Instead we walked over to Bourbon Street only to be greeted by the unprecedented sight of an empty street. Even this summer during the slowest season when l lived around the corner there was always something happening—a few drunk tourists wandering from bar to bar and a lone loser trying to toss beads from a balcony they’d overpaid to access. This Tuesday night, however, for Glacee Gras (Icy Tuesday) the streets were deserted except for the reflection of neon glistening off wet black asphalt.

ANOTHER HISTORIC FIRST ON BOURBON

DSCN0333Food was the first priority, but our only options on or near Bourbon Street were Bourbon House—too expensive and upscale; Desire Oyster Bar—packed to the rafters; the Erin Rose—Kevin thinks po-boys have too much bread; a touristy Cajun seafood joint—been there, done that; or the one and only pizza and daiquiri shop open. I tried to steer Kevin away from this last option—Bourbon Street pizza is only intended to be consumed following 3 hurricane, 2 hand grenades, and a more beers than you can remember. When he declared it the worst pizza he’d ever had I thought back to going to Denny’s for breakfast one morning and realizing why you usually end up at such places at 3 a.m.

DSCN0343At least 90% of the French Quarter was shut down but there were a few music clubs and, ahem, gentlemanly establishments, open. We chose the most happening bar and settled in as Kevin declared us Kings of Bourbon Street. Kevin is always the life of the party and a master of recruiting whoever’s close into his social circle so he went to work befriending the modest crowd that had braved the weather, including a Texan in ten-gallon hat who offered him a job. I played along for a while, but the crowd, the music, and the twirling carnival of a Bourbon Street soon grew monotonous so I pulled my out my phone and returned to David Copperfield. I’m pretty certain I’m the only person in history to sit in a Bourbon Street bar reading Charles Dickens on their phone, but when my battery faded so did my mood. Still, Kevin was having the time of his life and talked me down with declarations of a once in a lifetime opportunity to hang like this every time I attempted to leave.

DSCN0338Finally after midnight and six hours in a smoky Bourbon Street dive I put my foot down. As we walked back to the truck, the few open clubs were still humming but the streets were empty…and free of ice. There were a few slick patches on the sidewalk, but we managed to navigate this icy minefield and survive Glacee Gras: The Almost Ice Storm of 2014.

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. . . Or Mor-pheus Fun To Shop For Your Mardi Gras Throws?!

KITSCH CRACK FOR A MARDI GRAS JUNKIE
Krewe Dat!

Krewe Dat!

Our January Morpheus meeting, like the October meeting mentioned previously, was held at Plush Appeal—a Mardi Gras warehouse that supplies the costumes and throws for Morpheus and other krewes. Imagine those corner party stores that have a tiny section for every holiday imaginable but come to life for Halloween, only expanded to the size of a warehouse and dedicated solely to all things Mardi Gras. Yikes! A Mardi Gras junkie like me could go broke here in a hurry. No wonder riders spend thousands of dollars every year on throws. There are beads of every theme imaginable, stuffed toys, plastic instruments and novelties, decorative eye glasses, hats, masks, cups, goblets, light-up and bouncy balls, Saints cowbells, LSU plush footballs, Frisbees, whistles, penis whistles, boobs in any form that can accommodate two mounds, signs, decorations, and anything else you can imagine in a Mardi Gras theme.

While it’s a blast making your own throws, I must admit that I’m a sucker for the plush and plastic kitsch that flows like Abita Springs during Carnival. Any other time of year I’d decry such mass-produced Chinese trinkets as [Read more…]