Top 10 reasons to move to New Orleans. Mardi Gras and other festivals.
Top 10 reasons to move to New Orleans. Mardi Gras and other festivals.
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Louisiana Travel: The Best Of New Orleans
Laissez les bons temps rouler! In New Orleans the good times are perpetually rolling down Bourbon Street, which, thanks to the city’s annual Mardi Gras celebration, has quite a party animal reputation. Once you’ve soaked up the scenery of the historic French Quarter, tour the elegant Garden District and meet the colorful characters of Frenchmen Street. Experience the city's supernatural vibe at the Voodoo Museum or by taking a guided ghost or vampire tour through taverns, alleyways, and cemeteries.
No city in North America can compete with New Orleans when it comes to culture, food, historic architecture, joie de vivre and tourism options.
The Crescent City has suffered plagues, wars, imperial regime changes and devastating floods. Yet, it always wakes up with a smile on its face. This may be because its inhabitants step to an easy beat first laid down three centuries ago. Moving at this relaxed pace, visitors are delighted by the French Creole elegance of the Vieux Carre (French Quarter) or the opulence discovered in a streetcar ride through the Garden District and Uptown.
Anytime of year find live music, amazing Creole and Cajun cuisine, fresh seafood, farmers markets, shopping, nightlife and more. During Mardi Gras season, the city becomes the world’s center. Downtown transforms into an adult playground, while parades in residential areas provide children thrilling entertainment. Each spring, the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival moves the focus to the charming Gentilly area and the Fair Grounds Race Course. But no matter the time of year, New Orleans' calendar overflows in celebration.
#neworleans #louisiana #travel #bourbon #thebestof #orleans #new #street #la #mardigras #mardi #gras
Things I LOVE + HATE About NEW ORLEANS!
I live in my Mazda5 and am driving all over the U.S. and Canada, filming all of my adventures using my iPhone! Expand for more info:
Here are my top 3 favorite and least favorite things about New Orleans. saying goodbye as I move on past a city that I have fallen in love with, thank you NOLA... it has been a PLEASURE.
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This is my ALMOST daily vlog following my first experience as a solo traveler while living out of my Mazda5 and shooting on an iPhone! Come experience all the adventure, the fun, the beauty, and ALL the quirk... with me! xoxo
Places to see in ( New Orleans - USA )
Places to see in ( New Orleans - USA )
New Orleans is a Louisiana city on the Mississippi River, near the Gulf of Mexico. Nicknamed the Big Easy, it's known for its round-the-clock nightlife, vibrant live-music scene and spicy, singular cuisine reflecting its history as a melting pot of French, African and American cultures. Embodying its festive spirit is Mardi Gras, the late-winter carnival famed for raucous costumed parades and street parties.
The things that make life worth living – eating, drinking and the making of merriment – are the air that New Orleans breathes. We hope you’re not reading this at home. We hope you’re in New Orleans, because you’re about to eat better than most others. When it comes to food, New Orleans does not fool around. Well, OK, it does: its playful attitude to ingredients and recipes mixes (for example) alligator sausage and cheesecake into a dessert fit for the gods. This sense of gastronomic play is rooted in both deep traditions – truly, this city has one of the few indigenous cuisines in the country – and, increasingly, a willingness to accommodate outside influences, both in terms of technique and ethnicity.
We're not exaggerating when we say there is either a festival or a parade every week of the year in New Orleans. Sometimes, such as during Mardi Gras or Jazz Fest, it feels like there’s a new party for every hour of the day. At almost any celebration in town, people engage in masking – donning a new appearance via some form of costuming – while acting out the satyric side of human behavior. But the celebrations and rituals of New Orleans are as much about history as hedonism, and every dance is as much an expression of tradition and community spirit as it is of joy.
The Crescent City has suffered plagues, wars, imperial regime changes and devastating floods. Yet, it always wakes up with a smile on its face. This may be because its inhabitants step to an easy beat first laid down three centuries ago. Moving at this relaxed pace, visitors are delighted by the French Creole elegance of the Vieux Carre (French Quarter) or the opulence discovered in a streetcar ride through the Garden District and Uptown.
Anytime of year find live music, amazing Creole and Cajun cuisine, fresh seafood, farmers markets, shopping, nightlife and more. During Mardi Gras season, the city becomes the world’s center. Downtown transforms into an adult playground, while parades in residential areas provide children thrilling entertainment. Each spring, the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival moves the focus to the charming Gentilly area and the Fair Grounds Race Course. But no matter the time of year, New Orleans' calendar overflows in celebration.
A lot to see in New Orleans such as :
Bourbon Street
Jackson Square
Garden District
Cafe Du Monde
Frenchmen Street
St. Louis Cathedral
Royal Street, New Orleans
The National WWII Museum
Audubon Aquarium of the Americas
City Park
Audubon Zoo
French Market - Shops of the Colonnade
Faubourg Marigny
Preservation Hall
Tremé
Saint Louis Cemetery No. 2
Lake Pontchartrain
Magazine Street
Audubon Zoo
Audubon Butterfly Garden and Insectarium
The Cabildo
St. Louis Cemetery No. 1
Louis Armstrong Park
Jean Lafitte National Historical Park and Preserve
Harrah's Casino New Orleans
New Orleans Museum of Art
Mercedes-Benz Superdome
Canal Street, New Orleans
Mardi Gras World
Esplanade Avenue, New Orleans
Algiers Point
The Presbytère
Lafayette Cemetery No. 1
New Orleans Historic Voodoo Museum
Woldenberg Park
Louisiana Children's Museum
Carousel Gardens Amusement Park
The Historic New Orleans Collection
Bayou Segnette State Park
Old Ursuline Convent Museum
Bayou St. John
Ogden Museum of Southern Art
Warehouse District
Central Grocery and Deli
New Orleans Pharmacy Museum
Congo Square
Lalaurie Mansion
New Orleans Original Cocktail Walking Tour
New Orleans Botanical Garden
( New Orleans - USA ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting New Orleans . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in New Orleans - USA
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These Are The 10 WORST NEIGHBORHOODS to Live in NEW ORLEANS, LA
Where are the 10 worst neighborhoods to live in New Orleans? We looked at several factors, including quality of life, employment rates, home values and crime. The results: The 10 worst neighborhoods you could live in New Orleans.
The easiest and cheapest way to get from Paris to Versailles
Unfortunately, it is not quite as easy as just hopping on a Paris Métro train. It requires a little extra information, so we've compiled a step-by-step how to video guide.
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Academies et des Arts Hotel Paris
Academies et des Arts Hotel Paris
New Orleans 23 - Abandoned hotel 1
At the intersection of I-10 and Chef Menteur Hwy.
New Orleans gives Detroit a run for its money when it comes to abandoned buildings and houses. I think the DENSITY of abandoned structures is worse in Detroit though, and there are no truly nice parts of the city as there are in New Orleans, so Detroit has a much more post apocalyptic feel to it.
Rue de la Glacière Paris Arrondissement 13e
Rue de la Glacière
Arrondissement 13e
Quartier Maison-Blanche, Croulebarbe
Début 37 boulevard de Port-Royal
Fin 242 rue de Tolbiac
137 rue de la Santé
place Coluche
Longueur 1 275 m
Largeur 18 à 24 m
Le chemin de la Glacière figurait déjà sur les cartes du XVIIe siècle, et conduisait de Paris à Gentilly en passant par le hameau de la Glacière.
Dans cette région, les nombreuses mares et étangs de la Bièvre gelaient l'hiver, et leur glace était récupérée puis entreposée dans des puits maçonnés proches et dans d'anciennes carrières des hauteurs de Montsouris pour être utilisée l'été, d'où le nom de Glacière. Les étangs gelés étaient également fort prisés des patineurs.
La rue de la Glacière a été ouverte dans sa partie nord en plusieurs tronçons au milieu du XIXe siècle, et son nom actuel n'a été attribué à l'ensemble de la rue qu'en 1863, après le rattachement du quartier de la Maison-Blanche à Paris en 1860.
Avant 1894, elle se prolongeait jusqu'à la commune de Gentilly, mais elle a été renommée à cette date rue de l'Amiral-Mouchez depuis le carrefour Alésia-Tolbiac jusqu'à la porte de Gentilly.
Son urbanisation progressive à partir de Paris lui a conféré des caractéristiques diversifiées, plus urbaine et bourgeoise au nord, plus industrielle et populaire au sud.
Une première transformation profonde de ses alentours s'est opérée au cours de la deuxième moitié du XIXe siècle, avec la canalisation progressive de la Bièvre et le comblement partiel de sa vallée donnant naissance aux rues de Tolbiac, Vergniaud, Würtz et Daviel (tracée sur l'ancienne rue Saint-François-de-Sales qui s'arrêtait à la Bièvre) actuelles.
D'autres rues, disparues entre 1955 et 1967, furent établies également à proximité : Maurice-Mayer, Impasse Prévost sud, Palmyre, Bullant, Boutin, de l'Ebre-ancienne petite rue Sainte-Anne-, le passage Victor-Marchand.
Les années 1956 à 1967 ont vu la démolition et la reconstruction presque complètes de la partie comprise entre le boulevard Auguste-Blanqui et la place Coluche (avec rectification du tracé et doublement de la largeur sauf au droit des numéros 114-116 où elle est restée telle quelle) et concernant les îlot 13 et îlot Bièvre, dans le cadre de la résorption des îlots insalubres parisiens.
Flooding in New Orleans area as soon-to-be Tropical Storm Barry swirls in Gulf
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