New Orleans Bars | French Quarters Bar Hop!!
In this video we explore the New Orleans French Quarter in the best way possible - through a bar hop!
The bars featured in this video are:
1) Tropical Isle's
*Home of the Hand Grenade, and also famous for the Shark Attack, Horny Gator, and Tropical Itch.
2) Pirate's Alley Cafe
piratesalleycafe.com/
622 Pirate Alley, New Orleans, LA 70116
*Watch absinthe be prepared the traditional way, and see if you can spot a green fairy.
3) Fritzel's European Jazz Pub
733 Bourbon Street, New Orleans, LA 70117
*Known for the live traditional jazz music every night
4) Lafitte's Blacksmith Shop
941 Bourbon Street, New Orleans, LA 70116
*Lafitte's in the oldest continuous running bar in the United States and is known for their Voodoo daiquiri.
5) Fat Tuesday
633 Bourbon St, New Orleans, LA 70130
*Offers 21 different daiquiris to choose from, or mix & match. Their signature drink is the 190 Octane made with orange juice and everclear.
6) Tujague's Restaurant
823 Decatur St, New Orleans, LA 70116
*Founded in 1856, Tujague's is the birthplace of The Grasshopper.
Tell us about your favorite New Orleans bars in the comments below!
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About This Video:
New Orleans, NOLA, French Quarter, Bourbon Street, Frenchmen Street, Tropical Isle, Tropical Isle's, Hand Grenade, Shark Attack, Horny Gator, Tropical Itch, Pirates Alley Cafe, Pirate Alley, Jackson Square, Absinthe, Absinthe New Orleans, Fritzel's European Jazz Pub, Jazz music, traditional jazz music, Lafitte's Blacksmith Shop, Voodoo daiquiri, Oldest Bar in America, Fat Tuesday, Daiquiri, 190 Octane, Everclear, Tujague's Restaurant, The Big Easy, Grasshopper, Decatur Street, The Weekend Warrior, Travel Blog, Best Bars in America, Best places to drink in New Orleans, Bars in the French Quarter, Drinks in the French Quarter, Best places in drink in the French Quarter, Bars on Bourbon Street, Best Bars on Bourbon Street, Drinks on Bourbon Street, Best places in drink on Bourbon Street, Bar Hop, Bar Hopping in New Orleans, Bar Hopping in the French Quarter, Bar Hopping on Bourbon Street, Things to do in New Orleans, Drinks, Bars, New Orleans Drinks, New Orleans Bar.
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Navy Band Performs Taio Cruz's Dynamite in front of Tropical Isle Bourbon in New Orleans
The United States Navy Band performs Taio Cruz's Dynamite after the Krewe of Cork parade in front of Tropical Isle Bourbon (Home of the Hand Grenade) in the French Quarter on January 25, 2013
Singing in Tropical Isle New Orleans to Yesterday
Singing in Tropical Isle New Orleans to Yesterday
New Orleans, Louisiana | Bourbon Street
Our day in NOLA didn't disappoint! Good times down in the Bayou.
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Bourbon Street, New Orleans, Louisiana
Bourbon Street
Bourbon Street - New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
- Created at TripWow by TravelPod Attractions
Bourbon Street New Orleans
The partying never stops on Bourbon Street, the French Quarter's liveliest and wildest thoroughfare, where the rhythmic sounds of jazz, country western, Dixieland and sultry blues permeate the air. Brimming with life, you'll find everything from shopping to music to Cajun food to nightclubs.
Read more at:
Travel blogs from Bourbon Street:
- I should call it, A Day at the Circus Walking Up & Down Bourbon Street I headed into New Orleans at 2h00 with plans to stick around until after midnight
- The nightlife is crazy with the French Quarter's famous Bourbon Street and its bars
- Had a mooch around and after eating some dinner, we went to Bourbon Street
Read these blogs and more at:
Photos from:
- New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
Photos in this video:
- Bourbon Street. New Orleans, LA by Sschwaiger from a blog titled Day 16, 17 & 18: New Orleans, Louisiana
- ; Bourbon Street in day time by Fiscarlos from a blog titled Jazz and voulenteer in New Orleans...
- The infamous Bourbon Street by Julesjb from a blog titled Jazz'n it up...
- ....And Bourbon street now by Jennydavey from a blog titled Strolling the City on Cinco de Mayo
- Bourbon street then.... by Jennydavey from a blog titled Strolling the City on Cinco de Mayo
- Bourbon Street Chaos by C_villa from a blog titled The Big Easy....Always an Experience
- Bourbon Street by Shonandgraham from a blog titled The Big Easy
Bourbon street New Orleans USA
recorded on March 17, 2015
Moving Image Archive Serge de Muller
Audubon Acuario de las Americas de New Orleans, Louisiana
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El Audubon Aquarium de las Americas es un acuario en New Orleans, Louisiana, USA. Reconocido como uno de los principales acuarios en los Estados Unidos de America.
I didn't like Bourbon Street --- New Orleans
I was in New Orleans for the Womens Travel Festival (which was awesome) and spent an extra day exploring after the conference. I basically walked around Frenchman Street, Magazine Street, and finally hit up Bourbon Street for the first time. I was not excited about what I saw. I didn't like bourbon street.
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NEW ORLEANS VLOG| TRAVEL VLOG| BURBON STREET
Brandon Miller and Louisiana Inferno-New Orleans
Brandon Miller and Louisiana Inferno at Tropical Isle's Bayou Club in New Orleans, LA on Wednesday 9-17-14. Brandon Miller was apparently the leader of a Zydeco band called the Bonoffs at one time. Brandon was singing a Waltz in French and I would appreciate help from a French speaker out there who could translate the words so I can get the name of the song.
BEYOND THE BELTWAY: Louisiana isle home to the first US climate refugees
How will U.S. President Trump's decision to pull out of the Paris Climate Accord affect the world and the people in his own country? CGTN went to the tip of the southern U.S. state of Louisiana to look at the impact of rising tides for our series Beyond the Beltway.
JOHNNY'S TRIP TO NEW ORLEANS (pt .3)-SHARK ATTACK!!!
I finely make a fun trip or you guys, i go to the aquarium and there is sharks, penguins, alligators, even birds and more...
Hurricane Isaac approached the gulf coast [HD] New Orleans | Louisiana
Hurricane Isaac made landfall this evening in southeastern Louisiana, with winds of 80 mph that spread out over an area 200 miles wide.
It was a Category 1 hurricane as it came ashore, and the National Hurricane Center warned of strong winds and a dangerous storm surge occurring along the northern Gulf Coast.
The storm threatened to drop more than a foot of rain -- up to 20 inches in some areas -- from Biloxi, Miss., to New Orleans. The hurricane center said a storm surge -- the bulge of water that a storm pushes ahead of itself -- of 8.8 feet had been measured at Shell Beach, La.
Isaac, a massive and slow-moving storm, reached the coastline just a day short of the seventh anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, which devastated New Orleans in 2005. New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu said Isaac's path is similar to Katrina's and the anniversary has created a high level of anxiety.
USA - Southern Hospitality 2011 - Cajun Washboard Music
July 12, 2011. Another drunken stumble down New Orleans' Bourbon Street brought us to this place, Tropical Isle's Bayou Club. All I wanted was some music with no line-ups and a Hand Grenade (delicious and powerful drink) and in doing so, I inadvertantly got invited up on stage with another woman to wear a washboard vest and play it with some spoons.
I gotta say, my moves were pretty slick - even though the music was highly repetitive.
Laissez Les Bon Temps Roulez Rachandstu's photos around New Orleans, United States (louisiana)
Preview of Rachandstu's blog at TravelPod. Read the full blog here:
This blog preview was made by TravelPod using the TripAdvisor™ TripWow slideshow creator.
Entry from: New Orleans, United States
Entry Title: Laissez Les Bon Temps Roulez
Entry:
There's always something happening in the Big Easy (N'Awlins to the locals). Perhaps that's the reason we seemed to spend twenty hours a day on our feet while we were there! If we weren't admiring the stylish and historic French Quarter, sailing across the Mississippi on the Algiers ferry or walking around the devastated lower-ninth ward then we were probably listening to an improbably rowdy jazz band on Frenchman St. We didn't sit down much or get a great deal of sleep but we had a great time!
The French Quarter was traditionally where the Louisiana Cajun plantation owners had their winter homes, attended society functions and dressed up in ridiculous outfits for Mardi Gras. Today, the area is mostly pedestrianised and looks colourful with 18th Century Spanish colonial architecture and intricate wrought-iron balustrades running along the balconies. The grand Jackson Square and St Louis Cathedral are a focal point for the area, and (as we found) are best enjoyed whilst eating Beignet and sipping café au lait in Café du Monde. Combine this with buskers on every street corner, Cajun food and a chilled out vibe and you have yourselves an amazing city!
At night, the area really starts to hot up with the action centred around bar-lined Bourbon Street, for all intents and purposes the largest outdoor nightclub in the world! There's always music in the air, with so many bands on the street competing for your ears that you could (and we did) spend all night watching them, and not even walk through the doors of a proper bar. There are many 'hole-in-the-wall' bars that sell a variety of ridiculously strong drinks (think: '30 varieties of super-strong Daiquiri!', 'Hurricanes containing 150-proof everclear!', or 'Cherry Bombs made from 190-proof anti-freeze!'). If these don't sound strong enough, you can always opt for the ever-popular Tropical Isles Hand Grenade, advertised as 'The most powerful drink in New Orleans!' and served in a fluorescent green hand grenade shaped glass (we kept one as a souvenir of course!)
Bourbon St isn't the best place in the city for music. Rather, we were told once we'd had our fill of Bourbon St drinks to head down to Frenchman St, where a few of the clubs (Maison, the Spotted Cat and the Blue Nile for starters) had consistently excellent bands playing everything from Dixie to washboard Blues. We had three really fun nights out along these lines, always with a different crowd of people that we'd met in the hostel, or even on the streetcar!
On a more serious note, we spent one morning driving and walking around the devastated lower-ninth ward, one of the areas most affected by the post-Katrina floods. The biggest surprise for us was after five years just how many empty houses and plots there still are. Many, many former residents left before or immediately after Katrina swept through the city and haven't yet returned. Of course, you can imagine how this makes rebuilding the area, and perhaps more importantly the community very difficult. No-one yet has come up with a perfect solution, but a group of environmental consultants from California were more than happy to show us around theirs: the world's first affordable, platinum standard green houses. These were very impressive indeed. Think solar panels, recycled water and geothermal air-conditioning (strange for a state where there are no recycling facilities available, everything to eat and drink with is disposable and ...
Read and see more at:
Photos from this trip:
1. And another!
2. The drive through 4 states begins
3. Another state border
4. New Orleans downtown in the distance
5. The St Charles streetcar
6. Posh houses in the Garden District
7. Ready for Mardi Gras
8. Mardi Gras mask
9. Cheers! on Bourbon Street
10. One of the many Bourbon Street bands
11. Deserteed house in lower ninth
12. Lower ninth quarter
13. A parade we happened acrosss in lower ninth
14. C**** Street
15. Daiquiri machines
16. The Riverwalk
17. Bourbon Street hole in the wall
18. Jackson Square
19. Buskers and artists in the square
20. Buskers
21. The oldest pub in USA
22. More buskers
23. Beignet and coffee in Cafe du Monde
24. Buskers at Cafe du Monde
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Early November Tornadoes Ravage Louisiana
On November 5th, several tornadoes ripped through the southern United States. Here are some of the wildest videos from the day.
More: WeatherNationTV.com
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Table For 6: Rib Room At Omni Royal Orleans
The Omni Royal Orleans, affectionately known as the Royal O, maintains tradition while dipping a toe into the modern culinary realm in the Rib Room.
Wake Up America! The Weather is wilder than you realize! Gordon + Hurricanes
Gulf Coast. We've got a lot of flooding. Hawaii. You've got a lot of moisture headed your way. And the future of hurricanes is unknown but signs point to dangerous and many. Jebi is causing a major disaster in Japan. Don't be scared. Have a plan. Be prepared. Work together. Stay Cool. God bless everyone - T
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Tropical Storm Gordon to strike US Gulf coast at near hurricane strength Tuesday evening
Gordon, currently a strong tropical storm, may make landfall as a Category 1 hurricane over the central Gulf coast Tuesday evening.
The storm made landfall over the southern tip of the Florida Peninsula on Monday.
Gordon made a first landfall near Flamingo, Florida, shortly after 9 a.m. EDT Monday, according to AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Rob Miller.
As a result, Gordon is likely to make two landfalls in the United States this week, Miller said.
Gordon is moving quickly along and is expected to make a second landfall, perhaps as a Category 1 hurricane, along the corridor from Louisiana to Mississippi during late Tuesday or Tuesday night.
Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards declared a state of emergency Monday afternoon ahead of the storm's expected arrival in southeast Louisiana.
A voluntary evacuation has been ordered in Grand Isle, Louisiana, Mayor David Camardelle announced on the town's Facebook page on Monday.
Expect surf and sea conditions to build to dangerous levels over the northeastern and north-central Gulf of Mexico and adjacent shoreline on Tuesday. Bathers should use caution throughout the Gulf coast for occasional large waves and occasionally strong rip currents into midweek.
Strong wind gusts, battering waves, above-normal tides, minor coastal flooding, flash flooding and a couple of isolated tornadoes and waterspouts will be concerns in coastal areas from the upper Florida Gulf coast to the Louisiana Mississippi Delta region into Tuesday night.
Sporadic power outages are likely and a few trees may be downed as the storm makes landfall near the Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana borders during Tuesday evening and moves inland to the northwest across southern Mississippi and northern and eastern Louisiana during Tuesday night and Wednesday.
Since Gordon is likely to make landfall around the time of low tide Tuesday evening, a storm surge of 2 feet with the potential for a local surge up to 4 feet is most likely. Expect some low-lying coastal roads that typically take on water during above-normal tides to be flooded.
However, the risk of wind damage and flooding would increase if significant strengthening occurs.
By the time of landfall late Tuesday or Tuesday night, Gordon may reach Category 1 hurricane strength.
Flooding to be greatest risk from Gordon
People should not let their guard down even if Gordon does not reach hurricane strength and remains a tropical storm at landfall.
Anyone living or traveling through New Orleans, Biloxi, Mississippi, and Mobile, Alabama, should prepare for potential travel delays and disruptive flooding around the middle part of the week related to direct impacts from Gordon.
Flash flooding is likely to pose the greatest risk to lives and property from the central Gulf Coast to the lower Mississippi Valley. Download the free AccuWeather app to stay aware of flooding dangers in your area and receive the latest tropical alerts.
Four to 8 inches of rain can fall from the western Florida Panhandle through southern Alabama and into Mississippi. There is the potential for an AccuWeather Local StormMax™ of 12 inches over the central Gulf coast.
This rainfall will lead to flooding and possibly even some washouts of roadways, according to AccuWeather Hurricane Expert Dan Kottlowski.
The storm may eventually join up with a non-tropical system across the northern tier of the country and enhance flooding downpours in the nation's midsection.
This merge would not occur until late in the week and this weekend, but could bring a renewed threat of flooding in parts of the central Plains and Midwest, Sosnowski said.
Meanwhile, Tropical Storm Florence has moved well away from the Cabo Verde Islands and was spinning over the central Atlantic this week. Florence has to be watched in the long-term as the storm may strengthen significantly and could wander close to the coast of the eastern U.S. next week.