We woke to a
very chilly morning, I had to bring out our small heater to take the chill out.
The forecast calls for a beautiful day with sun and highs 70’s. We are planning
on taking the Great River Road Drive to visit old plantations.
We drove the
Great River Road and decided to tour the Oak Alley Plantation. For information on the plantation I’ve
included their web address www.oakalleyplantation.com
What
impressed me most were the trees, these were the prettiest trees I have ever
seen, they are magnificent. The most amazing thing is that they were on the
property 100 years before the plantation was even built in 1837.
The
following photos show the trees and grounds of this fabulous plantation.
Slave cabin
Some of the slave cabins
Rear of the Main house where the slave cabins were
Beautiful Large Oaks
The back yard
Back of the house
Front of the house
View toward the Mississippi River which is just over the Levee at the end of the trees in the photo
Beautiful grounds
Avery large front yard
The name Oak Alley comes from the fourteen oaks on each side of the walk
Front view
View of the front of the main house
The sitting and family room
The dining room
A slave boy would stand in the corner and pull the rope which would activate this large fan
Our tour guide
View from the front of the second floor balcony
View from second floor balcony
After the
Plantation tour we stopped at a small Creole restaurant where we had a
delicious lunch. I had a spicy sausage burger and Chris had the gator burger.
After lunch we
went to Jean Lafitte National Park and Preserve. The park has a number of board
walks through the swamp. I've attached a number of pictures taken along our walk. Chris was first to spot the gator and actually took a picture in which I
felt she got entirely to close. I’m sure we past many other creatures that we didn't even notice, may be that was for the best.
To find out
more about the park you can google jean
Lafitte national park.
An elevated board walk through the swamp
On the way back from our swamp walk we stopped at The Chapel
of St. John Bosco on the campus of Hope Haven. Hope Haven is part of Catholic
Charities. Hope Haven consists of a few interesting looking buildings.
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