Ramada Inn Houma
1400 West Tunnel Blvd. Houma, Louisiana, 70360, United States
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Sunny and Warmer Days Ahead
... There was live entertainment with local musicians playing accordian, harmonica, guitar, fiddle and banjo. They played country and cajin music with some dancing done by our traveling companions, Barry & Nancy. Bob wasn't wearing his dancing shoes so I was asked to dance by Barry too. It was great fun.
We got up this morning (Friday, March 11th) and are on the road again. We are headed to Galveston,TX for one nght only.
Until later,
...
"Crawfish till the bitter end"
... there was a look out tower. It honestly didn't look at all like I thought it would. I expected more swampyness but it all looked very clean and uniform. After we got our fill of that we started driving back, though we went up a different road. This one too us by a sculpture garden. Another Sight Betty suggested.
The sculpture park was small and very strange. It used to be private property and was all made by the previous owner. ...
To the Swamp
... here. The main building was closed but she had left sheets for us with instructions on the door. Chrystal & Josh were in cabin 1 and Donnie & I were in cabin 2. The paper told us breakfast would be at 8:30 and suggested local places to get some dinner. After putting our stuff away and taking a quick walk around the grounds and left to grab some food. Just a ways down the road there was the Bayou Delight. We shared fried gator ...
Laura Plantation
The Old South is suspended in an uneasy state of grace along the Great River Road, where the culture that thrived here during the 18th and 19th centuries, both elegant and disturbing, meets the blunt ugliness of the industrial age. Between New Orleans and Baton Rouge, beautifully restored antebellum plantations along the Mississippi are filled with period antiques, ghosts of former residents, and tales ...
June 2-6: CONVENT, LA
... alongside another barge. It's amazing how much industry is built along the river.
(Read on for more details)
Favorite stories from the Plantation tours:
Oak Alley: The candle holder that moved the candle up or down. When the candle burned down to the holder, the beau had to ...



