Day 20 – New Orleans

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On Monday it was off to New Orleans!
I can’t remember how the bus ride was but I most likely just slept most of the way.
It’s great to have a little nap on the bus because I’m all prepared for our nights out!

imageWe arrived into New Orleans around 4pm and went straight to pick up a local tour guide.
Apparently if you’re not a registered tour guide of New Orleans you can’t ‘legally’ give tours – which is why our Contiki Guide had to organise someone else to do it for us.imageWe did learn a lot about New Orleans though!
Such as how it got it’s name (after the Duke of Orleans) and that it was established by French colonists way back in the day. This is why New Orleans has such distinct French and Spanish Creole architecture everywhere.
While we drove through the city, we got to see the ‘French Quarter’ (the oldest area of New Orleans) where all the streets are named in French and there’s lots of markets and restaurants to eat at.
We also drove past Bourbon Street which is famous for it’s nightlife in the French Quarter. There’s live jazz music, Burlesque Clubs, DJs, bars and clubs at night-time which I’m sure we were all about to experience that night!

imageNew Orleans is famous for their Mardi Gras festival too!
I thought it was just a one-off event but apparently it’s a whole season like Christmas is. They have a day called Fat Tuesday which is the biggest day for Mardi Gras. The date it falls on moves around so it can be any time between Tuesday Feb. 3rd and March 9th.

If you’re in New Orleans over Mardi Gras, you’ll get to experience all the floats and parades covered in Purple, Green and Gold. These apparently stand for Justice, Faith and Power.
I didn’t know this but by law, float riders must always wear mask. imageNow to my favorite part, FOOD!
New Orleans’s are pretty well known for their seafood and soulfood. As the city is located near the Mississippi River, they have access to a variety of both saltwater and freshwater fish and shellfish.SFS_Beignet-33They also have something called beignets (locally pronounced like “ben-yays”) brought to New Orleans in the 18th century by French colonists. They’re fried square-shaped pastries served for breakfast (or dessert) with powdered sugar on top. Yum!

Another New Orleans specialty is the Praline. A local a candy made with brown and granulated sugar, cream, butter, and pecans. Pralines were one of the more popular recipes adapted from the old French tradition.
When Almonds were in short supply, cooks began substituting the nuts of the native Louisiana pecan trees, and that’s how the modern pecan pralines were born
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Oak_Street_Po-Boy_Festival_2011_Lobster_Po-BoysLastly, the Po-boy’s and Italian Muffuletta sandwiches!
Po-boy’s are a traditional sandwich that’s filled with some type of meat or seafood and served on a baguette either hot or cold. A “dressed” po’boy has added extra’s like lettuce, tomatoes, pickles and mayonnaise with melted butter. You can find these babies pretty much everywhere from the grocery store, deli-counters or neighborhood restaurants.
imagefro-yo-frozen-yogurtWhen we arrived at our hotel after the tour, we all went to our rooms to put our stuff away. My room mate needed the room to make some phone calls (she was going home early the next day) so I let her do her thing and went out for a walk with one of the couple’s from our Contiki,  Brodie & Mark.
We walked down to one of the main streets in New Orleans – Canal Street and got some fro-yo which was refreshing on the hot New Orleans day!

After walking around for about an hour, I went back to the hotel and starting getting ready for our usual Contiki night out.  Lots of the other people on the tour had attended an optional dinner (when I say optional, it means you have to sign up for it and pay for it if you want to do it but you don’t have to)
I’m a bit of a fussy eater (no seafood or pork stuff for me) so I didn’t put my name down.
It worked out well anyways because I had more time to get ready 🙂

Around 8pm, Marcus & Lauren (2 others on Contiki) came to my room and we took a cab down to Bourbon Street to get something to eat.
New Orleans isn’t the best place for people like me who don’t eat Seafood as everywhere we walked by had fish, lobster, oysters etc… I ended up just getting some type of Hamburger somewhere while the others ate the Seafood haha!

After dinner, we met up with the others from our Contiki at a bar on Bourbon Street. When we got there everyone was pretty much “on form” which is Kiwi slang for being drunk and having a good time!
I caught up to their level pretty quickly and we all ended up going to another bar for more drinks. In New Orleans you’re actually allowed to walk around and drink alcoholic drinks on the street and travel from bar to bar with a drink in hand.  Kind of reminded me of Las Vegas… If you don’t want to finish off your drink in the current bar you’re at, just ask for a go-cup and you can take it with you.
A few of us ended up meeting some locals from New Orleans which we hung out with for the rest of the night. My night ended at 3am with shots of patron and tequila and who knows what else!imageEventually in my lovely drunken state I took a cab back to the hotel and as I forgot my room key, my room mate had to let me in 🙈
I got all ready for bed and as soon as I lay down I didn’t feel quite well. It was either from that burger I ate or the litres of alcohol 😒
I then proceeded to spew in the bathroom like 10 times and went to sleep with the hotel bin next to my face. (Sorry Mum I know you’re reading this)

Hahahaha! That was probably the most drunk I’ve gotten on Contiki and I didn’t even think I was that bad.

Also, apologies to the Sleep & Suite Inn in New Orleans for their rubbish bin with no bag in it and my vomit. 🙊🙊

Love & peace xx

More Things I learnt about New Orleans:

  • If you don’t want to go to seedy Bourbon street – Head to Frenchman street instead (it has brass bands and music inside and outside the clubs)
  • Uber isn’t that reliable here
  • Canal Street, once the widest street in the world, was named for a canal that was planned for, but never built
  • The Superdome is the largest enclosed arena in the world.
  • Bars can stay open all night
  • They invented Poker
  • They’re the birthplace of Jazz Music
  • The Tombstones are above the ground in cemeteries as they get quite high water at certain times of the year

Day 19 Memphis #2

I’m so surprised I made it on to the bus this morning for our tour of Graceland. Considering I didn’t get to sleep until after 5am I feel like I was such a trooper.imageI really enjoyed our trip to see Elvis Presley’s house. I learnt lots about him and actually came to the realization that he was really good looking back in the day. 😄imageThe tour we did was an audio tour so you wear earphones and they give you each an iPad with directions taking you around the house and outside (you can’t go up to his actual bedroom though)
His daughter still sometimes comes and visits the house too so it’s nice it’s still being used.imageimageThere’s stables in the backyard where he had his horses and a little memorial garden which he had for meditation but is now the burial site of him. Buried next to him are also his parents and grandmother.imageimageAfter the tour, a few of us went to this diner across the road. I was really hungry as I still hadn’t eaten since the average dinner the night before but when I saw their food I decided against it as it looked so average. A few others decided to get food from there (I’m looking at you Dave & Marisa) but they ended up hating it. Dave had to keep from throwing up in the bus.
Haha! 🙈

Once back on the bus we stopped off at the place that Martin Luther King got shot and I also went to the Rock & Roll museum.
I don’t have any pictures though coz my phone was really low on battery 😐 so here’s some off Google….27E7B36E00000578-3050969-image-a-29_14297999393192015-08-11-1439328397-7050115-rrmuseumWhen I’d finished the museum tour (another audio tour) I went and met up with Johnathon for lunch at this place called Slims.
I ordered a grilled cheese sandwich and fries and it was so freaking good I wish I got a photo!

After that we went in search of a liquor store but as it was Sunday none were open 😦
I had a few remaining bottles from the box that broke the day before (that somehow didn’t get smashed) so I went back to the hotel and joined Dave & Benjamin in their room for drinks after having a shower etc…imageWe organised on our Contiki Facebook page to go out for dinner that night (as it was a free night) so 15 of us met up in the lobby and went to Aldo’s Pizza Pies restaurant for pizza.
It was really close to our hotel and the pizza was so good!!imageAfter pizza we all went back to Beale Street to watch some live music, have some drinks and then go to the clubs.
It was a Sunday night so it wasn’t as rowdy as the night before but I still got down on the dance floor 🙄

I think I was the only white girl dancing 🙆 haha.
imageimageimageI got to sleep just before 4am I think so a little earlier than the night before haha.

I’m now currently on the bus to New Orleans!
I made the bus just in time. I slept in 😦 so had to quickly rush to the bus without doing my hair or make up haha. There were 2 others as well that made it just as we were about to pull off.
Unfortunately for little Jonathan we left him behind as he didn’t make the bus by 8am.
He’s literally still in Memphis and has to make his own way to New Orleans now. Thank god that wasn’t me!image

Day 18 – Memphis

So for this day – I actually wrote a whole blog on my phone and when I exited out of it, it didn’t get saved!!!

You know when you’re so angry you’re like “F*** this!!” and leave it. Well that’s what I’ve done with Day 18.

I will however do a quick re-cap of my first day in Memphis…wpid-20150829_150456.jpg

That whole Saturday it was pretty much a driving day with a stop off at Little Rock Nine school.wpid-20150829_134840.jpg
If you’d never heard of ‘Little Rock Nine’ like I hadn’t, it’s a reference to a group of nine African American students enrolled in Little Rock Central High School in 1957 by a lady called Daisy Bates.
The high school was originally an all-white Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas but when these nine students came along, it became the Little Rock Crisis because of their skin color.
In 1896 there was a law passed by the U.S. Supreme Court which stated that there could be schools just for white children and schools just for black children. However, the schools for black children were not as good and people thought this was unfair.

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When the Little Rock Nine turned up to school on the first day (Thanks to Daisy – an American civil rights activist) they got yelled at by other white students and blocked from entering the school by soldiers that the Arkansas governor Orval Faubus hired.
The students obviously hated it and returned home that day in tears.
This is when President Dwight Eisenhower stepped in. He sent the US Army to the school to protect the colored students so they could finally go to school and learn like everyone else.

They did get to study there eventually, but not without being bullied and called names by all the other students. Only 8 of the 9 students made it till the end of the year which I find very brave. I don’t think I could have done it.
However, after that first year the Governor closed all the public high schools in Little Rock as he thought it was better to have no schools at all than have mixed race schools in his town. Many people blamed the Little Rock Nine for this and the racism got even worse.
Obviously that was a very significant moment in history and even though things aren’t perfect today, we have come a long way.

Not all is bad for the Little Rock Nine though, one of the students ended up working for President Jimmy Carter as Assistant Secretary of Labor, Melba Beals became a reporter for NBC news, Thelma earned her master’s degree in Guidance and Counseling and Jefferson Thomas became an accountant for the United States Department of Defense.wpid-20150829_162620.jpgOnce we’d spent a few hours at the Little Rock Center we headed to Memphis to our hotel.
When I got off the bus, I grabbed my bags from under the coach and also my box of alcohol I’d bought in Dallas.
However, as soon as I went to go inside the hotel, the box came apart from underneath and all the bottles smashed to the ground *Sigh* not a good start to Memphis.

As I’m writing this entry nearly a year later (took me awhile to get over this post being deleted obviously) I can’t really remember quite what I did that night.wpid-20150829_200349.jpgI know we all went out to dinner at this place called Kooky Canuck and it was terrible. I think Contiki usually takes their tour there when they’re in Memphis but it was really horrible. I think we went there because they do a ‘Big Burger Challenge’ where you can sign up to eat a massive burger and fries in a certain amount of time.
They did however have really big alcoholic beverages I enjoyed.wpid-20150829_191017.jpgwpid-20150829_162754.jpgAfter dinner, we walked to Beale Street which is known in Memphis as the heart of all Blues music and entertainment. It’s made up of three blocks of nightclubs, restaurants and shops in the heart of downtown Memphis.It’s one of the coolest places to go if you’re ever in Memphis.wpid-20150829_214653.jpgWe all went to one club but we were literally the only people there (Maybe it was too early)
Myself and another girl Marisa ended up leaving the group to go and explore some other clubs as everyone wanted to stay
wpid-20150829_214713.jpgwpid-20150829_215521.jpgwpid-20150829_220558.jpgwpid-20150830_025238.jpgI remember we had such a fun night. We were taking Jello Shots and having drinks everywhere we went.
I think I went to sleep really late now that I think of it because I only had a few hours sleep until I had to wake up!

xx