• Muddah Nature In His Act

    Hellllooo??? Is anyone out there??? It’s been 17 days since our last writing. I feel like I need to visit a confessional for my sins of not writing lately. If you haven’t noticed, KK does most of the writing, but as she’s been overloaded with training for the past 2 weeks, so now is my moment to shine! We have a lot of living to catch up on – there have been weddings, anniversaries, more scavenger hunts, and lots of work ramping up, but before we get to all that – ever more of our Deep South Roadtrip! yay!

    When I realized how close to the Mississippi delta and bayou we were actually going to be in New Orleans, the first words out of my mouth could have been ‘Bourbon St. here we come’ or ‘Angelina Jolie!’ or ‘mmmm… Cajun food.’ No no. Instead, my mind immediately asks ‘Can we please go on a swamp boat!?!’ You know, those boats with the big giant fan on the back that look so fun. And so that’s exactly what we did.

    It’s shocking that just 30 minutes outside of New Orleans, the landscape changes from such an urban city to swamps and watery roads that people literally call their backyards. Considering it is the wetlands and in the southern tropical climates, we shouldn’t have been surprised by the thunderstorms and tropical downpours that rolled in around noon each day we were there. But we were surprised how quickly the storm clouds rolled in. We don’t get thunderstorms here. And we miss them. However, lightning storms and big metal boats with supercharged fans strapped to them running across water just don’t mix kids. Thankfully, we were able to switch to an afternoon tour and drive around the post-Katrina ninth-ward neighborhoods while we waited.

    We took a tour in one of the smaller performance airboats that reaches 60 mph, turns on a dime, and can glide down some of the tighter water ways in between the trees. And when we didn’t quite fit, well, the boat just hops the dirt/logs/muck/swamp grass in the way. We glided over a very vast calm body of water, hung a left, and all of a sudden everything was green. The water, the trees, the sky, everything! Small lilies covered the water, moss on the grounds climbing the trees, and Spanish moss hanging from limbs as we passed under. It’s odd to say, but the swamp was simply beautiful! This literally was our tour guides backyard… as in for real, his family owned part of this green soup. (I still can’t get over someone calling the water their yard!) He was born and raised in the bayou, and we couldn’t understand a word he was saying. But we had a blast and we highly recommend 1-800-GO-SWAMP. I’m not kidding! You can even have parties and receptions there!

    Here’s KK super excited to be on a boat.

    Green Watery Road

    Gator

    Muddah Nature In His Act

5 Responsesso far.

  1. Deborah86 says:

    Wow you saw a gator! That is crazy :) Glad you enjoyed it!

  2. meghan says:

    Dude, that guy is petting a gator. Crazy. Yet, awesome.

  3. ro! says:

    freaking finally!
    good update. luv da gaters.

  4. LB says:

    yay, dan, you did it! i'm so proud.

    i love the video – you can hear kk's "i'm pretending i'm interested in what this weird dude is saying, but clearly he's a weird dude" laugh/tone of voice.

  5. LB says:

    yes, that was me who wrote and deleted the previous comment – i accidentally wrote "dad" instead of "dan" and it supremely weirded me out, and i couldn't have that weirdness out in the interwebs. even though i just told everyone.

π