Maison Vitry history

Interestingly, I know the previous owners of this house and just met the charming couple who now own this house. This love of history and home is exactly what makes New Orleans great. Take a look:

http://maisonvitry.com/history/

Meetings for potential vendors for CCFM @ French Market

(From Market Umbrella):

As you may have heard, Market Umbrella will be starting another year-round Crescent City Farmers Market in the French Market this fall, slated to open Wednesday, October 15 from 2-6pm. To this end, we are currently in the process of accepting new vendor applications for this exciting new Wednesday afternoon market.

We will be hosting 2 meetings for farmers, fishers, and food producers interested in becoming vendors with us: Wednesday, Sept 3 at 5:30pm at the CCFM offices (200 Broadway, suite 107) and Saturday, Sept 6 at noon, in the Saturday market space at 700 Magazine Street. This meeting will inform prospective new vendors about the market and the process for applying and vendor selection.

If you cannot make this meeting, but are interested in becoming a vendor, applications will be accepted online at crescentcityfarmersmarket.org’s New Vendor page.

Applications will be accepted until September Sept 15 at 5pm.

Please pass this along to any farmers, fishers, and food producers in your network!

Thank you for your help. We look forward to bringing the best local food to the French Market.

Please direct any questions or comments to markets@marketumbrella.org

Crescent City Farmers Market

Tuesday Market – Uptown New Orleans
9am – 1pm, 200 Broadway St., at the River

Thursday Market – Mid-City New Orleans
3-7pm, 3700 Orleans Ave., at the Bayou

Saturday Market – Downtown New Orleans
8am – Noon, 700 Magazine St., at Girod St.

Creole World by Richard Sexton

Great exhibit at the Historic New Orleans Collection’s Laura Simon Nelson Galleries of photographer Richard Sexton’s details of Caribbean life. It includes New Orleans, Colombia, Haiti, Ecuador and of course Cuba. The exhibit is designed well, with the New Orleans scenes hung next to their Caribbean counterpart, both photos sharing the exact same architectural or at least many composite details.

The exhibit reminds one that the Caribbean face of New Orleans is most likely another reason for its emotional distance from the rest of America. Those places have no great hold on  the American imagination, as seen in the lack of the same architectural styles of Washington DC, or in Savannah or even San Antonio.

America turned its back after its imperialism was slowed by Bolivar, Castro and others and left little New Orleans (and Miami too) without any older sisters to sit with, remembering the past.

On viewing this exhibit, I was reminded of one of my favorite quotes from those dark days of 2005 post-levee break reconstruction, said by a well known Cuban architect in a piece in The Atlantic. Andrés Duany, a co-founder of the Congress for New Urbanism, and a persistent advocate for traditional small-town design, gets to the essence of New Orleans as a Caribbean city said then:

“When I originally thought of New Orleans, I was conditioned by the press to think of it as an extremely ill-governed city, full of ill-educated people, with a great deal of crime, a great deal of dirt, a great deal of poverty,” said Duany, who grew up in Cuba. “And when I arrived, I did indeed find it to be all those things. Then one day I was walking down the street and I had this kind of brain thing, and I thought I was in Cuba. Weird! And then I realized at that moment that New Orleans was not an American city, it was a Caribbean city. Once you recalibrate, it becomes the best-governed, cleanest, most efficient, and best-educated city in the Caribbean. New Orleans is actually the Geneva of the Caribbean.”

Sexton’s Creole World Blog

exhibit and book information

And for those that remember the old Tally Ho Restaurant that was here at the corner of Chartres and Conti, it is a treat to walk through the gallery and remember the ghosts of past grits and red beans had at that counter….

Southern Decadence Parade Routes

SD-Parade-Route-Friday14

SD-Parade-Route-Sunday14

2014 is the 43rd Annual Southern Decadence celebration.However, 2014 brings us the 40th annual Sunday afternoon parade, as there was no official parade in 1972, 2005 (Hurricane Katrina) and 2008 (Hurricane Gustav).

Southern Decadence Parade Routes.

Restaurant at Rampart and Esplanade is proposed again

Cafe Habana’s new plans:

plans for cafe Habana submitted August 2014, after the original proposal was denied based on neighbor objections to the size of the restaurant.

New plans for Cafe Habana submitted August 2014, after the original proposal was denied based on citizen objections.

media.nola.com/politics/other/cafe habana plans.pdf.