Anonymous wrote:We did this trip in 2021 with a 14, 12 and 10 year old. This is what we did —
One day was beignets at cafe du Monde and walking around French quarter. We got the junior ranger badge at the NPS visitor center and participated in a drumming lesson there for free. Other half day was a plantation tour—we did the one with the oak tree tunnel and I would say it was pretty good about also discussing the lives of the enslaved residents. But there’s one that is more focused on that—can’t remember the name but it is easy to find.
Another day we did a swamp tour.
Another day we did brunch at Brennan’s and the aquarium. We also got lunch at mothers which is a thing to do but I was disappointed in that I thought the food wasn’t as good as it was many years ago. Anyway, if not mothers, find a place to get a good po boy. Go to some praline shops and sample the wares.
Things we thought about but didn’t have time to do included the ww2 Museum and the Mardi Gras warehouse. Also when I was a kid in the 1980/ my favorite memory was going into preservation hall to listen to the old men play jazz—you just stood in a line until there was space and then you squeezed in and paid some small fee like a few dollars and stayed as long as you wanted. We didn’t do it because it seemed like it had gotten more complicated and expensive but that might be a fun thing to do.
We did not stay in the French quarter because it is very loud there. I’ve stayed there for work and you can have people playing the trumpet outside your window until 3 am.
There are a ton of hotels that are just off th French quarter on the other side of canal. Don’t stay at the big Hilton that does conventions — it is pretty run down. But the others are all fine.
Everyone should be very mindful about their choice to go on these tours.
I lived in New Orleans (now live in the DMV) and I wish the plantations were not still used as tourist attractions. Even where the histories of enslaved persons are centered appropriately, it is still the commercialization of suffering. And if you do go, please do not use the place as an aesthetic background for pictures. These places should be considered memorials if they are even considered an attraction for the public to visit at all.