Friday, December 17, 2010

the peden four go to the french quarter


a couple of our faves came down to new orleans a month or so ago, which was just the excuse we needed to spend the day in the french quarter. i've never done a proper pub crawl (of the full-on, all-day variety), which is probably for the best, but given that excessive drinking seems to be the raison d'être of the french quarter, i couldn't spend a full year here and not waste an entire day on booze. right?

a&n are some of the finest companions for such an adventure - their drinking/traveling/general merry-making skills are legendary. and the weather was perfect.



one of many afternoon refresher sessions: the court of two sisters on royal

kp learns a valuable lesson...

the group discovers the joys of nola's open container laws - the ROADY!

story time at lafitte's

probably didn't need this last one...

the next day we went to our first second line in treme. the second line is an incredible new orleans tradition: they are organized by local "social and pleasure" clubs, which have traditionally acted as insurance groups ensuring each paying member a proper jazz funeral when the time comes. in the past, the different groups would put on a sunday second line parade as a sort of advertisement for their organization - complete with an empty coffin! there's no coffin involved these days, but every sunday one of the groups holds a parade in a different part of town.

these pictures will do it absolutely no justice. but i offer them anyway.

the "first line" is for the members of the group.
everyone who follows them is the "second line"



one of alan's shots - perfect combo of the neighborhood and the participants




kp and lb in full dance mode

kp and ah take advantage of the many traveling full bars that accompany the second line

me and my girl - y'all come on back down here anytime!

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

"look like you're having fun!"


an afternoon bevvie at tujacques

j&j peden came out for a party weekend last month, and infinite fun was had by all. we hadn't had a weekend adventure with them in a long while, and were very excited to be reuniting in - of all places - new orleans. we live here, but they're the ones who showed us the score. among the highlights: we checked another couple of classic new orleans eateries off our bucket list - antoine's and commander's palace, to be specific - and saw our first (and probably last) rice/tulane football game. we did a mini-crawl through the quarter, and discovered that the bloody mary at the loew's on poydras is dee-lish!

who wouldn't be happy about entering that great big pumpkin?

tulane plays its games at the superdome. it's sort of pathetic... but we did have great seats.




we introduced them to cure, a bar on freret that revels in the art of cocktail-ery. jim was transfixed.

jp and i "pretend" to have a great time (this is only glass #2).

they're planning a trip back in february, to watch chocolate thunder do his big race. i don't know about them, but we can't wait!

Sunday, December 12, 2010

coon-ass camping


lb and kp, aka bonnie and clyde
or as one of our weekend neighbors said: "i thought y'all's just campin' trash"

i started talking about our canoe-camping trip moments after we moved in. i'd been ready to go camping for months and couldn't wait to explore some cajun country. in late september, however, kp did a boys camping trip at caddo lake, so when i really started campaigning in mid-october, he'd already scratched the itch and was not interested. you may not know this about my husband, but he's a strong-minded individual. stubborn, you might say. a leo. but i kept at him and eventually, he got behind the idea... right around the time we got the fire going and cracked open our first beer, but better late than never, no?


kp made our reservation for us at lake fausse pointe, which despite its french spelling is pronounced "fossey point" (welcome to louisiana!), and being the generous man that he is, got us a "premium site." nothing's too good for his little lady... right? but premium is for campers. these sites come with electricity and water hook-ups, so you can imagine how ridiculous we looked showing up after dark (went in the long way, through some deeeep cajun country) and setting up our two-man tent. our neighbors, who were rolling in a camper easily the size of our apartment, were rocking their stereo when we arrived and spent a good portion of saturday afternoon watching the lsu game on the tv they set up by the fire!


to say the folks we met that weekend were colorful would be an understatement... to say the least. there was tim and paula, who fed us and were generally pretty cool, and then there was terry and gene, who were drawn to t&p's by the sound of football and the site of t's confederate flag (a little beauty he'd picked up at talladega last year...) terry was very suspicious of our california plates and immediately took to calling us bonnie and clyde, which i didn't mind one bit (i love that song). he also offered us some "abstinence," which we politely declined. but his take on katrina left a foul taste in my mouth, as did the rest of his generally predictable but still rather shocking back-country racism.

kp was fascinated by the transgression of it - he knew they knew it was some sort of perverted and self-indulgent performance - and tried for a bit to challenge terry, reason with him. i took a walk.

but i digress. i didn't go camping in coon-ass country to try and get some cajun coon-ass (self-proclaimed) to recognize how his own socioeconomic position and cultural inferiority complex determine his ideas on race in america. i went camping to roast hot dogs, drink beer, and do some canoeing!


and it was glorious. we saw a baby gator sunning on a log... and the mama's eyes as she watched from her spot not too far away. kp wanted to get closer but after hearing t&t's stories about frog-hunting-related gator run-ins and the poor ecologist who was testing the water after the BP spill and got her arm taken off, i thought not.


we spent two nights at fausse pointe. it was the second most bizarre camping experience i've ever had (second only to big sur 1999, when my friend jon and i were assaulted by hungry raccoons and ended up taking down the tent at midnight and sleeping in the back of my truck). tim said we should meet him at talladega next year, and i think kp is actually considering it. after we packed up, we went exploring a bit, stopping for fried chicken in st. martinville and tabasco-flavored ice cream on avery island (which was just as disgusting as you imagine it to be). we saw the evangeline oak made famous in longfellow's poem and learned a little bit about the expulsion of the acadian people from canada after the british took control of the region.


we're thinking of a family trip to sabine lake in the spring... and i hear mississippi is nice. might as well get as much in while we're here - who knows when we'll be back around these parts.

Friday, December 3, 2010

it's (a) christmas (giveaway), charlie brown!



it's christmas season, but you wouldn't know it at our house! maybe it's because we move around so much, or maybe because if we're anywhere in the u.s., we spend the holidays in big D... or maybe we're just a couple of scrooges... but k&i don't really do christmas decorations. in fact, we don't do them at all. we own no ornaments, no garlands, no holiday dishes... our stockings were a sympathy gift from jenny p, meant to get us through our first lonely christmas in paris. we still use them, though right now i think they're wrapped around the two bottles of wine we brought home with us this summer.

one year i made a star out of tin foil and taped it over a mess of eucalyptus - that was our "tree" (i think charlie brown would have approved) - but the next year i couldn't even be bothered to do that (ugh, foil. it rips too easily).

this year... well, i don't know... i've been thinking that i should maybe step it up a bit. no tree, obviously, but we have a mantle... maybe some greenery? i found a few plastic sputnik ornaments on etsy... those might be fun on the coffee table. maybe a candle?

then, lo and behold, i stop by one of my regular design blogs to find that the very talented bryn dunn (a fellow dallasite) of bryn alexandra is hosting a holiday giveaway! she's offering a host of lovely things, including a red burlap throw pillow (burlap!? what an unexpected and delightful fabric to choose for a holiday pillow!). go check out her site, and leave a comment to enter the giveaway.

but if you win, can i have the pillow? (shameless, i know).


Wednesday, November 17, 2010

simultania-bob



this past weekend - when we weren't out partying with j&j peden - i participated in a video installation project designed by my friend erin. the goal of the simultania project was to capture the same minute of experience all around the world, to visualize simultaneous realities and open up the individual experience to the possibility of its inherent multiplicity.

last saturday at 4pm universal time (or 10am in new orleans), over 500 people turned their cameras on... and soon, these videos will be brought together into one room for the spectator to witness all at once.

i decided to film my moment on the front porch, and a certain kitty didn't want to be left out...

(here is a link to my vimeo account, where i've uploaded the video... let's see if this works).

Monday, November 15, 2010

home improvement


knox and i have a great little place in new orleans, but it must be said, the kitchen and the bathroom are pretty lousy. small, dumpy looking, and severely lacking in storage. really, the cabinet and counter space is just pathetic, so shortly after moving in, we set about remedying the situation in the kitchen: the pegboard project!

(thank you, martha stewart, for your crafty genius!)


the supplies, strewn about in total disorder

we have to put the stud-finder away whenever knox is around - it won't stop beeping!

leslie gets her DYI fix

the final product

Monday, November 1, 2010

shadow and noise


a pile of wood

a walk through the french quarter

a glass of rosé

a pile of wood, a walk through the french quarter, and a glass of rosé - that's how i spent last sunday. normally i don't care much for the trucage that is so popular in photography right now. i appreciate the effects but don't use much or any of it on my own images (i do love to tweak the contrast, though, and occasionally cannot resist the sepia button, however cliché it might be). maybe i'm a purist or maybe i'm just lazy. but i'm often left wondering if a given image would stand up without all the saturation and whatnot...

these three shots, i can tell you, would not. they were all lousy - boring and terribly lit. but i do love me a good pile of wood. and after a few glasses of rosé, a backyard wine bar seems like a perfectly reasonable spot for a portrait... anyway, all three were destined for the virtual dustbin, so why not experiment a bit? over-expose. de-noise. hyper-saturate. it almost works.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

chocolate training



kp, aka "chocolate thunder," ran his first 5k this weekend - the susan g. komen breast cancer race for the cure. he's started training for the new orleans marathon and thought this would be a nice, gentle way to ease himself into racing. i can't tell you how impressive it is - he's already up to 8-mile runs on his long training days, and is running a minimum of four days a week. and during this race, he came in a minute or so under his target time! not only that, but he was among the top 1000 to finish (of over 12,ooo participants), so he came home with a medal!

also, how great is new orleans? the participants were treated to endless supplies of abita beer, chicken wings, and jumbalaya... (lazy wives were welcome to sample the eats as well, which this lazy wife did with gusto).



Monday, October 18, 2010

swamp thing



kp and i spent last sunday evening in fontainebleau state park. that afternoon, i'd dragged him to walker, LA to buy a table off a lady who told us to meet her at the "on the border" gas station (it took us a good, long minute to realize she meant "on the run," at which point we wondered, why wouldn't she just say "exxon"??!). anyway, this is not kp's idea of a good time, so i knew i'd have to make it worth his while. what better than a late afternoon hike and the promise of barbecue??

it was only a year ago that we visited fontainebleau state park's namesake in france. oh, to be blowing my monthly budget on wine... but alas, those days are over, and this couldn't have been further from the fall colors in burgundy experience... marshes, spanish moss, and bud light instead of vineyards, old churches, and pinot noir. we left our wooly scarves at home, too, since it's still tank top weather here.

the nature trail


the marsh




lake pontchartrain at sunset


the crown of a glorious mess of twisty roots


southern gothic