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Green
trees, some dripping with gray Spanish moss, bow over the
canal and sometimes brush the sides of our flat-bottomed boat.
Suddenly, out of the brown water, the curiously dog-like head
of an alligator appears, its ridiculously truncated legs clawing
the water as its amber eyes glare up at us. “The good thing
is, if an alligator isn't hungry, it won't attack you,” our
guide, Cap'n Joey of Lafitte Tours ( www.jeanlafitteswamptour.com
) tells us. “So you know if it attacks you, you'll die
right away. A crocodile will rip you apart and bury you for
later.”
Once
an endangered species, alligators now fill the swamp land
that is just a short drive from the great tourist destination
that is New Orleans . If you find yourself needing a break
from the decadence on Bourbon Street , the great outdoors
offers some fascinating alternatives.
Louisiana
is home to 40% of U.S. coastal wetlands, nature's sponge for
floods and an incubator for a wide variety of plants, birds,
reptiles and amphibians. The calm environment allows young
to grow up in water too shallow for many predators. Swamp
tours proliferate, and despite the campy alligators and pseudo-pirates
that decorate their literature and gift shops, nature is very
much the subject of the excursion.
Passengers
seated on wooden seats ringing the deck learn that alligators
grow one foot a year for the first six years of life; after
that it is a matter of inches until they reach a maximum of
18 feet. This fast growth is essential in the bird-eat-alligator
world of the swamp, where a majestic great blue heron can
dine on a 15”-long baby ‘gator. And that elegant beak is used
to spear fish so they can be flown to land and then swallowed
whole, Cap'n Joey tells us.
The
boat glides in a leisurely fashion down the arrow-straight
waterway, which was cut by oil companies searching for black
gold. Sunny, blue skies arch overhead, but the boat is cool
and breezy. Mullet leap in silver arches out of the water.
A hut sits on stilts, half on shore and half over water; Cap'n
Joey reveals his grandparents were swamp dwellers in just
such a dwelling in the early part of the century, harvesting
alligators, fish and seafood, and roofing their homes with
the leaves of the dwarf palmetta tree.
We
pass a turtle sunning on a log. “There are two kinds of snapping
turtles,” our guide says, “the alligator snapper that can
weigh up to 250 pounds and stay submerged most of the time,
and the common snapper, which can weigh up to 30 pounds.”
It is, of course, the latter we observe slide into the water
with a plop; this is not the stuff of which turtle soup is
made.
Indeed,
Cap'n Joey produces a snapping turtle for us to observe closer
up, although he advises a healthy distance. “Always hold a
snapping turtle by the tail,” he suggests, carefully demonstrating
the procedure (although I wasn't planning on trying it in
the foreseeable future). The powerful jaws,
once
snapped around an unwary finger, will unlock only
with the turtle's death.
We
turn into a bayou, the natural waterway where the ebb and
flow of the distant tide nurtures the abundant life. This
mix is threatened, however, by salt water seeping down the
man-made canals and killing the vegetation on which the food
chain depends. The environment is threatened in other ways:
80% of coastal erosion in the U.S. occurs in Louisiana 's
3 million acres of wetlands, which lose 30 to 40 square miles
a year.
The
complexity of the relationship between man and nature, on
the fringes of this city known for its carnal pleasures, is
also apparent on a river cruise around the New Orleans harbor,
just a few minutes' walk from the hotel district.
(
www.atneworleans.com/body/rivercruises.htm
). As the sun sparkles down, we glimpse the French Quarter
dominated by St. Louis Cathedral, and the residential section
of Algiers on the opposite bank of the mighty Mississippi
, which here is spanned by the graceful bridge called the
Crescent City Connection. But the sights also include ships
from Asia and South America unloading steel; U.S. Army facilities;
and the infamous levy, which controls the river only until
the next tornado hits, environmentalists warn.
A
more peaceful coexistence is apparent at City Park (www.neworleanscitypark.com),
a 30-minute trolley ride away from the hotel district and
featuring an astounding collection of fantastically shaped
live oaks. They tower over the entrance and dominate sections
of the spacious, lagoon-dotted park, sometimes stooping like
giants frozen in a crawling position, and offering wonderful
hiding
places and climbing possibilities for children.
Among
other things, the park also offers tennis, a playground, a
restaurant and an art museum – the perfect place to spend
the day with children. And the trolley ride is an adventure
in itself, offering an old-fashioned (read: no air conditioning)
way to explore the surrounding area.
Back
on the swamp tour, Cap'n Joey produces a baby alligator for
the brave to hold. We are carefully instructed on how to keep
our hands away from jaws and how to control the powerful tail
of this yard-long critter. He takes our handling placidly,
his craggy mouth seeming to smile as we gingerly pass him,
one to the other. Happy Traveling!
photos:
capn_joey.jpg, , gator_kid.jpg, live_oak.jpg, swamp_tour.jpg
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