Total Cajun Experience Tour in Jean Lafitte
A shrimp trawler with massive wing nets motors by in the distance. A local fisherman eases his skiff down a ramp, en route to the Barataria Bay Waterway.
And our burly, ginger-haired host holds court from behind a long fish cleaning station, the ground at his feet littered with scales.
Its boutique museums tell the stories of the fishermen, trappers and smugglers who have called this medley of land and bayou – and everything in between – home for more than 200 years. Nearby, a 26,000-acre national park offers miles of iconic, moss-draped hiking paths and canoe trails for fresh air-lovers to wander. Plentiful alligators, the stars of the swamp, wow tourists on guided tours.
And seafood? Whether visitors want to hook their own, buy fresh at a bustling open air market or have it served perfectly seasoned on a plate, this town has it covered.
“Lafitte is uniquely Louisianan,” Mayor Timothy Kerner will later tell me by phone. “You’re right here on the coast. And we have such a rich culture that’s been passed down to us. It’s a piece of paradise.”
There are world championship pirogue races, seasonal seafood festivals and sip-and-strolls through the swamp.
But today on Shaw’s boat, we’re getting to the heart of the region: The water.
Shallow and inky, it reflects a bright blue sky and piles of clouds as we zip toward our first fishing stop. The terrain is flat as far as the eye can see, a checkerboard of channel and reeds entangled with vibrant purple morning glories sitting just at the waterline.
With any luck, some tasty blue crabs will find their way into the trap by tomorrow, though everything we catch today will be released. This is an educational tour.
Over the next few hours, we take turns retrieving crab traps and squealing when their bounty skitters across the deck at our feet. We pull up lines to find gaping puncture marks in bobbers, telltale signs of gator activity. Shaw and Kyle show us how to set up trotlines, a series of hooks dangling from a main line strung between two bamboo poles.
They demo fisherman's knots and quick connects. We learn the best hooks and bait to use in order to bag the biggies like redfish and drum.
Shaw and Kyle had set up several lines the day before, and at one of our many stops, a white jug zigzags furiously at the surface of the water, a clear sign something exciting is happening on the hook below. Then, fellow sightseer Charlene Hale spots trouble.
“He’s going for our fish!” she shouts, excitedly pointing out an adolescent alligator gliding purposefully toward the action on the jug line.
The good news: The gator doesn’t get the fish. The bad: Neither do we.
Just up the road from the harbor, the Jean Lafitte National Historic Park and Preserve gives visitors an up close look at the landscape and stunning biodiversity that Lafitte and other non-Indigenous settlers likely encountered here when they arrived. Giant live oaks, freshwater marshes and cypress stands greet hikers on nearly 5 miles of trails. Paddlers who canoe through the swamp get an even more intimate experience.
A local captain pulls alongside us with a deck full of belly-up alligators and camouflage-clad hunters from a town near Baton Rouge. “We’re going to sink this boat with alligators,” the captain jokes.
The largest measures 10 feet nose to tail, and I cannot take my eyes off the pile. But the local Louisianans on both vessels have more important things to consider. Chatter erupts about last names, family lineages and hometowns as they try to work out who they might know in common.
Around here, that’s how you shake hands.
At another stop, Shaw points to the trees growing on a square mile of land, an unusual sight in the waterway nowadays. He explains some of the fascinating ways engineers are fighting the rapid coastal erosion threatening areas like Jean Lafitte, such as building islands like this one and breeding new types of cypress trees that can survive saltier water.
“Without trees, there aren’t roots to hold the land together,” Shaw explains.
Are you interested in being a Cajun for a day? Learn more at Jean Lafitte Harbor!
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