Saturday, December 6, 2008

Back in the US of A

Here we are again in the USA for the Globecom 2008 conference in New Orleans. A city still heavily marked by the devastating passage of Katrina 3 years and 3 months ago: only about half of the inhabitants have returned, complete neighborhoods are still in tatters and the rebuilding of infrastructure such as bridges and roads is not yet finished. All in all the city gives a sad impression. The blues, you know…

One area that has fully recovered however, is the French Quarter. This is the place where the colonial presence of the French remains very visible. It’s like walking through a small French town, with as only difference the rectangular street pattern. The oldest pub in town, which belonged to the pirate Lafitte if I got it right, is situated here:

DSC_0056

We went for a drink here with Peter and Michael, two colleagues from IMEC:

DSC_0079

Afterwards, we went for a local beer:

DSC_0108

in the good company of Kristof:

DSC_0109

Kristof is a PhD student from the KU Leuven and like Michael also a friend from at university. After the conference, Kristof and I will rent a car and make a road trip all the way to Chicago. More about that later…

At about noon, we left for a “swamp tour”: a boat visit of one of the many swamps in the surroundings of New Orleans. We were not sure whether we were going to see alligators, so I ate them instead:

DSC_0120

Indeed, a combination of two “local” specialties: American beef jerky with Louisiana alligator meat! For dinner I also had an alligator appetizer. Tastes and looks somewhat like chicken…

In the swamps, we saw this house that was lifted from its foundations by Hurricane Katrina, was carried a couple of hundreds of meters by the water and smacked down in the middle of the swamp:

DSC_0133

It’s a sturdy thing: it remained pretty much intact after the hurricane. However, it was impossible to move it back to its original place so the inhabitant had to find another residence…

We also saw a couple of cool birds:

DSC_0185

and I even held a small alligator:

DSC_0196

I’m not kidding here, it really was a live animal! It had been abandoned by its mom and the rangers picked it up. Now it is raised by them, and it will be set free once it is big enough to survive on its own. Unlike other animals, alligators don’t lose their instinct while held in custody, so they can be released afterwards without re-training them to catch their own food.

Now this picture allows me to end with a little joke:

DSC_0198

Michael walked into a doctor’s office with an alligator on his head. The doctor asked “What’s the problem?” and the alligator answered “Well it all started with a wart on my left foot…”

4 comments:

Flaming Philip said...

Love the beer pictures - did you get your hands on a 50mm 1.4 already? The blogger upload procedure seems to strip all the exif data, otherwise I didn't have to ask...

Wim said...

Nope, 50 mm will be a Christmas "gift" ;-) I'll make sure you'll notice once I get it...

Anonymous said...

Maybe alligators in custody do not forget how to get food but they apparently lose their fear of strange animals (see last picture) ...

Flaming Philip said...

I see... So why were you whining about your inability to produce pictures with a small DOF? The beer pictures prove the beautiful contrary...