This is the first time I've lived in a place without a porch and that includes my last apartment townhouse. I miss having a porch to sit outside on when it's raining, decorating for holidays, and having a little cafe table set to visit with friends. It's cool but I assume weird if you're not used to it.
@@shadowmoses3974 so funny how when you're in England no one uses ice like they don't need it then when they come here they're like OMG YAS and every drink they pour is loaded with ice lol
A New Orleans porch joke, An old man is sitting on his front porch one morning, enjoying the weather and having a cup of coffee. Suddenly he sees a young boy walking down the road carrying several rolls of duct tape. This obviously makes him curious so he calls out, "hey son, what are you doing with all that duct tape?" The little boy replies, "I'm going to catch some ducks sir!" The old man chuckles and calls out, "son don't be silly. You can't catch ducks with duct tape!" The little boy just smiles and yells "well I'm gonna try." Several hours pass and the old man is out in his yard when the little boy walks past him dragging a whole bunch of ducks. The old man just scratches his head and go's about his business. The next morning the old man is having his morning coffee on the porch as usual and the little boy comes walking down the road. As he gets closer the old man notices he is carrying a bunch of chicken wire. He wonders what the lad is up to so he calls out "excuse me young man! What's all that chicken wire for?" The little boy calls out "I'm going to catch me some chickens!" The old man scoffs and says "son that's not what chicken wire is for! You're not gonna get any chickens with that!" The young boy happily cries out "well I'm gonna try!" Later that day the old man notices the boy walking down the road dragging several chickens. He shakes his head and says, "well I'll be damned". A few days later the old man is on his porch, having his morning coffee when the same little boy comes running down the road carrying a bundle of sticks. The old man wonders what this is all about so he calls out "hey son! What do you got there?" The little boy yells back, "pussy willows sir!" The old man stands up and says "wait up, let me grab my hat".
....and all these years I thought you guys were saying “swamp GAS”, which is what we call the methane that comes up through the street sewers that are closer to the Mississippi River in St. Louis. 🤣
Shaun, your air conditioner is set on a thermostat where it shuts off whenever it reaches a set temperature and then turns back on when it gets hotter. Welcome to central air conditioning!
Keep the curtains closed during the hot part of the day and it’ll keep it cooler in the house. The South doesn’t know its officially Fall 😂 it’s hot here too
They say ventilator in England. They speak English but sometimes I don't know what they mean. When they say "pants" they mean panties or underpants. Careful about that one, lol
So glad you got to enjoy my home state. We may not have four seasons, but we will feed you right and make sure you have a great time. 🙂 Stay hydrated!!
Crazy! I live in south Louisiana and just came back from 2 weeks in Scotland. Surprised I didn’t see you in the airport. Have fun and BTW it’s called a shotgun house because you can stand in the front door and shoot a shotgun through the back door.
Another Interesting tid bit of Info is most of these shotgun homes in New Orleans are well over a hundred years old and older and were built with the wood planks of the old barges that were used to carry goods and supply down the river to the port, since it wasn't easy or cheap to get them sent back up river many ended up being scrapped and dismantled and their lumber used primarily in construction of these unique homes .
Buddy, I live in the French Quarter. The Best food in town is COOP'S Place on Decatur Street. Also try Molly's Irish Pub on TOULOUSE Street, right off of Bourbon. Have fun, be safe!
@@shaunvlog I am flattered for the invite! I recommended Molly's because it's in the middle of the Quarter but is popular with the locals here. Mellow enough to talk and watch the madness out of the windows. (fair disclosure, I work there too)
It's called a "shotgun" house because you can open the front door and the back door and fire a shotgun strait through without hitting anything. And you're as likely to hear sirens and gunfire from that porch as crickets. Y'all come see us in Mississippi when you get through in the Big Easy.
@@Maesterful It was just an expression... *chuckle*... a long, straight house designed off a central line or hallway... Shotgun Shacks were also brought up to the northern US during the industrial revolution when a lot of folks from the south moved there for factory jobs.
@@Maesterful It's just a visual that came to mind for someone long ago. Since I've traveled more, now, I've become highly cognizant, and don't even think twice, about how recently people in this country needed guns to hunt and work their farms and just eat, before we became more urbanized. People used guns often enough that if you can see straight through the house from doorway to doorway, that's what came to mind. It makes sense to us, just naturally. But to Europeans it makes no sense, right?
Just something I heard once, don't take it as anything more than speculation: Many of the houses are built as duplexes, and the straight line front to back is like a double barreled shotgun.
I live in Mississippi not far from New Orleans and I have been there many times . There is no place on earth like New Orleans it is a very unique city with its own culture . Even withthin Louisiana New Orleans has its own unique culture
Ric Heaton The first time I got a half of a muffuletta at Central Grocery, 35 years ago, the olive oil was dripping out of the brown paper sack before I crossed the street to the vest pocket park with the statue of Joan d’Arc. Heaven!
Muffaletta! Biggest sandwich in the world, so big they sell them in halves and quarters. Meat and cheese on a whole round loaf of bread with that gorgeous chopped olive salad on it. (It is impossible to spend a week in New Orleans and not gain weight.) If only you could spend more time and hit Antoine's and Commanders Palace. Cajun, Creole, Spanish, French and Mississippi River Southland...and if you really like history and (Outlander!) stroll down Royale Street...antique stores and houses where privateers (pirates!) like the LaFitte brothers strolled. Party all night, stagger over to Cafe du Monde for coffee and biegnets. Perfect for those after duel recoveries. :)
Have to tour the cemetery of the Voodoo Queen and have the tour guy tell you about the saying ‘I wouldn’t touch that with a 10 foot pole’ comes from how the people who pass and how they are placed in the crypts in a paper bag after they decomposed and placed down the Shute with a 10 foot pole. Very interesting history.
You HAVE to try beignets while there... Pronounced like Ben-YAYs... Friggin awesome... Love following your travels! Be safe there though...personally felt like I needed a shower after being in New Orleans. But the spirit of the people and pride in their city is admirable. Just my 2 cents worth.
"Who dat?!" Is a New Orleans saints chant. Football is every weekend. From September to the end of December. If you can't afford to go to a game, at least watch on TV.
I had to check if someone else mentioned it - one of my favorite memories of New Orleans! I ordered Cafe au lait (coffee with milk) and beignets - the best!
Man I'd kill for some fresh beignets. We used to have a place up here in Ruston that actually made legit beignets and served great coffee but they shut down. Gotta get back down south.
We were in New Orleans for a wedding a few years ago. I treated our friends to Cafe Du Monde and Beignets. An elderly lady friend wanted another order but her French was atrocious. She asked for Bug Nuts. I have pictures of my dad at Cafe Du Monde in November 1945 when his ship came in right after the war was over.
Love a porch! Grew up in a shotgun house with a porch. Every evening all the families would sit out in their porch and visit while the kids played. My current house has a deck in the back but no porch. I miss those days.
Yes, here in Chicago the older houses have large porches. My older clients have told me that during the depression whole families would sleep on the beaches to escape the heat.
Glad to see you made it to The Big Easy. Lived here all my life and wouldn't want it any other way. Porches are great. Sit outside and greet all the neighbors, watch the kids play, pass the time. Keep your curtains closed during the day, it will keep the house cooler. You're not actually staying in a shotgun, it's just a Creole Cottage. Shotguns are long, 6 or 7 rooms deep from front to back, usually don't have a hallway, you just walk through one room to get to the next. Not very private, but were very practical in the days before air conditioning. You could just open the front and back doors and the breeze would flow through the whole house. Ceiling fans are a must too. Watch your wallet in the French Quarter. Being here when the Cowboys are playing the Saints is gonna be hell. Football crowds can be nuts in the quarter, but there are lots of other areas to see. Uptown is the prettiest. Audubon Park is Uptown and has a wonderful zoo. There are great antique stores on Magazine Street, as well as good restaurants. If you get tired of walking, try to go to Canal Street and take the streetcar down St. Charles Avenue to see all the oak trees and the grand houses. Canal Street, (the main street in town) in the old days, used to divide the French side of the city from the American side. You can definitely see a difference in both the architecture and the size of the houses. New Orleans, being built in the crescent of the Mississippi River has it's own sense of direction. The streets run in a sort of fan pattern to follow the shape of the river. You have Riverside, Lakeside, Downtown and Uptown, or more commonly known to outsiders as South, North, East and West. Ha Ha. There are tons of good restaurants. Even the smallest little dive will have great food. Try to see as much as you can. Be safe, and have a wonderful time. You'll never be able to get this place out of your system now that you've come.
I love all the locals that know its a creole cottage. Exactly right. Actually a creole cottage service building behind a very large 7 bay creole cottage main house. Originally a summer kitchen for keeping the heat out of the main house during the warmer months. No covered porch originally
@@AlyssaGiron I grew up with them in PA, then spent 25 yrs in AZ were there were none 😭 now I'm in San Diego & there are none here either. I guess I figured they were all over back east & I'm probably also wrong regarding the season
Grew up with porches and "verandas." Such a great way to chat with the neighbours....vegetable garden in the back......social veranda on the front. Have fun!
I live in the south and we are having a extremely hot summer and first week of fall/autumn. Where I live we call it "the air you wear” it’s very muggy. You guys stay hydrated and enjoy yourselves.
WHO DAT say they gonna beat dem Saints!?! Best nfl team Shauny boy! So funny I moved to Scotland 2 weeks ago from New Orleans, and now look where you are! Haha enjoy that humidity and the best food in the world buddy.
I live in Arkansas. We also have shotgun houses. The reason for the name is because you should be able to open the front door and the back door and shoot a shotgun straight thru, without hitting anything.
Shotgun houses are all over the south . I think they built them like that before air conditioning was common because you can open both doors and try to get a breeze flowing through because it gets so hot in the south
@@commissaryarrick9670 Yes, that;s true.....but I've also heard ANOTHER reason.....It was an old Scottish or Irish belief that if your doors were in a straight line, any wandering faeries, spirits, elves,etc. would just walk straight through and not cause any mischief!
If you need a cool treat try Hansen's Sno-bliz on Tchoupitoulas Street, for a snowball. It's a family owned place that has been there for 89 years. Who Dat, is a New Orleans Saints football thing. Fan's are called the Who Dat Nation.
Great suggestion Michele! My aunt lives on Laurel just over from Hansen’s Snow-bliz. I used to think I was hot stuff when I got old enough to walk around the block by myself to get a snow ball. They got the best flavors! My favorite was bubble gum! Also I still love Domilise's Po-Boy & Bar - 5240 Annunciation St. They got the best Po-boys in the city!
Been trying to find videos about singing in Scots Gaelic, and I JUST found your channel, and I live in New Orleans! Believe it or not, it's cooler(ish) than a month ago 😂 If you're still here Wednesday night, I recommend the Starlight Lounge just off Bourbon Street for great music. Or the Spotted Cat on Frenchmen street. Hope you have a good time here! Will be watching your channel now that I've found it!
Welcome to New Orleans!! One of my favorite cities in the U.S., I visit at least three times a year! I have so many recommendations but here’s a few: French Quarter Bars: Sylvain Cane & Table The Empire Bar at Broussard’s Latitude 29 Bar Tonique Lafitte’s Live Music: Preservation Hall, French Quarter Bacchanal Wine, Bywater Tours: Cemetery Tours through Save Our Cemeteries, the only cemetery tours that use their proceeds to maintain and restore old tombs! Whitney Plantation, the only plantation tour with an exclusive focus on the lives of enslaved people Hermann-Grima House, preserved house 1850 House Museum, walking tour and preserved house tour
Shawn, you picked the perfect place for your first meal as an introduction to NOLA. The Gumbo Shop may be in a very touristy area (I hope you walked over to Jackson Square), and natives may favor other places, but it’s a great place to start. Get on over to Dooky Chase’s in Treme for a real slice of life.
Louisiana also has drive-through daiquiri shacks, and drive-through boiled crawfish shacks (when they are in season)... If you ever see one in your travels, stop by! 😉
Loved it! I am so glad you jumped right in to get a good taste of the food and the French Quarter. I knew you would love the food. I would call that house you are in a cottage. A typical shotgun house is much longer. Your house is only two rooms deep. It’s super cute, and I like what they did with the fun paint colors.
As a man that lives in NOLA, the best move you’ve made was NOT staying in French quarter and just visiting lol you would get no sleep if you stayed there
Oooh also, The Country Club in Bywater for really delicious food. This place is an old southern manor that became a clothing optional Cabana gay bar. GIANT PORCH. Clothing is required now, but it's a fun place to get drinks by a pool in a place with interesting history.
If you can, recommend trying boudin and crawfish pistolettes. Also try to take a tour of the plantations! Scenery is beautiful. So excited for y'all!!!!
Shaun...a lot of those houses have the ceiling on the porch painted 'h'aint blue' a 'H'aint' is a Ghost and it was believed that if you painted the ceiling to the porch this color that the ghosts, or Haints, would stay away. I couldn't see the ceiling of your porch, but look at it and see!
Jim Elliott I would say folks with a common culture (African/Creole) probably have similar customs so not quite sure it was stolen as much as it was shared. I think it is a cool custom. My Irish grandmother always had her eaves painted that color. After doing more research I think the insect repellent properties came from the old milk paint ingredients more than the color. Which this blue color is also associated with the Virgin Mary.
I wouldn't say that 'haint blue' was stolen from anywhere....it's always been popular in coastal cities all around the south. From Charleston, to Savannah, Mobile to New Orleans.....It's just a TRADITION! ....It's just something we Southerners do!
Called a ‘shotgun shack’ 😆 cause you can stand at the front door 🚪 and shoot your shotgun straight through to the back porch without hitting anything. All doors line up in each room, no hallways.
This made me so homesick. Born and raised in New Orleans, well actually a suburb but close enough, and I miss it terribly. No matter where I end up in life New Orleans is always my home.
I always watch YT with closed captioning on because of a hearing loss, and the way you are translated is hilarious! Proof of the struggle of Scottish accents
COFFEE AND BEIGNETS FOR BREAKFAST TOMORROW!!! Beignets are little balls of fried dough, covered with confectioner's sugar. Nothing like some strong coffee and a bit of sweet pastry for breakfast! And you need to try red beans & rice with andouille sausage!
Welcome Shaun! Can't believe you are here while we're all watching this! Yes, Molly's is laid back and makes one of the best Bloody Mary's I have ever had. But DO get out of the Quarter when you can. City Park is gorgeous. I grew up playing there as a child. The New Orleans Museum of Art is there, and a sculpture garden, and you can rent little boats to row in the lovely lagoon, and there are beautiful birds and swans. You can picnic and of course it's legal to bring your own beer. Please have a wonderful time, DO be careful. I hope you meet some locals. Lucky's on St. Charles Avenue I like. My friend Amber used to bartend there. Have fun and all the best to you and your travelling companions!!
Love that you're so excited by the porch! Do have one myself but can't even live without my "outdoor space" when I travel- a patio or balcony is a must for relaxing and enjoying the outside, preferably with my coffee (during the day, and decaf tea at night) 😊
Beinvenue a la Louisianne! (Welcome to Louisiana) I wish I could have made the time to try and meet up with you to show you around...perhaps next time. Typically in a shotgun house there is no hallway or corridor in the house. You have to walk through each room, one room after another to get to the back of the house. They are made this way to maximize room sizes since space is limited (the houses are very narrow), and so with no hallways the interior living square footage is not wasted. Hope you enjoyed your stay.
Just came back from New Orleans and it's like no other city I've visited. Definitely, coming back, what's not to like, the mixed races and culture, food, weather and soul. Bourbon Street it's wow, where do I begin, should be called Devils Street, Frenchmen St was more of a relaxed vibe. On the last day there, there was a live jazz band that was really, really good! Go visit New Orleans...who dat...who dat...lol!
Shaun, last year I was in your town. This year your in my back yard. Welcome to America (again)! Have a ball but be safe! Must have in NO: Po' Boys, Bengiets and of course Jambalayas and Gumbos. You're a great (adopted) American!😘
Not sure if anyone else has pointed it out. A shot gun house, is a very certain kind of home popular in New Orleans and the rest of Louisiana. The rooms line up one behind the other, with no hall way. The house is rectangular, one room wide, and usually 3 to 5 rooms deep. Because there is no hallway, you walk from one room to the next, so you will start in the front room, then walk through all of the rooms to get to the back room. The joke is, that because all of the doorways, from the front to the back, line up in a straight row, you could stand at the front door, shoot a shotgun through the house, out the backdoor and not hit anything. As you can imagine, this leaves very little privacy in the bedrooms as others have to pass through to get from one end of the house to the other.
Hello Shaun n Teka. I’m excited for y’all to enjoy the sweet heat of the south. My children drove me around NO. It’s very interesting. Cafe Dumonde is great for good coffee n beignets. Looking forward to your nxt vlog
Whenever THIS local NOLA kid goes vacationing, the first thing I do when I get back (at the airport) is take a deep breath of that humid ass air in that same parking lot. The feeling of "home" immediately sets in and it's super comforting despite being super uncomfortable.
That’s a cute little house. New Orleans is such a neat city with fascinating history, great food, and the nightlife is the best America has to offer. It’s so nice to see others enjoy it for the first time.
New Orleans is a special, special place. Really different from any other city I've ever been to in America. There are definitely other unique and distinct places, but there is just something about New Orleans. I absolutely love it there.
Traditional shotguns are sometimes called side-hall cottages, they are long and narrow so if you throw open the front door one can shoot straight through to the back door. They are found all along the Gulf Coast. The one you were in is a little different. I am grinning ear-to-ear watching you discover the Big Easy. Who dat say them Saints ain’t great? Who Dat? (Dat is local dialect for “that”) is a Saints chant, the Cowboys fans were trying to corrupt it.
I’m so happy that you came to Louisiana! I commented on a video you did a while back, saying that I was going to Scotland and was worried about the food. Our food is so good, everything else pales in comparison. I loved Scotland, loved how clean it was, loved the weather and loved how nice and polite everyone was. We stayed in Falkirk, so it was easy to go to Edinburgh and Sterling. I tried the haggis, and surprisingly enough, I liked it. I hope you have an enjoyable time in New Orleans. The French Quarter is like that all of the time, haha, the game added a little extra crazy, but normal none the less. Here in Louisiana, we like to party. There is a festival for everything and take place almost every weekend somewhere. Have fun and try to stay cool, lol, ‘cuz it’s hot down here!
As a full blooded Louisianaian, I appreciate the way you say New Orleans. You should like the food. We fry everything...as I believe you said you do in Scotland. But as you’ve experienced, it is spicy! I can’t eat most of it because of that for health reasons. Are you there just to experience NOLA? It gets crazy at night. Enjoy your stay!
That cottage is adorable!!! The proverbial front porch is a wonderful thing! Too bad it does not have a swing. You need to sit there at night with a glass of sweet tea!!
I'm so happy you and Teka are here in America! Hope you have a lot of fun. My refrigerator is bigger than that one. It's rained one time here in east Tennessee in over a month. Welcome to hot 💥 weather and it the first day of October. Hope you come back and visit Dollywood in Pigeon Forge Tennessee.
Yay! You made it! What a long plane ride and you moved the day before! No wonder you're exhausted! You two have fun! Watch your wallet!!! What you're missing out west here in the Rocky Mountains below freezing temps at night. But the mountains are gorgeous! Full Autumn colors! Red maples, Orange oak and yellow aspens against the green backdrop! There's still snow on Mount Timpanogos from last winter! I wish you and Teka could come here and see the utter beauty! Lots of wildlife to photograph also! Looking forward to your vlogs of The Gathering! In NC! So happy to see you!
Are u going to the ww2 I think museum in New Orleans I have been and it's really good, also I game you are going to a plantation while you're there, btw I live in NC and can't wait for u to visit my state first in flight (while your there. You should try eastern and western bbq if you can so you can see what all the arguing is about)
Easter BBQ, you mean pork slaw?? Just kidding, I like Carolina BBQ lol. I used to eat at McCall's in Goldsboro all the time! But I still prefer my Texas BBQ.
Today is actually my twentieth anniversary of moving to New Orleans, and I gotta say how awesome it is to watch you be basically shell-shocked by the city, lol! It's great to see NOLA through fresh eyes!
Just love your videos. I stumbled upon your channel as I was planning our first trip to Scotland (yet to come in May 2020), but as a U.S. Southerner and one who has visited New Orleans once (Airbnb too! last December) and has traveled a lot, I think your commentaries are "spot on," so candid, and refreshing. I hope you are making a living at this. You're as good as the folks on the Travel Channel (which is not intended to be disparaging to them). Keep it up! Hope to see you at the Highland games at Grandfather Mountain sometime in the future.
Ok also, Lucky's is a really fun 24hr bar and laundromat. Just a fun novelty that feels very specific to NOLA. Definitely don't have those in Chicago. Also has a porch 😁
Omg Shaun! You are too funny. I get excited about porches too. Hope you have fun relaxing on it. & hope you have a blast in New Orleans! Can't wait for the next one. Hope it's a Tailgating one! Lol
Hello Shaun, we just found these videos showcasing your trip to New Orleans. We're very happy you enjoyed your trip here and do hope you'll come back again. That way you can experience even more of what the city has to offer in terms of local dinning. Until then, I'm chef JJ with the Old New Orleans Food and Recipe Company and we're about to begin sharing some authentic and delicious New Orleans recipes here on UA-cam. Perhaps they'll keep you thinking about the Big Easy till you get back!
Welcome to New Orleans. My Home town, you will love it here. That was a normal Saturday night on Bourbon Street. If you go back to Bourbon Street go to New Orleans Original Daiquiris (Fat Tuesday) ask for Tina the General Manager and say her Dad (Dell) sent you.
Shotguns are so named because most are set up with one room leading directly into the next and the idea is you could shoot a shotgun through the front door and it’d pass through the house and out the back. Have fun!
Yo when ever you come to Charlotte this weekend, I work at a bar very close to uptown feel free to have your meet up there. It’s called Brickyard, 1411 south Tryon street.
Hey! Fellow Charlotte-ean here. I’ll have to check out the Brickyard, I haven’t heard of it. Also agree. It’s anything but cooler. High 90s in the beginning of October 🥵
kristabossipants ya for sure come buy sometime! We are open Wednesday-Sunday! We just had our 2 year anniversary of being open last month, it’s in the spot where the old gin mill was, corner of S. Tryon and E. Bland streets!
Welcome to America Shaun & Tekka, hope my team on American Air treated you well! Haven't been to NOLA yet, but it's on my bucket list. Have a great time. All the best Peg
Love New Orleans. Haven't been in many years. Hot, humid with amazing food. New Orleans shotgun houses are great. Normal sized fridge. You don't have porches in Scotland? Have fun.
Yep! and talking of feet, if you are told that .........'I bet you a dollar that I can tell you where you got your shoes', just smile and say ' I got them on my feet'
You did it right...visit the French Quarter, sleep somewhere else.
All wrong. The problem with nola. No affordable housing because it's all taken for airbnb
@jojofromtx Dont rent an airbnb in new orleans. Theres plenty of great affordable hotels in the city.
Yup.
@@menwithven8114 I guess you haven't been to San Francisco then? Or basically any other west coast city
@@menwithven8114 just say fuck off that's what I do, trust me they're use to it
Never realized that porches are an American thing.
They're not common at all in Scottish houses.
Australia also
Lol neither did I
I have a deck in the back of my house
This is the first time I've lived in a place without a porch and that includes my last apartment townhouse. I miss having a porch to sit outside on when it's raining, decorating for holidays, and having a little cafe table set to visit with friends. It's cool but I assume weird if you're not used to it.
“I’ve even got a porch!” 😂😂😂 You’re so cute.
Wait till you get to see porches that wrap around the house. Cute little shotgun shack though.
indeed he is.
I've got a front and back porch and porch attached to the side of my garage.
Lol!! That made me smile as well. I’m surprised they don’t have porches in Scotland (?)
“LOOK AT THE SIZE OF THE FRIDGE”
haha that’s a normal American fridge, many are even much bigger
I was so confused-thats not a big fridge for US at all :)
It's a bit smaller than mine at 26 cubic feet. Lol
lol He should see my fridge.
@@shadowmoses3974 so funny how when you're in England no one uses ice like they don't need it then when they come here they're like OMG YAS and every drink they pour is loaded with ice lol
Wait 'til he realizes how common it is to have two.
“Breathin’ soup” what a great description!
The humidity on and near the gulf coast is like that. It's like you can feel the air.
I love off the gulf and use that phrase often, I love that he used it. I haven't finished the video yet but it'd be funny if he says swamp ass 😂
Breathing soup is very accurate 😂
New Orleans is unlike anywhere else in the USA. That's both good and bad. Enjoy it all. Don't get mugged.
New Orleans is a knock off of Mobile which is older and has the original Mardi Gras.
Being from New Orleans, I'm glad you are pronouncing "New Orleans" correctly!!😍
FUCK OREGON
Neew Orleeeeeeyns
@@GOD-zp4pb Noooooooooooooo! and not Nawlins, either
Exactly
I hate seeing someone type Nawlins with a PASSION 😡. And really don’t try to say it around me. 😡🤬
“Maybe this isn’t a normal weekend because of the football...”
Oh, my sweet Scottish child.....😄
Hope you had an amazing time.
Sa Schmitt Great comment! There’s always a party in New Orleans!
You should have taken a haunted tour!
Sa Schmitt lol!! I hope he survived!!
There is ALWAYS a party going on in New Orleans! Those people party at another level.
@@astrodigger61 Yes, take the midnight graveyard tour! Some freaky looking tombs in the Odd Fellows and Free Masons sections.
A New Orleans porch joke,
An old man is sitting on his front porch one morning, enjoying the weather and having a cup of coffee.
Suddenly he sees a young boy walking down the road carrying several rolls of duct tape. This obviously makes him curious so he calls out, "hey son, what are you doing with all that duct tape?" The little boy replies, "I'm going to catch some ducks sir!" The old man chuckles and calls out, "son don't be silly. You can't catch ducks with duct tape!" The little boy just smiles and yells "well I'm gonna try."
Several hours pass and the old man is out in his yard when the little boy walks past him dragging a whole bunch of ducks. The old man just scratches his head and go's about his business.
The next morning the old man is having his morning coffee on the porch as usual and the little boy comes walking down the road. As he gets closer the old man notices he is carrying a bunch of chicken wire. He wonders what the lad is up to so he calls out "excuse me young man! What's all that chicken wire for?" The little boy calls out "I'm going to catch me some chickens!" The old man scoffs and says "son that's not what chicken wire is for! You're not gonna get any chickens with that!" The young boy happily cries out "well I'm gonna try!"
Later that day the old man notices the boy walking down the road dragging several chickens. He shakes his head and says, "well I'll be damned".
A few days later the old man is on his porch, having his morning coffee when the same little boy comes running down the road carrying a bundle of sticks. The old man wonders what this is all about so he calls out "hey son! What do you got there?" The little boy yells back, "pussy willows sir!" The old man stands up and says "wait up, let me grab my hat".
😆
Nearly fell off my chair laughing at this one. Thanks James. It must have taken you a few minutes to write all of that. 😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎😎
@@a00141799 The old ones are the best ones, I remembered the first line, so key'd it into my search engine and up it came, easy cut and paste :).
😂
That's all kinds of wrong. LOL
That feeling you get when you walk outside into the southern humidity is locally referred to as the swamp ass... lol
Like walking into someone’s mouth.
Lol! 😂😂😂😂
Jeremiah Langston I'm glad I live in Southern California 🌴
....and all these years I thought you guys were saying “swamp GAS”, which is what we call the methane that comes up through the street sewers that are closer to the Mississippi River in St. Louis. 🤣
szqsk8 But it’s a DRY heat....😅
Shaun, your air conditioner is set on a thermostat where it shuts off whenever it reaches a set temperature and then turns back on when it gets hotter. Welcome to central air conditioning!
Kevin P I was just going to say that. Beat me to it!
If you want it cooler, set it to a lower temp. 68° is a decent setting for sleep. Off when you're out. Have fun!!
And you'll need it in New Orleans. 90-100°F with 60-80% humidity is common for the summer which pauses for a few months each year :)
He knows what a thermostat is...they have them in Scotland and most countries too besides the US. Smfh
@@qolotlh , yep, without AC running you are soon going to battle mold because everything is damp.
Apparently I've been taking my porch for granted!
Living without one is just depressing!
Yep. Please don't take your porch for granted, think of all of us who dream of one. 😁 I would love to sit out on a porch on a nice evening.
Keep the curtains closed during the hot part of the day and it’ll keep it cooler in the house. The South doesn’t know its officially Fall 😂 it’s hot here too
Lol, I thought the same thing. Close the window, you'll let the heat in 😂
Omg I love that you’re so impressed with the fridge and the porch! lol So normal for us in the US!
I'd love a porch too!! Watching the folks stroll by is the best!
Caroline Riedlinger A front stoop works well, too, but a porch is better.
Jess Mason definitely! Love my porch
Porches are the best! I have a front one and a screened in side porch perfect for summer and keeping bugs away.🙂
so cute and funny. :)
4:03 maybe I need to get out more but I've never heard a ceiling fan be called a "ventilator on the roof"
They say ventilator in England. They speak English but sometimes I don't know what they mean. When they say "pants" they mean panties or underpants. Careful about that one, lol
Beds in the roof , called a loft .
Well he is from Scotland. Other countries may call things differently than we do here in the U.S.
Lol I caught that too what a hoot
Hey Shaun! I live in Texas---and in our home, we have "ventilators in the roof" (ceiling fans) in every room. I LOVE your terminology--very colorful!
I was like ventilator?...you mean a ceiling fan lol
Yea, threw me with the "ventilator" thing HAHA! yeah man, pretty typical to have fans in most rooms, even here in Ohio.
@@radamus210 , Glad I wasn't the only one. I was like ventilator?!!! 98° in Mississippi today; "ventilator" going in every room, along with AC.
So glad you got to enjoy my home state. We may not have four seasons, but we will feed you right and make sure you have a great time. 🙂 Stay hydrated!!
Crazy! I live in south Louisiana and just came back from 2 weeks in Scotland. Surprised I didn’t see you in the airport. Have fun and BTW it’s called a shotgun house because you can stand in the front door and shoot a shotgun through the back door.
They are also found throughout the South, not just New Orleans.
They were also designed that way to create air flow and a sort of breeze way to keep the house cooler back when air conditioning wasn't a thing.
Another Interesting tid bit of Info is most of these shotgun homes in New Orleans are well over a hundred years old and older and were built with the wood planks of the old barges that were used to carry goods and supply down the river to the port, since it wasn't easy or cheap to get them sent back up river many ended up being scrapped and dismantled and their lumber used primarily in construction of these unique homes .
j. f. I learned something new today. Thanks!!
Christine M First My husband and I lived in a 3 room Shotgun house then when our daughter was 6 we upgraded to a Double Shotgun.....
Buddy, I live in the French Quarter. The Best food in town is COOP'S Place on Decatur Street. Also try Molly's Irish Pub on TOULOUSE Street, right off of Bourbon. Have fun, be safe!
Eric T Styles thanks so much for the tip man, I’ll try go there before my time here is up 🙌🇺🇸
We loved Coop's! So good!
Eric T Styles hey we are having beers in the Quarter tonight after 8pm though not sure exactly where yet - welcome to join in if you’re around 👍
Grab my old friend Jeff Collins he's living in the French Quarter
@@shaunvlog I am flattered for the invite! I recommended Molly's because it's in the middle of the Quarter but is popular with the locals here. Mellow enough to talk and watch the madness out of the windows. (fair disclosure, I work there too)
It's called a "shotgun" house because you can open the front door and the back door and fire a shotgun strait through without hitting anything.
And you're as likely to hear sirens and gunfire from that porch as crickets.
Y'all come see us in Mississippi when you get through in the Big Easy.
Is there a reason for this or do you guys just enjoying shooting through your houses as a tradition? As a fellow Scot I'm genuinely confused.
@@Maesterful It was just an expression... *chuckle*... a long, straight house designed off a central line or hallway... Shotgun Shacks were also brought up to the northern US during the industrial revolution when a lot of folks from the south moved there for factory jobs.
@@Maesterful It's just a visual that came to mind for someone long ago. Since I've traveled more, now, I've become highly cognizant, and don't even think twice, about how recently people in this country needed guns to hunt and work their farms and just eat, before we became more urbanized. People used guns often enough that if you can see straight through the house from doorway to doorway, that's what came to mind. It makes sense to us, just naturally. But to Europeans it makes no sense, right?
Just something I heard once, don't take it as anything more than speculation: Many of the houses are built as duplexes, and the straight line front to back is like a double barreled shotgun.
@@Maesterful Houses were taxed based on their width so they made them as narrow as possible. Americans do love guns so it was a pretty easy analogy
I live in Mississippi not far from New Orleans and I have been there many times . There is no place on earth like New Orleans it is a very unique city with its own culture . Even withthin Louisiana New Orleans has its own unique culture
Gulf Coast?
@@MacGuffinExMachina I am from Jackson but live near gulfport now
@@MacGuffinExMachina about an hour and a half away from new Orleans
@@commissaryarrick9670 We always go there and Biloxi for the beaches and casinos. Our lower middle class vacations lol.
@@MacGuffinExMachina when I was growing up in Jackson we did the same thing . Compared to Jackson Biloxi was like a paradise when I was a kid
"And you may find yourself living in a shotgun shack."
Oooohhh!! Lol! I just got that!
"And you may find yourself in another part of the World!"
And you may find yourself behind the wheel of a large automobile.....
"How did I get here?"
And the days go by!
Same as it ever was
WHO DAT! You have to go to Central Grocery for a Muffaletta sandwich!
...bag of Zap's chips(crisps, Shaun. lol) and a Barq's root beer. Walk down to the levee to eat and river watch.
Ric Heaton The first time I got a half of a muffuletta at Central Grocery, 35 years ago, the olive oil was dripping out of the brown paper sack before I crossed the street to the vest pocket park with the statue of Joan d’Arc. Heaven!
Muffaletta! Biggest sandwich in the world, so big they sell them in halves and quarters. Meat and cheese on a whole round loaf of bread with that gorgeous chopped olive salad on it. (It is impossible to spend a week in New Orleans and not gain weight.) If only you could spend more time and hit Antoine's and Commanders Palace. Cajun, Creole, Spanish, French and Mississippi River Southland...and if you really like history and (Outlander!) stroll down Royale Street...antique stores and houses where privateers (pirates!) like the LaFitte brothers strolled. Party all night, stagger over to Cafe du Monde for coffee and biegnets. Perfect for those after duel recoveries. :)
I did not know that porches were an American thing. I love sitting on the porch! I'm on mine right now watching the rain. :)
I’m so jealous I absolutely love it. Perfect way to live 😊
All ya need is a porch swing.
Yes! Grew up in Ga, watched the rain on the porch swing. Great for naps too!
I have a porch too...with a hanging swing!
@@shaunvlog My porch has a swing that could seat 3 adults comfortably. It hangs from the ceiling ❣️
Have to tour the cemetery of the Voodoo Queen and have the tour guy tell you about the saying ‘I wouldn’t touch that with a 10 foot pole’ comes from how the people who pass and how they are placed in the crypts in a paper bag after they decomposed and placed down the Shute with a 10 foot pole. Very interesting history.
You being so excited about the Porch made my Morning!
Nothing like a front porch! Lot of neighborhood socializing done there drinking sweet tea. Have fun! Do a ghost tour.
Thanks Marietta, loving it 😊
Gumbo....jambalaya....& Bread Pudding with Whisky Sauce.....Yaaasssss!!!!!
You HAVE to try beignets while there... Pronounced like Ben-YAYs... Friggin awesome... Love following your travels! Be safe there though...personally felt like I needed a shower after being in New Orleans. But the spirit of the people and pride in their city is admirable. Just my 2 cents worth.
"Who dat?!" Is a New Orleans saints chant. Football is every weekend. From September to the end of December. If you can't afford to go to a game, at least watch on TV.
Violet Valkyrie Sports bar!
Welcome to America. Don't forget to go to Cafe Du Monde hot Chicory coffee and Beignets. Love Ya
YES! The Beignets are a MUST!
I had to check if someone else mentioned it - one of my favorite memories of New Orleans! I ordered Cafe au lait (coffee with milk) and beignets - the best!
Man I'd kill for some fresh beignets. We used to have a place up here in Ruston that actually made legit beignets and served great coffee but they shut down. Gotta get back down south.
We were in New Orleans for a wedding a few years ago. I treated our friends to Cafe Du Monde and Beignets. An elderly lady friend wanted another order but her French was atrocious. She asked for Bug Nuts. I have pictures of my dad at Cafe Du Monde in November 1945 when his ship came in right after the war was over.
First thing on my NO agenda. Beignet and chicory coffee at CDM!
Love a porch! Grew up in a shotgun house with a porch. Every evening all the families would sit out in their porch and visit while the kids played. My current house has a deck in the back but no porch. I miss those days.
Yes, here in Chicago the older houses have large porches. My older clients have told me that during the depression whole families would sleep on the beaches to escape the heat.
Glad to see you made it to The Big Easy. Lived here all my life and wouldn't want it any other way. Porches are great. Sit outside and greet all the neighbors, watch the kids play, pass the time. Keep your curtains closed during the day, it will keep the house cooler. You're not actually staying in a shotgun, it's just a Creole Cottage. Shotguns are long, 6 or 7 rooms deep from front to back, usually don't have a hallway, you just walk through one room to get to the next. Not very private, but were very practical in the days before air conditioning. You could just open the front and back doors and the breeze would flow through the whole house. Ceiling fans are a must too. Watch your wallet in the French Quarter. Being here when the Cowboys are playing the Saints is gonna be hell. Football crowds can be nuts in the quarter, but there are lots of other areas to see. Uptown is the prettiest. Audubon Park is Uptown and has a wonderful zoo. There are great antique stores on Magazine Street, as well as good restaurants. If you get tired of walking, try to go to Canal Street and take the streetcar down St. Charles Avenue to see all the oak trees and the grand houses. Canal Street, (the main street in town) in the old days, used to divide the French side of the city from the American side. You can definitely see a difference in both the architecture and the size of the houses. New Orleans, being built in the crescent of the Mississippi River has it's own sense of direction. The streets run in a sort of fan pattern to follow the shape of the river. You have Riverside, Lakeside, Downtown and Uptown, or more commonly known to outsiders as South, North, East and West. Ha Ha. There are tons of good restaurants. Even the smallest little dive will have great food. Try to see as much as you can. Be safe, and have a wonderful time. You'll never be able to get this place out of your system now that you've come.
Great info! Good description!
Thanks for the comment and it’s so true - New Orleans will always have a place in my heart
I love all the locals that know its a creole cottage. Exactly right. Actually a creole cottage service building behind a very large 7 bay creole cottage main house. Originally a summer kitchen for keeping the heat out of the main house during the warmer months. No covered porch originally
Keep an eye out in the evenings for lightning bugs!
The air will shut off when it reaches desired temperature
I've lived in nola my whole life and I've never seen a lightning bug... Where have you found them!
@@AlyssaGiron I grew up with them in PA, then spent 25 yrs in AZ were there were none 😭 now I'm in San Diego & there are none here either. I guess I figured they were all over back east & I'm probably also wrong regarding the season
Grew up with porches and "verandas." Such a great way to chat with the neighbours....vegetable garden in the back......social veranda on the front. Have fun!
Shaun says, I’m only going to taste the hot sauce, decides to pour the whole bottle. 😂😂
I live in the south and we are having a extremely hot summer and first week of fall/autumn. Where I live we call it "the air you wear” it’s very muggy. You guys stay hydrated and enjoy yourselves.
Your enthusiasm for the porch is so cute! I hope you enjoyed it even in that heat! 😘
Ok that’s not a shotgun house, that is a creole cottage. Very cultural to the city of New Orleans.
I love that you actually know how to say New Orleans right! Also your excitement of the porch is my favorite thing ever lol.
WHO DAT say they gonna beat dem Saints!?! Best nfl team Shauny boy! So funny I moved to Scotland 2 weeks ago from New Orleans, and now look where you are! Haha enjoy that humidity and the best food in the world buddy.
Your enthusiasm for my hometown is delightful. Thank you Shaun. Especially for not saying New OrLEENS
I live in Arkansas. We also have shotgun houses. The reason for the name is because you should be able to open the front door and the back door and shoot a shotgun straight thru, without hitting anything.
Yep!....That's it!
Shotgun houses are all over the south . I think they built them like that before air conditioning was common because you can open both doors and try to get a breeze flowing through because it gets so hot in the south
@@commissaryarrick9670 Yes, that;s true.....but I've also heard ANOTHER reason.....It was an old Scottish or Irish belief that if your doors were in a straight line, any wandering faeries, spirits, elves,etc. would just walk straight through and not cause any mischief!
But, I tend to think it's probably due to wandering faeries being shot at in the summer heat due to the irritation this heat causes!
@Justin B yes, you are correct! I shouldn’t have used the word reason.
If you need a cool treat try Hansen's Sno-bliz on Tchoupitoulas Street, for a snowball. It's a family owned place that has been there for 89 years. Who Dat, is a New Orleans Saints football thing. Fan's are called the Who Dat Nation.
I hope he goes to Creole Creamery on Prytania as well. I love all their odd flavors.
Great suggestion Michele! My aunt lives on Laurel just over from Hansen’s Snow-bliz. I used to think I was hot stuff when I got old enough to walk around the block by myself to get a snow ball. They got the best flavors! My favorite was bubble gum! Also I still love Domilise's Po-Boy & Bar - 5240 Annunciation St. They got the best Po-boys in the city!
Been trying to find videos about singing in Scots Gaelic, and I JUST found your channel, and I live in New Orleans! Believe it or not, it's cooler(ish) than a month ago 😂 If you're still here Wednesday night, I recommend the Starlight Lounge just off Bourbon Street for great music. Or the Spotted Cat on Frenchmen street. Hope you have a good time here! Will be watching your channel now that I've found it!
Welcome to New Orleans!! One of my favorite cities in the U.S., I visit at least three times a year!
I have so many recommendations but here’s a few:
French Quarter Bars:
Sylvain
Cane & Table
The Empire Bar at Broussard’s
Latitude 29
Bar Tonique
Lafitte’s
Live Music:
Preservation Hall, French Quarter
Bacchanal Wine, Bywater
Tours:
Cemetery Tours through Save Our Cemeteries, the only cemetery tours that use their proceeds to maintain and restore old tombs!
Whitney Plantation, the only plantation tour with an exclusive focus on the lives of enslaved people
Hermann-Grima House, preserved house
1850 House Museum, walking tour and preserved house tour
Yes! Preservation Hall!
Shawn, you picked the perfect place for your first meal as an introduction to NOLA. The Gumbo Shop may be in a very touristy area (I hope you walked over to Jackson Square), and natives may favor other places, but it’s a great place to start. Get on over to Dooky Chase’s in Treme for a real slice of life.
Louisiana also has drive-through daiquiri shacks, and drive-through boiled crawfish shacks (when they are in season)... If you ever see one in your travels, stop by! 😉
Loved it! I am so glad you jumped right in to get a good taste of the food and the French Quarter. I knew you would love the food. I would call that house you are in a cottage. A typical shotgun house is much longer. Your house is only two rooms deep. It’s super cute, and I like what they did with the fun paint colors.
As a man that lives in NOLA, the best move you’ve made was NOT staying in French quarter and just visiting lol you would get no sleep if you stayed there
Oooh also, The Country Club in Bywater for really delicious food. This place is an old southern manor that became a clothing optional Cabana gay bar. GIANT PORCH. Clothing is required now, but it's a fun place to get drinks by a pool in a place with interesting history.
If you can, recommend trying boudin and crawfish pistolettes. Also try to take a tour of the plantations! Scenery is beautiful. So excited for y'all!!!!
You don't have porches in Scotland?? That Creole cooking might be too spicy for your Scottish stomach?? 😝😝😝
Just a bit cold here to sit on a porch,no air con but plenty central heating 😂🤣
Shaun...a lot of those houses have the ceiling on the porch painted 'h'aint blue' a 'H'aint' is a Ghost and it was believed that if you painted the ceiling to the porch this color that the ghosts, or Haints, would stay away. I couldn't see the ceiling of your porch, but look at it and see!
bluesageful that blue also discourages wasps from building nest.
@@ChrisinOSMS That's amazing ! Haven't ever heard it....but I have heard that wasps are attracted to the color yellow!
Jim Elliott I would say folks with a common culture (African/Creole) probably have similar customs so not quite sure it was stolen as much as it was shared. I think it is a cool custom.
My Irish grandmother always had her eaves painted that color. After doing more research I think the insect repellent properties came from the old milk paint ingredients more than the color. Which this blue color is also associated with the Virgin Mary.
We have that tradition in Charleston, SC too. I think it's supposed to look like the sky so bad spirits will leave.
I wouldn't say that 'haint blue' was stolen from anywhere....it's always been popular in coastal cities all around the south. From Charleston, to Savannah, Mobile to New Orleans.....It's just a TRADITION! ....It's just something we Southerners do!
Called a ‘shotgun shack’ 😆 cause you can stand at the front door 🚪 and shoot your shotgun straight through to the back porch without hitting anything. All doors line up in each room, no hallways.
This made me so homesick. Born and raised in New Orleans, well actually a suburb but close enough, and I miss it terribly. No matter where I end up in life New Orleans is always my home.
It's all good sitting on the porch until the mosquitoes start tearing your ass up! I'm glad you enjoyed your stay here in New Orleans! #WhoDat
I always watch YT with closed captioning on because of a hearing loss, and the way you are translated is hilarious! Proof of the struggle of Scottish accents
COFFEE AND BEIGNETS FOR BREAKFAST TOMORROW!!! Beignets are little balls of fried dough, covered with confectioner's sugar. Nothing like some strong coffee and a bit of sweet pastry for breakfast! And you need to try red beans & rice with andouille sausage!
Welcome Shaun! Can't believe you are here while we're all watching this! Yes, Molly's is laid back and makes one of the best Bloody Mary's I have ever had.
But DO get out of the Quarter when you can. City Park is gorgeous. I grew up playing there as a child. The New Orleans Museum of Art is there, and a sculpture garden, and you can rent little boats to row in the lovely lagoon, and there are beautiful birds and swans. You can picnic and of course it's legal to bring your own beer.
Please have a wonderful time, DO be careful. I hope you meet some locals. Lucky's on St. Charles Avenue I like. My friend Amber used to bartend there.
Have fun and all the best to you and your travelling companions!!
Don't forget Pat O' Briens Hurricane Drink. I am so excited for you. Sprimp Creole too
Love that you're so excited by the porch! Do have one myself but can't even live without my "outdoor space" when I travel- a patio or balcony is a must for relaxing and enjoying the outside, preferably with my coffee (during the day, and decaf tea at night) 😊
Beinvenue a la Louisianne! (Welcome to Louisiana) I wish I could have made the time to try and meet up with you to show you around...perhaps next time.
Typically in a shotgun house there is no hallway or corridor in the house. You have to walk through each room, one room after another to get to the back of the house. They are made this way to maximize room sizes since space is limited (the houses are very narrow), and so with no hallways the interior living square footage is not wasted.
Hope you enjoyed your stay.
You're better off being out of the Quarter. Trust me.
Marigny is better.. IMO
I was so sad when the gumbo shop was his first meal!
Just came back from New Orleans and it's like no other city I've visited. Definitely, coming back, what's not to like, the mixed races and culture, food, weather and soul. Bourbon Street it's wow, where do I begin, should be called Devils Street, Frenchmen St was more of a relaxed vibe. On the last day there, there was a live jazz band that was really, really good! Go visit New Orleans...who dat...who dat...lol!
Awesome video! Glad you made it over to our side of the pond. Keep enjoying the food, music, and everything else, & keep posting too!
Shaun, last year I was in your town. This year your in my back yard. Welcome to America (again)! Have a ball but be safe! Must have in NO: Po' Boys, Bengiets and of course Jambalayas and Gumbos. You're a great (adopted) American!😘
Not sure if anyone else has pointed it out. A shot gun house, is a very certain kind of home popular in New Orleans and the rest of Louisiana. The rooms line up one behind the other, with no hall way. The house is rectangular, one room wide, and usually 3 to 5 rooms deep. Because there is no hallway, you walk from one room to the next, so you will start in the front room, then walk through all of the rooms to get to the back room. The joke is, that because all of the doorways, from the front to the back, line up in a straight row, you could stand at the front door, shoot a shotgun through the house, out the backdoor and not hit anything. As you can imagine, this leaves very little privacy in the bedrooms as others have to pass through to get from one end of the house to the other.
Hello Shaun n Teka. I’m excited for y’all to enjoy the sweet heat of the south. My children drove me around NO. It’s very interesting. Cafe Dumonde is great for good coffee n beignets. Looking forward to your nxt vlog
Whenever THIS local NOLA kid goes vacationing, the first thing I do when I get back (at the airport) is take a deep breath of that humid ass air in that same parking lot. The feeling of "home" immediately sets in and it's super comforting despite being super uncomfortable.
I hated living in shot gun houses. I’m glad you had a good time!
That’s a cute little house.
New Orleans is such a neat city with fascinating history, great food, and the nightlife is the best America has to offer. It’s so nice to see others enjoy it for the first time.
Drago's for chargrilled oysters is the bomb!
Welcome back to the USA!!
The Metairie location, not the Riverside one...
New Orleans is a special, special place. Really different from any other city I've ever been to in America. There are definitely other unique and distinct places, but there is just something about New Orleans. I absolutely love it there.
Traditional shotguns are sometimes called side-hall cottages, they are long and narrow so if you throw open the front door one can shoot straight through to the back door. They are found all along the Gulf Coast. The one you were in is a little different. I am grinning ear-to-ear watching you discover the Big Easy. Who dat say them Saints ain’t great? Who Dat? (Dat is local dialect for “that”) is a Saints chant, the Cowboys fans were trying to corrupt it.
For the reason why your home-away-from-home is called a shotgun house, see www.southernliving.com/home/shotgun-house
I wondered why the Cowboys jerseys were there!
I’m so happy that you came to Louisiana! I commented on a video you did a while back, saying that I was going to Scotland and was worried about the food. Our food is so good, everything else pales in comparison. I loved Scotland, loved how clean it was, loved the weather and loved how nice and polite everyone was. We stayed in Falkirk, so it was easy to go to Edinburgh and Sterling. I tried the haggis, and surprisingly enough, I liked it. I hope you have an enjoyable time in New Orleans. The French Quarter is like that all of the time, haha, the game added a little extra crazy, but normal none the less. Here in Louisiana, we like to party. There is a festival for everything and take place almost every weekend somewhere. Have fun and try to stay cool, lol, ‘cuz it’s hot down here!
Be safe of your wallet Shawn.
Lived there and done that.
Be safe.
Be wise young man.
Stay on populated streets in the Quarter; no alley shortcuts.
As a full blooded Louisianaian, I appreciate the way you say New Orleans. You should like the food. We fry everything...as I believe you said you do in Scotland. But as you’ve experienced, it is spicy! I can’t eat most of it because of that for health reasons. Are you there just to experience NOLA? It gets crazy at night. Enjoy your stay!
Welcome back to America! Enjoy your stay :)
That cottage is adorable!!! The proverbial front porch is a wonderful thing! Too bad it does not have a swing. You need to sit there at night with a glass of sweet tea!!
I'm so happy you and Teka are here in America! Hope you have a lot of fun.
My refrigerator is bigger than that one.
It's rained one time here in east Tennessee in over a month. Welcome to hot 💥 weather and it the first day of October. Hope you come back and visit Dollywood in Pigeon Forge Tennessee.
Come to Wyoming, idt it breached 40 here today. I'd rather have that than the heat and humidity tho.
Yay! You made it! What a long plane ride and you moved the day before! No wonder you're exhausted! You two have fun! Watch your wallet!!!
What you're missing out west here in the Rocky Mountains below freezing temps at night. But the mountains are gorgeous! Full Autumn colors! Red maples, Orange oak and yellow aspens against the green backdrop! There's still snow on Mount Timpanogos from last winter! I wish you and Teka could come here and see the utter beauty! Lots of wildlife to photograph also!
Looking forward to your vlogs of The Gathering! In NC! So happy to see you!
Are u going to the ww2 I think museum in New Orleans I have been and it's really good, also I game you are going to a plantation while you're there, btw I live in NC and can't wait for u to visit my state first in flight (while your there. You should try eastern and western bbq if you can so you can see what all the arguing is about)
The WW2 museum is EPIC. I saw a bit of it, but not nearly as much as I wanted, when we were down a few years back.
Easter BBQ, you mean pork slaw??
Just kidding, I like Carolina BBQ lol. I used to eat at McCall's in Goldsboro all the time! But I still prefer my Texas BBQ.
Today is actually my twentieth anniversary of moving to New Orleans, and I gotta say how awesome it is to watch you be basically shell-shocked by the city, lol! It's great to see NOLA through fresh eyes!
Been to New Orleans years ago, it was fantastic, the slowed pace is also the reason why it's nicknamed "The Big Easy."
Just love your videos. I stumbled upon your channel as I was planning our first trip to Scotland (yet to come in May 2020), but as a U.S. Southerner and one who has visited New Orleans once (Airbnb too! last December) and has traveled a lot, I think your commentaries are "spot on," so candid, and refreshing. I hope you are making a living at this. You're as good as the folks on the Travel Channel (which is not intended to be disparaging to them). Keep it up! Hope to see you at the Highland games at Grandfather Mountain sometime in the future.
Ok also, Lucky's is a really fun 24hr bar and laundromat. Just a fun novelty that feels very specific to NOLA. Definitely don't have those in Chicago. Also has a porch 😁
Yes, I mentioned Lucky's as well! Easy to sit there half the day and chit chat. I wonder if Amber still works there.
Omg Shaun! You are too funny. I get excited about porches too. Hope you have fun relaxing on it. & hope you have a blast in New Orleans! Can't wait for the next one. Hope it's a Tailgating one! Lol
No other place in the US is like NOLA. It has it’s own unique culture. I enjoyed watching your first video about it and can’t wait for the next!
Hello Shaun, we just found these videos showcasing your trip to New Orleans. We're very happy you enjoyed your trip here and do hope you'll come back again. That way you can experience even more of what the city has to offer in terms of local dinning. Until then, I'm chef JJ with the Old New Orleans Food and Recipe Company and we're about to begin sharing some authentic and delicious New Orleans recipes here on UA-cam. Perhaps they'll keep you thinking about the Big Easy till you get back!
Glad you made it. One of the finest cities anywhere!
I had no idea that porches were a distinctly American thing. Cool to learn that!
Welcome to New Orleans. My Home town, you will love it here. That was a normal Saturday night on Bourbon Street. If you go back to Bourbon Street go to New Orleans Original Daiquiris (Fat Tuesday) ask for Tina the General Manager and say her Dad (Dell) sent you.
Thanks Dell - honestly I am blown away. I am in love with your city. Great place, great people.
Shotguns are so named because most are set up with one room leading directly into the next and the idea is you could shoot a shotgun through the front door and it’d pass through the house and out the back. Have fun!
Yo when ever you come to Charlotte this weekend, I work at a bar very close to uptown feel free to have your meet up there. It’s called Brickyard, 1411 south Tryon street.
At least it'll be a 'little' cooler there!
bluesageful lol it’s gonna be 97 tomorrow-Friday but by Sunday we should finally have some fall weather roll through for the first time this year!
Hey! Fellow Charlotte-ean here. I’ll have to check out the Brickyard, I haven’t heard of it.
Also agree. It’s anything but cooler. High 90s in the beginning of October 🥵
kristabossipants ya for sure come buy sometime! We are open Wednesday-Sunday! We just had our 2 year anniversary of being open last month, it’s in the spot where the old gin mill was, corner of S. Tryon and E. Bland streets!
@@@baileyfarlowe + kristabossipants. Nice to see other Charlotteans here!!
Welcome to America Shaun & Tekka, hope my team on American Air treated you well! Haven't been to NOLA yet, but it's on my bucket list. Have a great time. All the best Peg
Love New Orleans. Haven't been in many years. Hot, humid with amazing food. New Orleans shotgun houses are great. Normal sized fridge. You don't have porches in Scotland? Have fun.
Your excitement over the porch is great!
Welcome to the South in the fall! The newest joke going around is today is July 71st.
Shaun, your enthusiasm and willingness to jump into a new experience with both feet is most refreshing. Welcome back to the US.
Yep! and talking of feet, if you are told that .........'I bet you a dollar that I can tell you where you got your shoes', just smile and say ' I got them on my feet'