RURAL LOUISIANA: The CRAZY Things I Saw

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  • Опубліковано 25 сер 2024
  • I took a drive through nearly forgotten central Louisiana. I visited these fading small towns:
    Glenmora
    Oakdale
    Oberlin
    Mamou
    Ville Platte
    Bunkie
    Marksville
    Travel Vlog 156

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,6 тис.

  • @chriskelly509
    @chriskelly509 Рік тому +496

    Growing up in a trailer park my mom once told me "just because we are poor doesn't mean we have to live like pigs ". My mom always kept the place clean.

    • @Magicdice1
      @Magicdice1 Рік тому +18

      Same here man. I grew up just like that in Louisiana

    • @97carded
      @97carded Рік тому +29

      We call that class...

    • @jamesrosado2929
      @jamesrosado2929 Рік тому +35

      Amen! That and illiterate/ uneducated/ ignorant. My mom was a widow. She raised 5 boys on her own but the house was always clean, we had no tv. But the house was loaded with books and encyclopedias. So we read all manner of Classical literature

    • @bobprescott
      @bobprescott Рік тому +16

      moms are best what we do without

    • @Good4U88
      @Good4U88 Рік тому +7

      @@jamesrosado2929 the best mom ❤

  • @markallen721
    @markallen721 Рік тому +1125

    I was young, dumb and broke and wound up in Lafayette, La. with a desire to work hard, get up before the sun and go down sometime after it sets. The Cajun people made sure I never went hungry or had to sleep out in the cold. After 6 years went by I was driving a fairly new Cadillac, living in a nice house along the coolie and was a superintendent for an oilfield service company. All in Breaux Bridge just outside of town. All bc they were good people and were willing to help their fellow brother.

    • @jasonroberts9788
      @jasonroberts9788 Рік тому +36

      My only experience with that part of the woods was when I first started out diving. We stayed at Pat's Fisherman's Warf in Henderson LA for 8 months while we did some dive work in the area. The food was amazing, the people were friendly, and there was never a dull moment.

    • @crawfishxrp
      @crawfishxrp Рік тому +2

      xrp crypto

    • @redmaengda
      @redmaengda Рік тому +15

      Awesome story, man. Touched my heart with that one!

    • @joesmith9216
      @joesmith9216 Рік тому +14

      aw yes, breaux bridge, acid bath played there!

    • @timothyboone5003
      @timothyboone5003 Рік тому +27

      Lafayette, La some of the best food in the lower 48 is served there.

  • @roseswallow5133
    @roseswallow5133 10 місяців тому +280

    I was raised in Louisiana, and until I was 7 yo, I lived in an alley. An alley was the poorest of the poor. My mother was wonderful and raised us to have manners and pride. She was legally blind and worked in a bar to support us, 4 children. She taught us the Golden Rule - Do Unto Others As You Would Have Them Do To you. Mamma, thank you for loving us and taking care of us. We were street kids, but we turned out fine. RIP my dear Momma. Rose Mary

    • @amyparker7531
      @amyparker7531 8 місяців тому +15

      Thank you for sharing your life .what you said is so beautiful to me what kinda folks your mom and you kids are. Bless your Mother what a wonderful strong woman !! I am thankful for stories shared like yours ! I would love to be your friend 😊

    • @brendamallard7313
      @brendamallard7313 4 місяці тому +1

      🥲♥️

    • @lydiacabrera6251
      @lydiacabrera6251 3 місяці тому +1

      May your precious mama rest in God’s mighty love & peace.❤🙏

    • @sarkisa781898
      @sarkisa781898 3 місяці тому

      Sahak City

    • @nikkifernandez5674
      @nikkifernandez5674 2 місяці тому

      ❤❤❤❤

  • @maryparsons5543
    @maryparsons5543 11 місяців тому +129

    I am from Louisiana and I love it. We care about our neighbors, and if you are hungry, we will feed you. We like seafood gumbo and homemade pies. We like boiled crawfish and fried catfish. We are Cajuns, Spanish, creoles, and black Americans. We get along just fine. I grew up in a 3-room house, with 1 sister and 3 brothers. My daddy was a WW2 veteran and my mother a baker. My daddy taught us how to hunt and fish. Yes, I got my first BB gun at 6 years old. I learned how to shoot a shotgun at 10. We had a simple life but it was a great life. We ate wild game and I loved it. I had a great childhood living free. Those were the good old days. We didn't care what our house looked like, but my mother kept it spotless. My dad taught us a lot and I miss them so much. I love Louisiana!!

    • @rhodabaruch4
      @rhodabaruch4 5 місяців тому +1

      Capitalize the “C” in “Creoles” and “B” in “Black” and don’t list us last. I don’t know if Louisiana having the highest incarceration per capita rates with most of them being Black Americans quite qualifies as “all getting along well”.

    • @maryparsons5543
      @maryparsons5543 5 місяців тому

      How would you know? You probably live in Chicago!!!@@rhodabaruch4

    • @cynthiacarlos9820
      @cynthiacarlos9820 5 місяців тому +5

      I agree 1000% with you!! We had no worries back then. Always ran around in our bare feet drinking out of the hose pipe on them hot days after playing & getting so sweaty. I miss those days! I wish I could go back!! The world was a much better place than it is now!!!

    • @lindaburns4890
      @lindaburns4890 5 місяців тому +3

      Must have been a nice peaceful city to live in, too bad those old days won't come back, now times have changed too much.. good neighbors, ..

    • @lilacrosesandthemoon
      @lilacrosesandthemoon 5 місяців тому +1

      Sounds like a great childhood.

  • @susievarnado2142
    @susievarnado2142 Рік тому +1591

    Rural Louisiana is a place where if your down on your luck,you can live in a house trailer or shante with out being embarrassed and that’s a lot better than living on the streets in some big city.

    • @prepperandson1399
      @prepperandson1399 Рік тому +142

      exactly and no one should be embarrassed

    • @TheSolitary1
      @TheSolitary1 Рік тому +103

      I live in Atlanta and you are so right. Seeing entire families with infants sleeping in parks is heartbreaking

    • @charleshoang566
      @charleshoang566 Рік тому +36

      Some houses in Northeastern Texas look like the chicken coops.

    • @rubyparchment5523
      @rubyparchment5523 Рік тому +51

      Snoop Dogg’s father’s last name is Varnado! I read that many California Blacks had Louisiana roots. And there’s a town there of that name!

    • @curtisbrown5939
      @curtisbrown5939 Рік тому +14

      You got that right 👍

  • @ourblazingworld
    @ourblazingworld Рік тому +364

    Mamou is known for it's Mardi Gras celebration. The ride around on horses and collect chickens and other stuff to make gumbo. My Aunt married a Guidry and lived in Crowley; I loved going to visit her as a kid. Her husband was creole and loved hearing his french and his accent on english. He was a good man, they both were good people and I miss them.

    • @MustafaBinAkbar
      @MustafaBinAkbar Рік тому +2

      Grand Mamau is a famous song

    • @benjaminguidry5827
      @benjaminguidry5827 Рік тому +4

      Interesting. My family is from Crowley.

    • @surpriseitsus9622
      @surpriseitsus9622 Рік тому +4

      Beautiful story. Thanks for sharing it.

    • @louisinese
      @louisinese Рік тому +7

      My family is from ville platte.

    • @wackyruss
      @wackyruss Рік тому +9

      That’s awesome that French language still survives in Louisiana. I hope it never dies out completely. That would be tragic.

  • @yolandam611
    @yolandam611 Рік тому +203

    I would love for you to interview people every now and then just to get a real feeling of what it's like to live in these towns

    • @mango8918
      @mango8918 Рік тому +20

      Amen...then you begin to get a real feel for the town. Towns are made up of a lot more than just buildings. It's made up of people and their lives.

    • @bextar6365
      @bextar6365 Рік тому +7

      All like ghost towns, not one person seen out and about other than driving?

    • @TedH71
      @TedH71 Рік тому +2

      @@bextar6365 He probably was driving around in the middle of the day during the week. I bet he would get more people on the weekends.

    • @tomcripps7229
      @tomcripps7229 Рік тому +4

      I don't doubt that he interacts with the locals. Interviewing and filming conversations is another ballgame that could invite legal troubles without a waiver.

    • @kenkunz1428
      @kenkunz1428 Рік тому +4

      The problem is, there are never, ever any people out on the street in these vids.

  • @Bubba_Beer_Gut
    @Bubba_Beer_Gut Рік тому +59

    Working in New York and living in New Jersey makes me appreciate how quiet and empty some other parts of this country can be.

    • @sepperD3
      @sepperD3 9 місяців тому +3

      Well I tell ya what Louisiana has empty places lol it's a nice quiet place until your car is stolen and your cat is knocked up

    • @russm4677
      @russm4677 8 місяців тому

      Dude I grew up in Jersey. Went to Rutgers... I now live here in Bossier City Louisiana. The place is complete garbage. I truly miss NJ. But that may just be me

    • @Liz-xc5zs
      @Liz-xc5zs 7 місяців тому +1

      @@russm4677 how did you end up there? I fantasize about Louisiana sometimes. I live in New York and am working on moving south.

    • @alejandrorodriguez5315
      @alejandrorodriguez5315 6 місяців тому

      Same here, I’m in Cranford NJ!

  • @michaelbrower5042
    @michaelbrower5042 Рік тому +326

    Most abandoned mobile homes are the aftermath of hurricanes. A lot of these rural towns that are depopulating were thriving before the interstate system was put in. Oil and gas industry is at a downturn due to various reasons causing some relocation. The Acadian region you are exploring is very strong in culture and heritage. Some of the best folks you'll ever meet.

    • @watchiman1
      @watchiman1 Рік тому +4

      Was hoping you would go into Trees and show the place and the people. I luv smoked meats btw. Carry on. Come to my town give you a tour.

    • @watchiman1
      @watchiman1 Рік тому +1

      Fred's I meant

    • @jmarengo9662
      @jmarengo9662 Рік тому +5

      Said what I was thinking... hurricane Laura and others moved alot of folks out

  • @evelynfoster2706
    @evelynfoster2706 Рік тому +109

    Can you imagine what the old houses would tell if they could talk ? I love old and small places. Thank you for sharing the area and small towns with us !!

  • @TheMechasmo-ef5ue
    @TheMechasmo-ef5ue Рік тому +72

    One thing you need to take in account when you're down in Louisiana is when you see something like that trailer being taken over by nature that's only about a month or two of growth in the summer. I giggled when you said it's been abandoned for a very long time. 😆

    • @joeschmo7957
      @joeschmo7957 Рік тому +18

      I also love it when people from out of town roll through and figure they know the whole story already.

    • @ILikesports360
      @ILikesports360 Рік тому +5

      Mane the grass and plants be growing crazy for reason

    • @J.C.Ky.ridgerunner1955
      @J.C.Ky.ridgerunner1955 Рік тому +5

      If a person likes to learn history about the U.S. this is a good place to learn it. Especially the comments from the locals. Thanks for your videos and the comments from all the ppl. Very educational and interesting.

    • @Tugela60
      @Tugela60 26 днів тому

      When there is a tree coming through the roof, it is a long time 😂

    • @Bigdaddyleroy2big
      @Bigdaddyleroy2big 20 днів тому +1

      ​@@Tugela60 in Louisiana, certain trees can grow 10 feet in a year.

  • @kirk467
    @kirk467 11 місяців тому +39

    I know my feelings about Louisiana from my experience and I’m 63, my dad’s family were Cajun French and my mom’s family were Cajun French but my dad and his brothers and sisters spoke French but they used the language to talk over us as kids! I’m still upset with that today because we as they coming up youth back then were cheated out of our chance to learn the language and carry on the tradition! I still talk to my mom about it even today! I never had a chance to teach my daughter and for her to teach her kids! I believe that’s what you’re looking at with these small towns my friend, the tradition is gone and lost and nobody has the respect like the old people did! I love Cajun music and the language even though I can’t understand all of it or speak it! But I remember when the old people took care of these towns and they were beautiful, that’s the only thing that the old generation did was to keep the cities clean and hospitable! Thanks for sharing and my dad’s family is from Lafayette! Just my opinion!

    • @Lunarbobadragons
      @Lunarbobadragons 7 місяців тому +2

      I feel the same way . Hurts my heart to see all that culture fading . I try hard to keep it alive in my family.

    • @user-rr9gr3qp2j
      @user-rr9gr3qp2j 2 місяці тому

      My dad was raised tri-lingual(spanish,creole and french) .He didn't teach any of us kids any of those languages. There were letters written in spanish 2 him from his mom,but my mother threw them out because she didn't understand them. When she told me this,I was pretty darned upset and asked her if she didn't think 1 day us kids would grow up 2 want 2 c them? By this time i was studying Spanish at school. I was the only 1 of 4 kids 2 do spanish. The others did french. I had always loved spanish not even knowing my heritage. Years later i met a man and had 3 kids 4 him. Here, history repeats itself because he also did not teach the kids his native tongue(creole). I wasn't very confident in teaching it 2 them because I was not fluent. They r all grown now, with1 having kids of his own with a girl whose native tongue is not english. She says she speaks her native tongue 2 the kids,but i c no evidence of it. I AM SOO UPSET. It's like a curse or something.

  • @solarguy1702
    @solarguy1702 Рік тому +57

    Was in the Air Force with a guy from Lafayette. Told me every time he drove his van to New Orleans, he would get pulled over and searched for drugs. He went to a sporting goods store and got two big stickers. One of a fish and one of a deer. Put them on his van and never got stopped again.

    • @mrjon75
      @mrjon75 Рік тому +12

      Busted, down on Bourbon Street.
      Set up, like bowling pin.
      Knocked down,
      It gets to wearing thin.
      They just won't let you be... 🎶

    • @oranstelly5393
      @oranstelly5393 Рік тому

      Ok..

    • @ronaldwalton6066
      @ronaldwalton6066 Рік тому +7

      @@mrjon75 Great Dead reference. "Truckin" good song.

    • @mrjon75
      @mrjon75 Рік тому +4

      @@ronaldwalton6066 I knew at least a couple folks would get it :)

    • @solarguy1702
      @solarguy1702 Рік тому +5

      @@mrjon75 what in the world ever happened to sweet Jane?

  • @Neilsowards
    @Neilsowards 9 місяців тому +21

    I learn so much from the comments. Thanks to all the people who give history and personal experiences, so we can better understand the places.

  • @jlathem56
    @jlathem56 9 місяців тому +17

    During the '70s and '80s, I traveled through many of those towns as a portrait photographer. There was a large percentage of the people there who had never traveled more than 30 miles away from their hometown. It was also a very different way of life.

  • @HornetLarry
    @HornetLarry 7 місяців тому +22

    The vibe here is unreal. The elevated houses, the sun, the grass, the swamp. I can hear the accordion and the banjo playing in my head just by watching.

  • @reb1050
    @reb1050 Рік тому +52

    Nothing new here when you were brought up in rural America. That's especially true in the South. I grew up in a town with a population of just under 800 back in the 50's and 60's (and I think they counted the dogs and cats to get that number). The last time I visited that town was 2 yrs. ago and about half of the buildings on main street were demolished (the rubble was still there). Some of the old houses were still there, but the majority of them were either remodeled to the point you couldn't recognize them, or replaced with newer houses (or just gone completely). At 73 yrs. old now, I could not find anyone I knew from the years gone by. I always thought I would someday return "home", but after that visit, I realized there was no "home" to return to. None of my few remaining relatives are still living, and none of the friends I once had there are living or still live in that area.

    • @debrahelmlinger6256
      @debrahelmlinger6256 Рік тому +2

      ☹️

    • @joesmith9216
      @joesmith9216 Рік тому

      you got that right, they will erase a lot of places and more to come, THEY, Meaning rothschild.

    • @rafaeltorre1643
      @rafaeltorre1643 Рік тому +5

      My dad is 73. Your comment made me chuckle and sad at the same time. I swear your last statement is a quote from a movie I’ve seen. That you thought you would return home but there was no home to return to. I’m glad everyone thinks this way. That regardless of where you end up, nothing will ever feel as “home” as there place you grew up in and the memories of loved ones are.

    • @chriscusick6890
      @chriscusick6890 Рік тому +3

      Yeah, I'm 66 and I know that feeling. Old acquaintances and places are now ghosts of the past.

    • @fabiancain3852
      @fabiancain3852 Рік тому +1

      Ditto.

  • @charlesrobertthomas
    @charlesrobertthomas Рік тому +97

    Glenmora La isn’t perfect but the people who live there are warm friendly and inclusive, for the most part. I grew up there and graduated from high school there. I have a wide range of memories of my home town, G-Town. ❤

    • @joeschmo7957
      @joeschmo7957 Рік тому +1

      What exactly do you mean when you say "inclusive"? Please define that.

    • @barbarabreaux2719
      @barbarabreaux2719 10 місяців тому +1

      I grew up in Glenmora and have family still there. Great place to raise a family.

    • @waynelofton2068
      @waynelofton2068 2 місяці тому

      I grew up there and remember going to the movies every Friday night. Mr Pringle showed the same movie all weekend and all he sold was a small bag of popcorn and a small cup of Coke. A Dollar each. I remember when Raiders of the Lost Ark came and it was standing room only. Great memories. Glenmora had every store open… a parts house, Dollar store, Glenmora Hardware store, Fuzzies Dairy Queen, cotton merchant store ( only place to get magazines and comics), G&Gs. Good ole days.

  • @TheFrugalMombot
    @TheFrugalMombot 10 місяців тому +30

    My dad was born in Mamou (pronounced like mah moo). Used to spend my summers with my grandparents there. So many great memories.
    My grandfather played accordion at Fred’s and Fred and Sue were like family to me. I’d spend my days walking from one end of town to the other catching crawfish and frogs in the ditches. Everyone knew who I was and really everyone was like family. If I got thirsty or hot, just about anyone would offer me some tea or lemonade. My dad’s side of the family are buried in that cemetery. One section is Protestant and the other is catholic.
    My grandfather was actually featured in a Life or Time magazine (can’t remember which). You can find old videos of him playing accordion at Fred’s on UA-cam.
    My grandmother barely spoke English. French was her native tongue as was the case of most born in that area.

    • @venetia6296
      @venetia6296 10 місяців тому +1

      Fred’s was the place to ‘pass a good time’✌️

    • @leilasutton8233
      @leilasutton8233 10 місяців тому +1

      omg! Are you family of Charles Duplichienne?

    • @TheFrugalMombot
      @TheFrugalMombot 9 місяців тому

      @@leilasutton8233 I don’t think there’s any relation, but my dad was friends with some of them and actually some of them later ended up growing up around where I grew up and I went to school with them (Deidre and I forget the other kids names)

    • @sparkysmom7149
      @sparkysmom7149 4 місяці тому

      Awesome, rich, history. I love it ❤️

  • @u.s.militia7682
    @u.s.militia7682 Рік тому +80

    I’m loving this video. It’s taking me back. Fully functioning Civil War cannons used to be a common sight in people’s front yards across the South in the early 1970’s. Also, before the interstate roads were built, all the “mom & pop” shops were open for business. We had no Walmart’s or McDonald’s & gasoline station attendants actually came to your car and checked your oil and water and filled your tank up with leaded gasoline. All the small towns had an ice cream stand too. We had cards on Saturday night with dad’s family and Sunday supper at mom’s family. I was very fortunate to have experienced it all.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Рік тому +5

      Wow. Thank you for the great comment.

    • @corrinnacorrinna5572
      @corrinnacorrinna5572 Рік тому +4

      What a shame it's all in the past 😕 WV is like this as well & all of the foods, traditions, lifestyle that made us unique are forever gone.

    • @iron352
      @iron352 Рік тому +6

      It's not that much trash 🗑️

    • @TAWier
      @TAWier Рік тому

      @@iron352 what trash? Lol

    • @mikewilhelmson8413
      @mikewilhelmson8413 Рік тому +3

      I can't even put my jealousy into words. I was born in 1988 and grew up here in the Midwest. But my soul belongs in the deep south and in the past.

  • @trixier6505
    @trixier6505 Рік тому +103

    How I miss the flatness, small houses, old gas stations, and vegetation along the Gulf Coast. I grew up in a small, Southern town and am sad to see that so many small towns are disappearing all over the country. Thank you very much for your documentation.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Рік тому +3

      Thank you for the kind words, Trixie!

    • @trixier6505
      @trixier6505 Рік тому +4

      @@JoeandNicsRoadTrip you are more than welcome.

    • @normanlee4025
      @normanlee4025 Рік тому +10

      Very sad to see this fading town, Hard to believe when there is so much homeless in the USA.

    • @Surfer041
      @Surfer041 Рік тому

      @@normanlee4025 Cost of Living is too high.

    • @TheMrDamp
      @TheMrDamp Рік тому +8

      @@Surfer041cost of living in rural towns is not high. There’s just no opportunity anymore for people to make a decent living.

  • @ckzf1842
    @ckzf1842 Рік тому +11

    I find your channel on small American ( mostly dying ) towns truly fascinating ; really sad to see these once thriving small towns - slowly corroding , and dying …

  • @Michelle-oc4ty
    @Michelle-oc4ty Рік тому +12

    I imagine a lot of residents didn't come back after Hurricanes Katrina and Wilma hit in 2005. I was a volunteer that went out there to help and met some of locals. Many people lost EVERYTHING they had, including their lives. A lot of buildings became plagued with deadly mold and infested with termites and some didn't have insurance. It was horrible and the few people that came back to see how their homes withstood the hurricane, were leaving again permanently. It was very heart wrenching. .
    Be thankful for what you have, as it could be gone tomorrow.

    • @Michelle-oc4ty
      @Michelle-oc4ty Рік тому +1

      Also, after you showed the front of a building, that didn't have a main building. I saw a huge store (a big name construction store) that was moved off its foundation, I believe I saw it on the other side of the parking lot.

    • @oXxDutchy
      @oXxDutchy Місяць тому

      The residents of these towns were not affected by Katrina.

    • @oXxDutchy
      @oXxDutchy Місяць тому

      My parish got 30+ feet in some areas for just Katrina alone the areas outside levee protection get 15+ easily every hurricane and come back strong every single time

    • @debbiemoore5737
      @debbiemoore5737 28 днів тому

      And more recently the destruction from Hurricanes Laura and Delta was absolutely devastating. Lake Charles and all the little small surrounding towns are still struggling. So sad

    • @debbiemoore5737
      @debbiemoore5737 28 днів тому

      @@oXxDutchythey most assuredly were affected. Don’t be deceived into thinking that only the ninth ward of NO was effected. Study up on it and see how the evacuation and storm had such a long term affect on LA, TX, MS, and many other states north of there. I live in Carthage TX, (from LA), and can tell you horror stories about the evacuees and the way they treated the volunteers and our shelters

  • @coleengoodell7523
    @coleengoodell7523 Рік тому +196

    I live in Ville Platte and you really did a disservice to the town. There are much nicer, thriving and newer areas. Some beautiful old buildings, two libraries, three local grocery stores and a Walmart, a variety of fast food, sit down restaurants and cute Ma and Pop roadside daily lunch special take-out stands. We also have a beautiful and popular state park. The people who live here have manners and treat one another respectfully. The water is clean enough to drink out of the tap and the air is clean as well.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Рік тому +50

      I visit city downtowns on this channel. That is it. A city's downtown should be the best part of town, not the worst.

    • @diane9544
      @diane9544 Рік тому +7

      @@JoeandNicsRoadTrip good point!

    • @artemisappollo1491
      @artemisappollo1491 Рік тому +7

      We moved to Opelousas for awhile following Hurricane Katrina and we visited the state park a few times..you are right; it is very beautiful * I actually thought it would be a great place to live.🤟💯

    • @benjaminguidry5827
      @benjaminguidry5827 Рік тому +40

      @@JoeandNicsRoadTrip I understand your overarching point, but you aren't simply visiting downtown. I've been to all the cities and towns in this video. It kinda does feel like you're selective about which residential areas you film. I agree that a city's "downtown" should be maintained. Unfortunately though in the south, a lot of downtowns are "historic", and it's difficult to obtain a permit to actually modernize the buildings, so businesses choose to construct in open areas with more real estate. Obviously they also want to be on main thoroughfares.

    • @vjslaughter2059
      @vjslaughter2059 Рік тому +19

      Right! Not sure where Lord S is originally from but as a transplant from Ohio to Louisiana, I have found / noticed each area or town can be different and unique. That is part of the charm of La to me. Others may not agree but it's to each his own. I love La as much as if I was born here and after being here 11 years I feel very much a part of this state even more so than my home state. Ppl down here just think and live different and THANK GOD that is the case bc we all look out for each other. Something you can't find in many states anymore.

  • @paularizzo5217
    @paularizzo5217 Рік тому +14

    This brings back so many memories. Drove down that way while in high school. My boyfriend lived in Welsh, LA. His family had a camp on the gulf coast. Traveled with them to visit relatives around Mamou. Such friendly, happy people. Best food ever!!

  • @mikejohn0088
    @mikejohn0088 7 місяців тому +12

    I remember in HS in the 1960s going to the theater downtown on a Saturday night with a beautiful girl at your side.
    It was a rush posturing your arm closer and closer to her shoulder until contact was made and she remained in place as we watched "The Great Escape."
    All three theaters closed their doors in my home town to be open no more to those teenage transforming years. It's a damn shame, gone forever.

  • @shaynah322
    @shaynah322 Рік тому +24

    I’m a new subscriber, I feel like I’m riding along with you guys . I love history so I’m enjoying learning about so many towns from the comfort of my own home . Thank you for such interesting content .

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Рік тому +3

      Thank you for the kind words, Shayna! My goal is to make you feel like you're riding in the car with me, so you gave me a great compliment! :)

  • @laurienicholas4492
    @laurienicholas4492 Рік тому +40

    It's so sad to see these old towns disappear. I grew up about 20 miles or so from Oakdale.

    • @ronthomas240
      @ronthomas240 Рік тому

      Lived in oakdale for 20 years haha

  • @TheSteveSteele
    @TheSteveSteele Рік тому +16

    I spent some time in Bunkie. The folks I stayed with were wonderful. I spent a lot of time in that general area of Louisiana. If you really want to see something different, start at Thibodaux and go south to Cut Off. It’s like a different universe. Got nothing but love for the people there.

  • @kirk467
    @kirk467 11 місяців тому +6

    During Mardi Gras the Main Street is blocked off and the intersection by Fred’s Lounge is set up with a bandstand and there’s music and food on the streets! You should make a trip and video during Mardi Gras and really meet some crazy fun people and try the Cajun barbecue and gumbo, it’s awesome and exciting! I’m from Lake Charles and a bunch of friends, all get together and ride our Harley’s there for the fun, music and food! Thanks for sharing the video , brings back memories of the last time I was there and it’s been a while! Thanks

  • @lurlenestratton8630
    @lurlenestratton8630 Рік тому +117

    I’ve lived and loved Louisiana my entire life and live in southeastern Louisiana but the entire area you’ve traveled has gotten hit by hurricanes so many times over the years that people got tired of building back just to have another storm wipe it out. That is the main reason so many of these towns have lost much of the population. It breaks my heart to see people give up and move out. If you went a little south of Lake Charles, you would begin to see the damage hurricanes does to our low lying state

    • @richardtorr4553
      @richardtorr4553 Рік тому +1

      That makes a lot of sense Lurlene. It must be heartbreaking to have your home flattened by Hurricanes, not to mention the danger. I was on holiday in New Orleans just a week before Hurricane Catrina struck. When I watched the news back in England I could not believe what I was seeing...that was a close shave! Before we left I could tell something was brewing in the atmosphere, it was really weird. Just so hot and uncomfortable. Thanks for sharing your valuable local knowledge.🙂

    • @drjustin84
      @drjustin84 Рік тому +1

      The Florida panhandle is very similar. Even with the real estate boom, where Micheal hit in 2018 still hasn’t recovered

    • @jgriffin282
      @jgriffin282 Рік тому +2

      It’s amazing how many old historic plantation homes survive. All the floods, storms, hurricane.

    • @johnf817
      @johnf817 Рік тому +6

      At a certain point, people realize it's just not worth it to live in a crime ridden swamp that gets blasted by hurricanes all the time. I would live in Louisiana I could, just not near the coast.

    • @eimanbadri276
      @eimanbadri276 Рік тому +1

      How much dollars of properties at there? House & lands?

  • @debrahelmlinger6256
    @debrahelmlinger6256 Рік тому +33

    You will be surprised at how many houses that look abandoned have people living in them or someone keeping an eye out for people that ain't from around there. I discovered this traveling the back roads of Florida during the 90's and early 2000's.

    • @mariemoore6406
      @mariemoore6406 Рік тому +9

      Exactly ..Don't think just because houses or trailers are abandoned that they are....These towns look like they're fading to the outside world but they're not...Lived here for years

    • @ladywayn1973
      @ladywayn1973 Рік тому +3

      @Marie Moore I've parked outside of abandoned areas and I haven't seen anyone just crawl out of a building even a bank teller area with nothing going on. Should I start pounding on boarded up wood to see if any of them will wake up ?? Lol

  • @ronturner5560
    @ronturner5560 Рік тому +11

    The little hair salon @ 10:02 doesn't cut hair any longer, but it can cut it shorter 😂😂😂.

  • @lilithrose76
    @lilithrose76 3 місяці тому +3

    This video cracked me up! Lol you're in my old stomping grounds. I know people who still live near Bunkie/Marksville. I lived in Effie.
    Avoyelles parish is pronounced A Voils.
    Thanks for the drive down memory lane!

  • @jeffhaynes8848
    @jeffhaynes8848 2 місяці тому +5

    That's all beautiful PEOPLE and you will not go hungry ❤❤❤❤

  • @joebanks3698
    @joebanks3698 Рік тому +63

    You had me at "Cajun food is the best!" Agree 100% with a caveat that can also be applied to Cajun girls. One of the most amazing women I'd ever met in regard to demeanor, humor, looks, sex appeal, and talent was a very proud "coonass," (absolutely not meant derogatorily in any way) from Baton Rouge. Sweet memories of her laughter, scent, sweat, and taste will follow me to my grave. Monica you truly deserve the best of everything...

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Рік тому +9

      LOL, I was waiting for you to say that you married her!!

    • @joebanks3698
      @joebanks3698 Рік тому +14

      @@JoeandNicsRoadTrip 😂 The young fool that I was believing I didn't deserve and couldn't keep someone like her, but things worked out as they were meant to be. Been a widower going on 2 years. Extremely grateful for everything God had given me...no regrets.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Рік тому +6

      @@joebanks3698 That’s awesome. 😀

    • @almabelhumeur6672
      @almabelhumeur6672 Рік тому +2

      @@JoeandNicsRoadTrip Ha! ha! So was I...lol!

    • @nedpiper64
      @nedpiper64 Рік тому +5

      I moved to Louisiana in 2006 and eventually married a beautiful Cajun girl. It's been the best 15 years of my life!

  • @clarencephillips552
    @clarencephillips552 Рік тому +22

    Louisiana is MY favorite Foreign country in the United States I Love it's hospitality it's people it's Food is out of sight MY First Love for 39 years and 10 months before She passed was for there what a Blessing.

    • @ankhpom9296
      @ankhpom9296 4 місяці тому

      LA as a state is not enticing, , but I would love to go driving around to get a feel of the state.
      The only place in LA I’ve been to is New Orleans and its environs.

  • @addisonesslinger3653
    @addisonesslinger3653 Рік тому +5

    Ville Platt closes school for opening day of squirrel season. Can't be a bad place to live.

  • @bretheweb
    @bretheweb Рік тому +14

    Close. Bunkie was named after the plantation owners daughters pet monkey called "bunkie" because she couldn't pronounce monkey. I grew up there in the late 60's/70's/early 80's(went to college in Lafayette) during it's "peak" and got out as soon as I could. Most of my generation also left town. The local high school didn't integrate until the early/mid 70's and there were still "race riots/fights" between black and white students(boys) when I got there in 79.
    That railroad track delineated the black side of town, McNabs didn't close until after I left town, and was why the area was eventually incorporated after the plantation slaves were freed post Civil War to bring out cotton and sugar cane.
    The parts of 12 Years a Slave that happened in the area were just a couple of miles south in an area called Eola. Google Maps has it designated, but the Epps House has been relocated to Alexandria. I remember when they first pulled it into Bunkie around 80/81 when I was in high school.
    Lots of those black families and, I suspect, NOLA refugees have moved to the "white side" of town. My old neighborhood is far more integrated than when I lived there.
    Also, Mamou - Mahmoo. Rapides is Rapeeds. Avoylles is Avoy-els. And not county, but Parish from all the Roman Catholic French.
    There was a Bailey's Theater in Bunkie, too.
    Good video. Glad you weren't there when it was hot. :D

    • @catcrazy67
      @catcrazy67 10 місяців тому +2

      Great info also explaining pronunciation would like to hear the Cajun music

  • @Dutchtreat-pn3cj
    @Dutchtreat-pn3cj Рік тому +33

    Thanks for letting us ride with you. I'm living in Europe as a single dad and can't afford to tour the U.S. This way you are giving us a mini vacation.

  • @keithsView01
    @keithsView01 Рік тому +6

    Thank you. I have been to many of the town you have shown in your videos, but did not see them as you. It is nice to see the neighborhoods and learn of the history you share. I look forward to more

  • @doneggerton7313
    @doneggerton7313 Рік тому +13

    This is my old stomping grounds … When you go to Lafayette be sure to go to Ole Tyme grocery and have a Shrimp Po boy there it is incredible

  • @k-huntk-hunt2086
    @k-huntk-hunt2086 Рік тому +4

    I liked the video because you said, " you can be poor, but still pick up your trash". Facts 💯

  • @OfficialLovelySunflower
    @OfficialLovelySunflower Рік тому +11

    Looks peaceful and quiet. I’m thinking about moving here to get away from noisy humans. 😫🌸🌻

  • @alexandralovesgoats3360
    @alexandralovesgoats3360 Рік тому +9

    Love the tour of the northern small towns. Great trivia and info on the towns. Cemeteries and swamps were very cool. Great narration!

  • @media1groupDC
    @media1groupDC Рік тому +6

    By now you know it's "Mamoo" Taut Sue, Aunt Sue" ran Fred's for years. Always had a shot of fireball for you @ 7:00 a.m. on Saturday mornings. My wonderful Cajun neighbors. Check out Wayne Toups going back to big Mamou tune.

  • @Savoiefair64
    @Savoiefair64 7 місяців тому +2

    Louisiana born (New Orleans) and raised . Lived in Alexandria, and below I-10 corridor (Lafayette) and my husband says the hardest thing to do is to get a Louisiana girl to leave the state. Never leaving this beautiful full of culture State! It has a sultry beauty and nostalgia that is difficult to put your finger on but once you feel it and get in the groove of what it’s all about it won’t let you go ❤️

  • @becca2475
    @becca2475 10 місяців тому +6

    I'm a Harvey that married a Marrero my roots run deep in Louisiana & will always be my home no matter where I live today. Jambalaya crayfish pie & filet gumbo Cajun girl in ❤ & soul

    • @LuziannMan
      @LuziannMan 4 місяці тому

      I'm from Old Gretna and work on River Road in Marrero. I love where we are from and wouldn't trade it for the world!

  • @crewmax4240
    @crewmax4240 Рік тому +29

    We call them "shotgun shacks". Usually they were built by mill companies to rent to the workers. The mills were the fabric of the communities. When you see those hulking buildings with hoppers on the roof, those are mills. They lasted until all that work gravitated overseas because labor dried up as young people left for greener pastures. I really enjoy your travelogues, man.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Рік тому +1

      Thank you, Crewmax.

    • @cjlooklin1914
      @cjlooklin1914 Рік тому +2

      Are you sure the young people left before the jobs left?

    • @jamesroberts2115
      @jamesroberts2115 3 місяці тому

      They were called shotgun houses because if you opened the front and back doors you could fire a shotgun through the house and not hit anything. Had plenty of those where I used to live in South La..

  • @xxx-gp6sj
    @xxx-gp6sj Рік тому +16

    I don't understand why your videos hasn't so many view, you are truly showing a lot of the American History places, that I am sure that most of the American even heard about it!! Louisiana state has signficant role in American History since XVIII when it was created, not only in music, but cusine, food, religion, clothing, language, architecture, art, literature, games, and sports. Unfortunately since the civil war it was relegated to "minimum importance" but thanks for you to show those places. Please if you can talk about the Jean Laffitte the pirate who hide some of his treasure bouty on Lousiana somewhere in the bayous and it was never found!! that is an amazing history and a good place to visit.

  • @andrewmcnicoll4268
    @andrewmcnicoll4268 Рік тому +35

    HEY, MY NANA'S HOMETOWN (Glenmora)! She lives at the end of McNicoll St. My Papa was part of the town committee when they started naming streets; they used to not have names or just had informal names. As you might have guessed, he gave it our last name. We have family in almost each town you went through, including a camp in Oberlin.
    And yes, PLEASE do a video of Mamou (Mah-moo) during Mardi Gras. Fred's is poppin on Saturday mornings. They do prizes for farthest traveled because so many people visit. My Papa was even featured in the article cover when National Geographic came and did a piece about the bar.

  • @user-xn1ww4dp3b
    @user-xn1ww4dp3b 8 місяців тому +3

    My wife and I really enjoy your videos; we especially enjoy learning the small differences between our two countries. We live in the largest town (Blyth) in Northumberland, England but it is still classed as only a small town with a population of 37,000+ and growing. It is surprising when you call a place with 8000 a small city. I think the biggest surprise is seeing so many buildings simply abandoned as if the people just walked away. My wife keeps saying: "Where do all the people go?". It really makes me want to visit.

    • @jenniferduncan4966
      @jenniferduncan4966 8 місяців тому +1

      These videos DO NOT depict how most Americans live even in small towns and small cities. He’s cherry picking the worst of the worst for views and advertising revenue. Don’t believe his hype.

  • @janoswimpffen7305
    @janoswimpffen7305 Рік тому +25

    I have traveled to over 90 countries on every inhabited continent and few of them have such areas of extreme poverty and derelict buildings as one finds in the USA. The levels of inequality are matched only in a few corners of Africa and Asia. The saving grace is that one finds that people, whether in Louisiana, Kenya or Cambodia to be wonderful. Here in America WalMart and the automation of most industries has killed off these towns.

  • @JayStorms
    @JayStorms Рік тому +6

    You should stop by some shop that is still open and ask them for a quick interview ask them about the town and how long have they been open etc... would be interesting

  • @Villian_Karai
    @Villian_Karai Рік тому +4

    that storage shed is a livable home someone lives in

  • @p4ul1123
    @p4ul1123 2 місяці тому +1

    I was born in Bunkie, raised in a little community outside of Marksville. You did an excellent job showing what is becoming of that area. There are life-long politicians who have been in office since the rust and decay started, and the citizens continue to vote for them without asking for change. I love the people of that area, but getting them to see that they deserve better is next to impossible. Watching you struggle to get a signal while in city limits lets you know just how bad things are. Wireless businesses won't invest the area without businesses coming in to generate money. I'm praying that the people decide to want more out of their tax money. If not, all those towns will disappear.
    Oh, and it's pronounced Ma-moo. ❤

  • @potentialreality
    @potentialreality Рік тому +40

    This is where my mother's family was from for several generations going back to the late 1700s. My grandmother was born in Mamou and grandfather was born in Mallet (close by.) I have never met someone with heritage from St. Landry Parish in which we could not quickly figure out how we were related. I am not sure when large numbers of people started leaving but many members in my family and cousins left in the 1930s and 40s for places like Lake Charles and the western border of Texas (Raywood, Port Arthur, and Beaumont.) Did you at least get to try the food. I miss that a lot. I haven't been back to St. Landry Parish in about 15 years. I miss it though. I have traveled all over the world and these are the friendliest people I have met. Oh, Zydeco music is from Mamou. I enjoyed your video. I not much of it has extreme poverty but I will always cherish the area as it is where my roots are from.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Рік тому +3

      Thank you for sharing this.

    • @rivareed1641
      @rivareed1641 Рік тому +7

      My mother's family is from Chittagnier, Mamou, Eunice. It has changed so much from when I was a kid in the 80's. Really sad to see the culture dying

    • @potentialreality
      @potentialreality Рік тому +4

      @@rivareed1641 My great great great grandfather was a Reed. He fought with Napoleon. He had a bar in Ville Platte and it was my understanding he was a tourist attraction. People would stop by to listen to his stories about fighting with Napoleon. I have family in Chattagnier and Eunice as well. It is sad to see the culture dying. I am doing what I can to keep it alive. I have done something like 25 years of research on our heritage. A while back I was considering getting a graduate degree in Louisiana Studies at ULL under Carl Brasseaux. I have read a number of his books on our heritage. I am sure like everyone else I have met who has roots in St. Landry Parish that we are related. The people before me include St. Andre, Fontenot, Gobert, DeVille, Lede, Rougeau, Reed, Allain, Guillory, Gradenigo/Gradney, Donato-Bello, Vasquez, Metoyer, Victorian, - these are most of my great grandparents from St. Landry Parish.

    • @rivareed1641
      @rivareed1641 Рік тому +5

      @@potentialreality My Reed comes from my dad, he's from Texas. My mom's family is Johnston, Sonnier, Cormier, Fontenot, and a Spanish name I can't remember of the top of my head :( The Johnston is from the same family of J Bennet. The family split in early 1900's and J Bennet's father "stole" the family bible. It was quite a scandal that was talked about every single Sunday.

    • @potentialreality
      @potentialreality Рік тому +4

      @@rivareed1641 I have Sonnier and Cormier too. That is back in the 1700s but also in St. Landry Parish. I have Johnston way back. He was from Acadia, Nova Scotia so a true Cajun. I am forgetting where he migrated to, maybe Ville Platte. Fontenot is my grandmother's name from Mamou.

  • @talltrucker2682
    @talltrucker2682 Рік тому +5

    Good Ole Glenmora…. I used to live and work there. Home is only 20 minutes away. Oakdale used to be a very rough place to live. Thanks for the video. 😃😃

  • @clarencephillips552
    @clarencephillips552 Місяць тому +1

    Got a ticket there in 1982 and the Judge was also the Mayor and returned to pay my ticket and talked with his wonderful Mother while I waited for him to come off the river to open the safe to get my license be Blessed 😇🙏

  • @desiderata1104
    @desiderata1104 Рік тому +2

    Reminder to be kind with how you remark assumptions for the obvious. I appreciate seeing corners of Louisiana and subscribed to your channel immediately. Thank you for the time you invest to provide that. 👍

  • @Phoebe1980.
    @Phoebe1980. Рік тому +10

    Thank you so much for posting this, I love going to LA and New Orleans. I was super excited to see this pop up this morning! We’ve been to plantation country where Oak Alley and a bunch of others are and we always go to Laplace LA to the Cajun Pride swamp tour. I’ve never actually driven around and explored Cajun country though so I loved seeing this video. Please do more Louisiana videos.
    ⚜️💜💛💚 🦐

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Рік тому +2

      Thank you, Stacy! Yes, there are more Louisiana videos coming. :)

  • @Markus_Andrew
    @Markus_Andrew Рік тому +15

    It's sad to see these small towns which were once bustling with commerce, activity and life slowly fading away. So many stories behind the vacant storefronts and deteriorating homes which will never be heard... I find it very poignant. I wonder how many will end up as complete ghost towns in decades to come, or even be completely consumed by nature with almost nothing to indicate that they ever even existed. I'm talking about a pretty long span of time there, but our works can seem so impermanent when compared to the relentless, tireless march of nature. The vagaries of civilization also play their part in the decline of rural communities, of course. I like to think that at least some of these towns may bounce back, but that's probably a forlorn hope for the most part.
    Your videos are wonderful, LS. I'm so appreciative of your efforts to present these places which are so far away from where I live, and which I would otherwise never get to see. I find them absolutely fascinating. Whatever else the internet may be, there's no denying that for experiences like this, it's without parallel. It's an amazing time to be alive.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Рік тому

      Great comment, Markus! Thank you for that.

    • @davidgraham7325
      @davidgraham7325 Рік тому

      I would say that the increasing bad weather and deadly hurricanes 🌀 😑 are the main reason why people are leaving the lowlands for higher ground

    • @hughriger6177
      @hughriger6177 Рік тому +1

      Walmart Kills!!!

    • @goonn337
      @goonn337 Рік тому

      Nobody wants to live those places

  • @returnofthenative
    @returnofthenative Рік тому +8

    I've just watched TX, & now LA.
    What strikes me is that the downtown areas look pretty much like any small town here in Australia. The houses are very different though.
    Thanks for the vids, I really enjoy them.

    • @mccadee5933
      @mccadee5933 Рік тому

      I understand what you mean but please remember that he is only showing the saddest areas. There are lovely homes and subdivisions in each of these small towns. We grew up and live in the area. Small towns were abandoned when it became possible to shop in larger towns. The automobiles made people more mobile.

  • @lisbethseeley3121
    @lisbethseeley3121 Рік тому +7

    You must appreciate people that do not have as much as maybe others have

  • @9thGenerationCajun
    @9thGenerationCajun Рік тому +82

    "Acadiana" I'am a 9th generation Cajun/ Creole my dad moved to New Orleans in the late 50's for work so I grew up in the south east of Louisiana. The baffling thing to me in the 80's & 90's as soon as you would get on the west side of the Mississippi River EVERYONE had a thick Cajun accent. It has drastically faded with the gen Z's but the further you get away from I-10 you will find Cajuns that sound like my cousin Troy Landry from "Swamp People " and yes Cajuns are all linked we're all cousins. Most don't really know our history, Over half of the original Acadians were mixed with Mi'Kmaq Indian from Nova Scotia. King Philip of Spain granted my great grandparents land in 1785 to use them as a buffer between Apache and Chitimacha Tribes so you will notice alot of the people you see look mixed . I describe myself as a "Gumbo" I have every nationality in my DNA in Louisiana... (Stop at Best Stop Meat Market on hwy 93 in Kankton between Lafayette and Opelousas and get some Boudin Balls & Cracklins )

    • @barbarawelcome3373
      @barbarawelcome3373 Рік тому

      .

    • @louisinese
      @louisinese Рік тому +6

      I’m a creole that moved out of state, but my lineage is form the Evangeline parish. Komen ca va mon frèr?

    • @MJIZZEL
      @MJIZZEL Рік тому +1

      @@barbarawelcome3373 ,

    • @almabelhumeur6672
      @almabelhumeur6672 Рік тому +5

      Very interesting. I am Canadian and live in Ontario, Canada. I use to watch your cousin on TV. Troy Landry.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Рік тому +8

      I've been to around 12 towns in the area, have talked to people at gas stations, grocery stores, restaurants - I have yet to hear a Cajun accent. I'm a bit surprised.

  • @teresaharris-travelbybooks5564

    This reminds me of Blountstown Highway, southwest of Tallahassee, and of the Forgotten Coast area. I actually love these types of places and if a person just wanted a quiet place to retire, the only thing stopping you would be a fear of hurricanes and tornados. Regarding the trash; possibly an animal got into it and no one has had a chance to pick it up? It does happen.

  • @RacerRoss
    @RacerRoss Рік тому +2

    Thank you sir, you take us on a nice journey that I hope to go on myself when I retire. 😊

  • @brianjohnson2483
    @brianjohnson2483 Рік тому +54

    Between Woodworth and Glenmora on the west side of Highway 165 there was the massive Camp Claiborne, a WWII Military training camp. You can still see a fair amount of the old roadways on Google Earth views. It was an awesome place to explore as a kid in the late 1960's. At one time, there was one or two military surplus stores along Hwy 165 in that area. I grew up just down the road in Oakdale. So great to see them both in a UA-cam video.

    • @teraceburns7
      @teraceburns7 Рік тому +1

      I think every high school student from the 90's went to at least 1 bonfire at Claiborne..those partied were epic!!!

    • @sheilathompson6631
      @sheilathompson6631 Рік тому +1

      Yelp we rode four wheelers down there.

    • @fourwindsflock971
      @fourwindsflock971 Рік тому +3

      I am from the area... family still lives in the sticks there!! One thing I must say--- trash busted out windows, left towns-- Hurricanes ravage these small towns and with little to NO city revenues to rebuild they get left behind!! So ease do not take the trash and busted out windowsn...abandoned buildings for something more than a sad part of history dying due to natural disaster. (Not that all trash is from that..but is a huge source of the way these towns look.) Hurricanes season every year takes a couple more out EACH YEAR

    • @kittykat4824
      @kittykat4824 Рік тому +1

      I just went trail riding there a couple weeks ago! Beautiful horse trail riding

    • @johnstoutenburg7163
      @johnstoutenburg7163 Рік тому

      Are you the one who saw a Sasquatch and gave your experience online?

  • @peterparr3079
    @peterparr3079 Рік тому +11

    What I find strange is at most abandoned house's that the lawn's look to be mowed.

  • @womanofjesus1
    @womanofjesus1 5 місяців тому +1

    Wow.. I used to love seeing old towns, but it's been decades. So much history. These vids are great. Shows me parts I'd never seen but would like to see.

  • @user-hd7vl5kw9c
    @user-hd7vl5kw9c Рік тому +1

    Thank you for yo.ur tours, Joe and Nic. Y'all do a great job of tour s. I have enjoyed the entires series

  • @u.s.militia7682
    @u.s.militia7682 Рік тому +18

    I grew up in small towns, like these, in Kentucky. There were 6 of us kids. 4 of us moved off & made good lives for ourselves while 2 stayed behind & haven’t done well at all. I’d have given anything to have stayed & prospered but I knew it wasn’t going to happen.

    • @pl7868
      @pl7868 Рік тому +8

      me to left as soon as i turned 16 an got feet under me , one thing that has propelled me through life is hard work pays and learning never stops i got that from growing up poor and watching my mother cry because she was pregnant again an pa was off drunk made up my mind to never have a kid until it had a home that was safe was well fed never had to move and knew it was important and loved , your born meet someone have kids an die that's a normal life , so make the best of it , i'm old just got my sixth grandchild and can die pretty happy made mistakes sure lots did things right sure did that's life .

    • @rafaeltorre1643
      @rafaeltorre1643 Рік тому +2

      @@pl7868 thanks for your comment. It makes me happy I waited to have kids. I refuse to have kids without having financial security, a home I own, and an awesome wife and mom. I need all 3 before I would consider it, even if im 40 before it happens. I can’t imagine worrying everyday when life is so short. At least I’ll be a well traveled and educated dad to pass it on.

    • @pl7868
      @pl7868 Рік тому

      @@rafaeltorre1643 we live on through our kids why not give them the best start we can , they are the next you

    • @curtiseggemeyer5681
      @curtiseggemeyer5681 Рік тому

      I did the same thing left a small farming town in Texas, had I stayed I would be dependent on the government. I did well moving to the Northwest/ Washington State.

  • @andrewleblanc8630
    @andrewleblanc8630 Рік тому +21

    Hello, Proud Louisiana native here, have lived all over the state. Yes, we live in mobile homes and shantys, and sometimes too many to a room, multi-generational, but stop and smell what's cooking on the stove, see kids playing OUTSIDE, entertaining themselves, an aunt or uncle sitting under the tree, an eye on them while he and his buddies play Spades or dominos. Not to offend anyone, but in St. Martinville, it's said that if you could be black on Saturday night you would never want to be white again.

    • @benjaminguidry5827
      @benjaminguidry5827 Рік тому +2

      St. Martinville would be a good spot for his downtown videos

    • @jennyr6094
      @jennyr6094 Рік тому

      @@benjaminguidry5827 absolutely

  • @lovelygoddess2285
    @lovelygoddess2285 Рік тому +3

    Louisiana is beautiful ❤️ lovely state thanks for sharing this video 🏆🏅

  • @dwmzmm
    @dwmzmm Рік тому +6

    You ever been to Natchitoches, LA? The oldest town in the Louisiana Purchase (founded in 1714). The movie Steel Magnolia (and other movies) were filmed there. Lived there for about 15 - 20 years in the 1960's, 70's and early 80's before settling down in the Houston metro area (since 1986).

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Рік тому +3

      We'll be doing a video there, probably in late spring.

    • @dwmzmm
      @dwmzmm Рік тому +2

      @@JoeandNicsRoadTrip You should have an easier time getting there; at the time I moved away from there, I-49 hadn't even been built or finished yet. You'll love what that little town has to offer. Be sure to visit Front Street in downtown Natchitoches (cobblestone streets). Have fun!

  • @Theraceagainstmyhealth
    @Theraceagainstmyhealth Рік тому +6

    It's funny that all of the small towns you go to in LA and TX that they have gigantic courthouses lol

  • @LifeattheCornerCastle
    @LifeattheCornerCastle Рік тому +5

    I have relatives in most of the small towns. My mother was born in Oakdale and lived there most of her life. She is now 84. As a child I would go visit my great grandparents in Oakdale and they only had an outhouse for the bathroom.

  • @Dumperdivingdiva
    @Dumperdivingdiva 10 місяців тому +3

    These were my stomping grounds. Fred's is the best during Mardi gras 🎉❤😅. Love me some Fred's.

  • @diane1390
    @diane1390 Рік тому +4

    I love these little towns, they have so much character, and I love photographing the towns I see like that.

    • @frankmangan2113
      @frankmangan2113 Рік тому

      They are dumps

    • @diane1390
      @diane1390 Рік тому +1

      @@frankmangan2113 maybe, but the old buildings are what draw my attention, those 100 years old or more. That's my main thought.

    • @frankmangan2113
      @frankmangan2113 Рік тому

      @@diane1390 the American dream far from it

    • @diane1390
      @diane1390 Рік тому +1

      @@frankmangan2113 can you actually point out where the American dream is being lived these days? There seems to be so little of that any longer.

    • @frankmangan2113
      @frankmangan2113 Рік тому

      @@diane1390 Your crooked government talk about the American dream all the time, Wonder could they live on the minimum wage ? my guess is no.. I'm Irish and yes we do have poverty but not in your scale... easy dream when you have money American or Irish or wherever you live

  • @lindaw9389
    @lindaw9389 Рік тому +3

    My family lives in Melder, right near Glenmora. This is a great video! Rural Louisiana is something else.

  • @TM-xr5ue
    @TM-xr5ue Рік тому +6

    I don't know how many movies I watched in the Pringle. I spent 18 years doing everything I could to get out of that town. Now I'm trying to figure out how to retire and get back to it.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Рік тому +4

      I am the same way about my old hometown. Funny how things change. :)

  • @AstraMage
    @AstraMage 10 місяців тому +2

    I watch you all the time this is so cool I live in Glenmora Louisiana🤓

  • @jamiewight3336
    @jamiewight3336 28 днів тому

    Love your work Joe keep doing your videos open the eyes of everyone

  • @danafrechette6595
    @danafrechette6595 Рік тому +13

    So I have the LITTLE Hair Salon in Oberlin. Yes it’s little but it’s mine and it fits plenty of people who support my business! This is town that if your from there your heart is forever there. This is a town that comes together when people are in need! I love that you explore these places but you don’t have to choose to share the worst parts of these towns. Yes they are dying but people are trying to bring them back to life. There are very nice homes in all of the towns you showed, you chose to show the bad…
    Outsiders shouldn’t judge by what you see on the outside bc what’s on the inside is quite beautiful…togetherness and family ❤

  • @bluediamond4502
    @bluediamond4502 Рік тому +5

    Hello from oz. First time viewer. I’ve never been to US so I find it so fascinating to see “real life” for some parts. I can relate it to some of our outback towns so empty and quite sad. 💎🙏💕🐨

  • @weshay3699
    @weshay3699 7 місяців тому +1

    Yes, I am sure NAFTA and GATT had been
    responsible for so many business failures, loss of jobs and
    depopulation of so many both rural areas such as these and more heavily
    urban areas. It's really sad and when I look at these videos I get really conflicting
    emotions. Some nostalgic, bitter sweet feelings and downright love. I really hope
    someday many of these places will get a new shot at life somehow.
    Again Joe and Nic thank you so much for taking all this time showing us all these wonders
    most of us were not aware of. I just love it so much!

  • @klh2m661
    @klh2m661 5 місяців тому +1

    Loving that you didn’t edit out the train sounds. I grew up close to train-yards and small stockyards in Montana in the 60s Great memories and feelings of my happy childhood attached to the sound of train whistles. Thanks!

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  5 місяців тому +1

      I would never do that. I love the sound of trains!!

  • @johnbond506
    @johnbond506 Рік тому +8

    The building of interstate 49 is what affected every one of the towns you have shown.

    • @Valmontst
      @Valmontst Рік тому

      You are absolutely correct! It was so sad to see that, especially with the Interstate traffic now bypassing all those small towns. It killed off tourism and many of the small businesses.

    • @EdWatch-yx7hy
      @EdWatch-yx7hy Місяць тому

      But imagine not having the interstate. Trains instead maybe would've been a "fair " alternative.

  • @benjaminguidry5827
    @benjaminguidry5827 Рік тому +4

    Bailey's in Marksville was a nightclub for years. It's now an event center, mostly wedding receptions.

  • @alexr8502
    @alexr8502 Рік тому +2

    Thank you for the video. I’ve been to big cities in US & never thought things are going really bad in small town. So so..sad! Watching from AUS🇦🇺

  • @pamelastockwell3414
    @pamelastockwell3414 10 місяців тому +2

    I’m enjoying this tour. Born nd raised in north central Louisiana; but never got to visit these towns.

  • @bthomson
    @bthomson Рік тому +3

    Love the train whistle! Reminds me of your voice! So mellow and sonorous! You really have a great way with narration!

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Рік тому

      Thanks, B!!

    • @lindag9207
      @lindag9207 4 місяці тому

      Like in the movie Stand By Me!!! That is who his voice reminds me of.

  • @esd9511
    @esd9511 Рік тому +16

    Hello. You are traveling through the part of central Louisiana where my father's parents lived. Their house was in Moreaville. If they needed to go to a grocery store they would drive into Bunkie. Where they lived there were no store's. As a child we would pick corn and trade with others that grew other things or raised pigs, cow's or chicken's. Everyone traded so there was always a lot of fresh food to eat. This was in the late 60's and early 70's. It was a great place to visit as a child because growing up in Houston was so different. Everyone in central Louisiana was so friendly and so nice. I have really great memories of the abandoned places you are visiting. Thank you so much for your video. I will be passing through central Louisiana in a few weeks heading to Atlanta so I may take a little time to look around and see the changes for my self.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Рік тому +1

      Great comment. Thank you for that.

    • @hg58125
      @hg58125 Рік тому +2

      Make sure you make a video and tag it here .. i would love to hear about the changes from you .. everything you said was just so amazing .. point the places you used to visit... safe travels

  • @CharlottePrattWilson
    @CharlottePrattWilson Рік тому +2

    Very interesting and love your commentary. Those trees that were held up by metal stands are strange.

  • @vickyhorton9083
    @vickyhorton9083 Рік тому +5

    Accidentally found your channel but have enjoyed looking at parts of the country I have not visited!
    Have you ever explored the east coast, NC, SC & GA????

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Рік тому

      Some. But will be doing much more in the next few months. We're actually going to spend January in Georgia and the Carolinas.

  • @kalileiore7585
    @kalileiore7585 Рік тому +40

    Ahhh.....Mamou....you should really go back there just to experience courrier de Mardi Gras. Now that's original Mardi Gras how it was before the glitz and glamor of parade floats lol when people ran around like coullions having a good time to collect ingredients for gumbo and chase down chickens :) Good times! Patiently waiting to see what you find in southern half of Acadiana (Lafayette/New Iberia/St Martinville areas)! Love you guys' videos!

    • @fortyarpent
      @fortyarpent Рік тому +3

      Lol Yes! Fred’s! laissez les bon temps rouler! Ayeeee 🎉

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Рік тому

      Thank you Kali!

    • @louisinese
      @louisinese Рік тому +1

      My parents went to vill platte high, we say “kouyon”. Haven’t been to Mardi Gras since a child.

    • @cristalmesser964
      @cristalmesser964 Рік тому

      Yep gotta love Mamou!!!

    • @MrDonny27
      @MrDonny27 Рік тому

      T boy boudin

  • @wynonarburgstiner4667
    @wynonarburgstiner4667 Рік тому +4

    I live in Zwolle, La. a very small town about 7 miles from Toledo Bend Reservoir about 18 miles from the north eastern border of Texas. Our area is famous for Bass Fishing and crappie. Come here in the spring when the bass and crappie are bedding and watch just how active we are. A great place to live for the people, but very poor except for the few families who were lucky enough to be on the natural gas field laying under ground. Caution most of these small towns have active speed limit controls. We also tend to have terrible roads.

  • @user-rl3cs3tj9f
    @user-rl3cs3tj9f 10 місяців тому +1

    Another great video, bud! Thanks for all you do! Two thumbs up!

  • @monamorrow8716
    @monamorrow8716 Рік тому +1

    Lord, we certainly enjoy your excursions of old town America and your freedom and ability to bring it about!

  • @bon6461
    @bon6461 6 місяців тому +6

    If you're gonna be condescending, at least pronounce the towns correctly. It's Mamou ( Mah- Moo). Home of the best Mardi Gras ever.