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CICLOVIA in NEW ORLEANS

July 6, 2013 by Charlie London

bikes1

CICLOVIA in New Orleans is proposed for September 21, 2013. The proposed event will start at City Park then travel down Esplanade to Rampart and end at Armstrong Park.

Jamie Wine describes CICLOVIA in New Orleans this way, “With an activity every 100-200 feet – juggling, dancing, cooking demos, etc. It’s about getting active, fit, meeting others in the community and being healthier.”

WANT TO GET INVOLVED?
  • Sign up to run an activity on the route | Help spread the word to your neighbors
  • Come to the event! |   Need more details?  Contact Jamie Wine Executive Director
    (504) 656-6224 (C)   |    (504) 861-4022 (w)   |    Join us to make bicycling safer, easier and more fun!

 

 

When

Sat, Sep 21, 2013 8:59 am – 12:59 pm

Where

Esplanade, Broad and Orleans

Cost

Free

Details

Why Easy Streets?

Long before cars arrived on the roads of New Orleans, our streets were places to meet and come together. Communities grew up around thoroughfares. They were easy streets to enjoy. We just think it’s time to reclaim the streets, just once in a while, to bring neighbors together. Let’s make the streets of New Orleans the place to be, not something to travel over at breakneck speed. That’s the mission of Easy Streets. It’s a project designed to bring the community together, safely, in a way that’s free of cars and exhaust.

Activities

We’ll have activities for people of all ages from 1 to 100. It’s the perfect place to walk around, meet your neighbors, watch a cooking demonstration, eat some fun food, even dance in the streets as Martha and the Vandellas recommended so many years ago.

Yes, we’re taking back the streets, but in a way that could only happen in New Orleans. So join us on Saturday, September 21st from 9:00AM to 1:00PM. Or better yet, join us early and be a part of bringing smiles to thousands of faces across this great city.

We are currently looking for program partners to lead, organize and create wellness activities, and also educate the participants of Easy Streets. Our goal is to have over 50 program partners for the day of the event, especially if you are willing to help make the inaugural program a huge success and lead the way for subsequent future events.

Full details of partnership (.doc) Application to be a partner – early applicants get the best locations on the route.

***

FSJNA Board Meeting | July 8 | Monday | 7 pm | Holy Rosary Cafeteria | 1368 Moss
I. Guests
• Evacuteer – city evacuation planning – M. Cherney
• Easy Streets (Ciclovia) – Kate Parker & Jamie Wine (BikeEasy.org, (504) 861-4022, Jamie@bikeasy.org)

•  Noise Ordinance – 7 Essentials – Carol Allen and Meg Lousteau – go back to 1997 decibel levels

II. Approval of June 2013 Gen’l & Exec Meeting Minutes
III. Committee Reports/Updates/Actions (if any)
• Public Safety – update
• Membership Outreach Committee – successful Porch Crawl raised over $ 3,200 for Desmare Playground.
• Landscape Committee- Bobby Wozniak talked about the progress of the Coypu grant. $5,000 will go toward adding fish to Bayou St. John and $35,000 will go toward adding trees on the Parkview side of Bayou St. John along with a maintenance contract to care for the trees for a year. Bobby said a lot of indigenous vegetation was planted along Bayou St. John during Earth Day this past spring. Bobby added that the Orleans Levee Board filled the holes along the bayou with crushed granite and sand. The holes were made by nutria.• Re-Bridge – update
• Zoning Committee – the new Motown Coney Island hot dog business on Broad has applied for a liquor permit.

Old Business
• Volleyball on the Bayou – The Mid-City Volleyball Group has taken back their proposal to provide a volleyball venue on the bayou and is currently in discussion with City Park about putting a volleyball venue there.
• PRC Great Neighborhood Sellabration will take place September 14th from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
• Urban Conservancy – Storm Water Managementsign-on letter from the Urban Conservancy
• From Floor
sign-on letter from the Urban Conservancy
7 Essential Items for a Noise Ordinance

 

***

GENERAL INFORMATION ABOUT THE CYCLOVIA MOVEMENT IS BELOW

Ciclovia as defined by Wikipedia: Ciclovía is a term which translates from Spanish into English as “bike path” is either a permanently designated bicycle route or the closing of city streets to automobiles for the enjoyment of cyclists and public alike.

Each Sunday and on holidays from 7 am until 2 pm certain main streets of Bogotá, Cali, Medellín, and other municipalities are blocked off to cars for the exclusive use of runners, skaters, and bicyclists. At the same time, stages are set up in city parks. Aerobics instructors, yoga teachers and musicians lead people through various performances. Bogotá’s weekly ciclovías are used by approximately 2 million people (30% of citizens) on over 120 km of car-free streets.

The inspiration for Ciclovías is credited to the city of Bogotá, Colombia. The events have taken place since 1976 when they started through the efforts of organizer Jaime Ortiz and others. Some credit Bogotá Mayor Hernando Duran Dussan with starting Cyclovías in the early 1980s. Mayor Enrique Peñalosa deserves some credit for turning Bogotá into a safer cycling city by taking on the dominance of automobiles in the late 1990s. In Bogota, permanently designated bikeways are also known as ciclorutas, while streets temporarily closed for that purpose are called ciclovías.

Wikipedia indicates that ciclovia is popular around the world and has been used in numerous cities in the United States.


Taking the streets back on Sundays in San Francisco
***
http://m.theatlanticcities.com/jobs-and-economy/2013/07/s-right-los-angeles-giving-car-lanes-pedestrians/6116/

That’s Right, Los Angeles Is Giving Up Car Lanes for Pedestrians
by Eric Jaffe

Los Angeles has a great deal of walkability despite its car-centric reputation, but much of it remains hidden to the public. In the city’s historic Broadway corridor, at least, that secret is about to come out. The city council recently voted to fund an initial redevelopment of Broadway into a legitimate pedestrian plaza — reducing six lanes of road down to three in the process.

The plan to “bring back” Broadway has been going on for about five years, but it really started to take shape in late 2009 with the public release of a street redesign. The first phase of this “Broadway Streetscape Master Plan” is a makeshift and very cost-effective ($1.8 million) conversion modeled on the pedestrian parcels implemented in New York City. The second phase, yet to be funded, is where the heavy transformations would occur.

The proposed changes will alter Broadway to its core. Instead of five travel lanes plus a “ghost” sixth lane for buses, the street will devote just three lanes to traffic and extend sidewalks and curbs for walking. Transit will be enhanced, too, with improvements to bus service and groundwork for a streetcar line the city hopes to bring to the corridor.
All told, Broadway’s reconfiguration will increase pedestrian share of the road from 38 percent, at present, up to 47 percent — just about going halfsies with cars.

The goal is to rejuvenate a Broadway strip that’s lost much of its historic charm, at least according to the master plan. While shoppers do flock to the area during the day, at night the street is largely shuttered to business. Some of the old theaters have even been converted into non-entertainment venues, though many have agreed to revive their previous roles once the street changes take place.

But Los Angeles has wisely chosen to pursue this goal by making Broadway a much friendlier place to walk around. Right now the traffic whizzes right next to the sidewalk without a buffer, and the 56-foot crosswalks are daunting. The new plan will broaden and beautify the sidewalks and, in addition to reducing the crossing length, also include mid-block refuges.

The traffic studies suggest that the plan represents a true shift in priorities. On their own, the proposed alterations will put a strain on some intersections during morning and evening rush — at least so far as car level-of-service is concerned. But the plans intend to mitigate this impact by promoting walking and transit, and the master document makes clear that vehicles will take a backseat, if you will, to alternative modes.

Instead of seeing an efficient street as one that moves a certain number of vehicles through its intersections at certain target speeds, or one that maximizes throughput, this Plan seeks to move people both through and along the street, in a multi-modal fashion, in order to achieve efficiency and maximize input and output, be that by bus, bike, streetcar, delivery truck, or car.

The plan is far from perfect. The choice for streetcars in the corridor seems inspired more by nostalgia than true mobility: as currently conceived, they will share the road with other traffic and may be redundant with some buses. While plans do call for bike racks, there’s no sign of bike lanes. And parking is a key to the new corridor, no doubt a nod to business demands, although the best new research suggests that retailers make more money over the long term from walkers than from wheels.

But there’s still time to work on the details — phase one won’t be done until the end of the year — and even in its current form the Broadway plan serves a greater purpose. The more that walkability is brought to high-profile parts of Los Angeles, the more that Angelinos can think of it as a natural part of their city as opposed to a hidden gem.

http://m.theatlanticcities.com/jobs-and-economy/2013/07/s-right-los-angeles-giving-car-lanes-pedestrians/6116/

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: #nolaprogress, bicycle, bike, ciclovia, community, cyclovia, festival, fun, New Orleans, neworleans, nola, progress

Postcard from Home

June 29, 2013 by Charlie London

OrganGrinder1926Organ Grinder by Arnold Genthe, 1920

Filed Under: Featured, Postcards from Home Tagged With: New Orleans, nola, organ grinder

Power to the People

June 29, 2013 by Charlie London

full-speed1

Never underestimate the power of dreams and the influence of the human spirit. We are all the same in this notion: The potential for greatness lives within each of us.

~Wilma Rudolph

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: bayou, bayou st john, best neighborhood in New Orleans, city of new orleans, faubourg st john, greatness, New Orleans, new orleans best neighborhood, new orleans progress, nola, people, progress

New Orleans Tomato Company

June 28, 2013 by Charlie London


UPDATE: July 1, 2013

nolatomato4

WGNO’s News with a Twist will do a segment on the New Orleans Tomato Company.nolatomato1
nolatomato5nolatomato6nolattomato2
***
June 28, 2013. Products from the New Orleans Tomato Company are now available at Swirl on Ponce de Leon right off Esplanade. This should be perfect for all our Faubourg St. John friends. Thanks Beth

nola-tomato-at-swirl
***
tomatocompanyUPDATE: JUNE 22, 2013. By William Mauk–> Hi guys. So here is the grand update. We of course have our new logo, however it is at Lakeside Photo getting digitalized so the sauce we have made now will have the old logo on them. Those labels will arrive Monday. We’ll be making our sauce available for sale starting this Tuesday. I would like to remind people that there are only 9 ingredients in our pasta sauce. Creole tomatoes, caramelized onions, basil, oregano, red wine, extra virgin olive oil, salt and pepper. You will not find a more healthy or better tasting sauce. Back to our update. We found a manufacturing facility so we can move out of our house lol. We are now registered with the FDA, and have sent product to NC university for testing. This will give us our nutrition facts and move us one step towards to grocery stores. Now we’re asking for ideas from our friends. We will continue to cook, and would like our clever friends come up with clever ways for us to sell our sauce… did I mention its delicious, nutritious and for sale starting Tuesday?!
***

June 7, 2013
neworleanstomatocompany

New Orleans Tomato Company: Locally Owned, Locally Grown

New Orleans Tomato Company will be launching their Original Pasta Sauce in July, 2013 once they have bottled 500 units. Their cane sugar ketchup will be released about a month after that and then their salsa and tomato basil soup will be offered in the Fall. New Orleans Tomato Company will be hitting the farmers markets once they’ve completed bottling of their pasta sauce, again which will be available in July. William Mauk is a chef by trade. He has strict sanitation practices in the kitchen, and as an urban farmer, grows enough tomatoes for all these products. Currently, New Orleans Tomato Company gets its tomatoes from Becnel Farms right here in Louisiana. All the herbs are grown by New Orleans Tomato Company.

Stay tuned to FSJNAdotORG for more about the New Orleans Tomato Company.

neworleanstomatocompanytomatoes-neworleanstomatocompany

New Orleans Tomato Company: Locally Owned, Locally Grown

Filed Under: Featured, HISTORY Tagged With: farm, ketchup, nawlins, new company, New Orleans, New Orleans Tomato Company, nola, salsa. food, tomato, william mauk

Perigee Moon

June 23, 2013 by Charlie London

perigee-moon-2013june23

Brenda London took this iPhone photo of the moon
over Bayou St. John this morning at 5:45 a.m.

From Wikipedia: A supermoon is the coincidence of a full moon or a new moon with the closest approach the Moon makes to the Earth on its elliptical orbit, resulting in the largest apparent size of the moon’s disk as seen from Earth. The technical name is the perigee-syzygy of the Earth-Moon-Sun system. The term “supermoon” is not astronomical, but originated in modern astrology. The association of the Moon with both oceanic and crustal tides has led to claims that the supermoon phenomenon may be associated with increased risk of events such as earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. However, the evidence of such a link is widely held to be unconvincing.

The perigee-syzygy of the Earth-Moon-Sun system occurred this morning. (June 23, 2013) This full moon will be the closest and largest full moon of the year. It also presents the moon’s closest encounter with Earth for all of 2013. The moon will not be so close again until August 10, 2014.

They occur about once every 14 full moons in a full moon cycle.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: bayou, bayou st john, faubourg st john, moon, New Orleans, nola, perigee, supermoon

Trash Mob on Lafitte

June 23, 2013 by Charlie London

trashmob2013june23

Sunday | June 23rd | 8:30 a.m.


We will meet at 8:30am at Hagan & Lafitte toward Broad (near Jeff Davis) and mob our way down Lafitte St. If you arrive anytime after 8:30, just look for us along Lafitte St. We’re hoping the earlier start time will help us beat at least some of the heat. Please help us continue our assault on litter as we take back the streets from the trash!

Participants are encouraged to bring their own gloves and garbage bags, but we will try to bring a limited supply of extras. The trash mob will last for about 1 to 1.5 hours, but people can participate however long they would like.

=====
For those that are new to NOLA Trash Mob, we are a group of volunteers who want to change the way New Orleans thinks about litter, primarily through clean-ups or “trash mobs”. For these trash mobs, we select a public space, usually a particular city block or area that has a significant amount of litter, and we set a time and day to go and pick up trash there. They usually are scheduled about once a week on Sunday mornings.

We welcome feedback from the community of where areas there is a lot of litter to target for future trash mobs. Additionally, if anyone knows of any organizations that would like to publicize and/or sponsor a trash mob event, we are always in need of publicity, incentives for participants, and trash grabbers to save the mob’s back.

So tell your friends and come on out this Sunday to join NOLA Trash Mob!

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: clean, keep new orleans beautiful, New Orleans, nola, volunteer

Inspirational Leader Gets Praise

May 25, 2013 by Charlie London

norton_1st-ashx

Commander Robert Norton

If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader. ~John Quincy Adams

May 25, 2013
Dear Bobby:

For the past six years, you have brought the First District out of its Katrina depression into one of the safest communities in New Orleans. There has never been a problem too small or too large that you could not personally respond. Even though you worked all day, you went to all of our crime walks and whatever other little thing we did.

Every police officer in the First District is professional in appearance and demeanor. It’s no accident that the First District has lower crime statistics than many areas in New Orleans: this condition is the result of a cohesive, professional unit of law enforcement officers. You have been a beacon of hope, kindness, and effective law enforcement for the First District.

Although we can be a fussy, picky group of people, you have always dispatched exactly the right Quality of Life Officer for Faubourg St. John. I know of no one who would hesitate to ask or tell Robert Norton anything. You have always responded to our email complaints and questions, phone calls and conversations graciously and attempted to understand our points of view.

Not long ago, you mobilized this entire community to find an armed robber. As vigilant as we were–and we were extremely observant and communicative with each other– we didn’t find him. But we ceased to be targets of opportunity, were able to relate information in a timely fashion that led to the arrest of others, and never heard from the armed robber again.

When Commander Norton asked for tips, everyone looked everywhere and came up with some tips! Actually, you probably got way too many tips. Still, this incident stands out for me as emblematic of our respect and trust in Robert Norton.

Bobby, you have been a unifying presence in a district that likes to be divided into little neighborhoods! You have taught us that we’re all in this together and have illustrated how far a little teamwork can go. Whenever I talk to neighbors in Esplanade Ridge, Treme, and Fairgrounds Triangle, everyone knows you and speaks fondly of working with you and your department to solve real problems.

Although you are leaving, you have made permanent changes in the police-community relationship in the First District. You will bring the same professional and caring spirit to your new post as you continue to be a change agent wherever you go. I will miss you terribly and want you to know if there’s every anything I can do for you, I would be so happy to do so.

Kindest Regards,

Mona McMahon

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: 1st District, bayou, bayou st john, best neighborhood in New Orleans, bobby norton, department, eclectic, faubourg st john, first district, leadership, nawlins, neighborhood, neighbors, New Orleans, new orleans best neighborhood, nola, nopd, norton, oasis, police, robert, robert norton, swat

Are You NOLA Ready?

March 16, 2013 by Charlie London

Whether it’s a boil water advisory or hurricane alerts, you need to be ready… NOLA READY! Learn more by visiting the links below.

nola-ready

On the Web – http://new.nola.gov/ready/

Via Email – http://new.nola.gov/ready/emergency-alerts/

On Twitter – https://twitter.com/nolaready

On Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/NOHSEP

 

Readiness starts with you

Whether manmade or natural, every emergency situation is different, and requires both citizen and City to be prepared. From the Final Four to the Super Bowl, all-hazards alerts to hurricane evacuations, 24/7, 365 days a year, agencies across the City of New Orleans work to keep you safe and our city prepared for any event or emergency.  

For our City to be ready, our citizens must be ready. 

We must take all take important steps to prepare for an emergency. At NOLA Ready, we provide all the information residents need to travel their own road to being ready, including how to:

  • Get Informed
  • Make A Plan
  • Gather Supplies
  • Leaving Town
  • Coming Home
  • Get Involved
  • Sign The Pledge

City-Assisted Evacuation

City-Assisted Evacuation assists Orleans Parish residents and/or tourists who cannot self-evacuate during a mandatory City-wide evacuation by providing transportation from designated City evacuation pick-up points to the Union Pacific Terminal bus station, for outbound transportation to State and Federal shelters. Learn more here.

 

Sign the NOLA Ready pledge

Join Mayor Mitch Landrieu and make a commitment to the City committed to you. Make a Plan. Mark Your Name.

Because I love New Orleans, I know how I will leave New Orleans. I am New Orleanian. I am NOLA Ready.

Sign the Pledge


Get notified: Emergency Alerts

Accurate, immediate information, straight from the City of New Orleans to you via text, call, or email.  NOLA Ready is the CIty of New Orleans’ emergency alert system and official source of information about every emergency situation, from power electrical outages to hurricane evacuations. What you need to know, when you need to know it, wherever you need to know it. Sign up here.

 

  • NOLA Ready
    • Get Emergency Alerts. Get NOLA Ready
    • Get Informed
    • Make a Plan
      • City-Assisted Evacuation Application
    • Gather Supplies
    • Leaving Town
    • Coming Home
    • Seniors & Medical Needs
    • Pets
    • Businesses
    • Get Involved
    • Sign The Pledge
    • Partners in Preparedness
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Feedback

 

A CHECKLIST OF ITEMS NEEDED FOR HURRICANE PREPARATION

 

  • Prescription medication for a month
  • Aspirin and non-prescription medicine
  • FIRST AID KIT
  • Antibiotic ointment
  • CASH
  • Drinking water (2 gallons per day per person)
  • Containers for storing water
  • Non-perishable food
  • Eating utensils, paper plates and towels
  • Baby supplies (up to 3 weeks)
  • Non-electric can opener
  • Battery powered TV or radio
  • TOILET PAPER
  • Boards for your windows
  • Matches
  • Fire Extinguisher
  • Flashlight with extra batteries
  • Lantern with extra fuel
  • Fuel for your generator or saw
  • Aluminum foil
  • INSECT REPELLENT
  • Month’s supply of pet food
  • Cat litter
  • Tools and shovel
  • Latex and regular work gloves
  • SIGNAL  LIGHT
  • AX IN ATTIC
  • Rope or heavy cord
  • DISINFECTANT
  • Toiletries and feminine supplies
  • Soap and liquid detergent
  • Household bleach without lemon
  • GARBAGE BAGS
  • Sturdy work shoes or work boots
  • RAIN GEAR AND A CHANGE OF CLOTHES
  • Have a plan of action for your pets.   Many shelters will not take them.   Call the SPCA for more information to help you prepare for evacuating your pets… (504) 368-5191.   
  • http://www.la-spca.org

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: bayou, bayou st john, best, disaster, eclectic, faubourg st john, hurricanes, neighborhood, New Orleans, new orleans best neighborhood, nola, notice, ready, storms, warning, water outage

Bud’s Re-Opening February 9th

February 2, 2013 by Charlie London

budsbroilerEarly to bed, early to rise, work like hell, and advertise.
Laurence J. Peter

Faubourg St. John neighbor, Shannon McGuire would like you to know the original Bud’s Broiler is reopening its doors FEBRUARY 9, for Endymion Saturday, after completing an extensive renovation.

A fire at the Mid City location last year forced owner Shannon McGuire to close the doors of the restaurant. However, after months of clean up and updating, “We’re back in business,” says McGuire.

Bud’s Broiler was opened in 1952 on City Park Avenue by Alfred “Bud” Saunders. Since then, Bud’s has become a dining main stay. Generations of New Orleanians know Bud’s for its cooking slogan, “High Quality Meat and Glowing Charcoal Make the Difference.”

McGuire stresses this attention to detail has guided the renovation and the reopening. “Bud’s isn’t just about the burgers. It’s about the friendly service and the familiar atmosphere,” says McGuire. “We had to stay true to the restaurant that everyone has come to know and love, so when you walk in before Endymion rolls, you’ll feel at home again.”

With the help of All Dry Water Damage Experts, the restaurant now looks better than ever. If you had a favorite menu order number before, you can stop by February 9, Endymion Saturday, for the reopening at 500 City Park Avenue.

Bud’s Broiler reopens on February 9, 2013 and is located at 500 City Park Avenue in Mid City. For more information, please contact Shannon McGuire at budsbroilercityparkavenue@gmail.com or visit http://www.facebook.com/BudsBroilerNewOrleans

Bud’s Broiler started in 1952 by Alfred “Bud” Saunders, has seven locations across the New Orleans area. Bud’s is known for its butterflied hot dogs and its quarter-pound hamburgers, grilled over charcoal and served on toasted buns. More information on Bud’s Broiler is available on Facebook at Facebook.com/BudsBroilerNewOrleans.

NOLA.com also did a feature on the Bud’s Broiler Re-Opening…
http://www.nola.com/dining/index.ssf/2013/01/buds_broiler_on_city_park_aven.html?fb_action_ids=348531471931627

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: bayou, bayou st john, best, bud, bud's, bud's broiler, city park, eclectic, faubourg st john, hamburger, nawlins, neighborhood, New Orleans, nola

Parkway Partners December Newsletter

December 4, 2012 by Charlie London

Check your home landscape for Buck Moths pictured left. They are a sure sign of the need to treat your trees..

Parkway Partners offers the Save Our Trees program to care for trees: spraying, termite treatment and fertilization. Information will be mailed and posted to our website in January.

The insects are commonly found in deciduous trees like Oaks, Willows, Wild Cherries, and shrubs like azaleas, and are known to strip a landscape of its leaves. Older trees are especially prone to dying from an infestation, while younger trees often recover. However due to the caterpillars’ intense sting, people usually prefer to eradicate their landscape of these unwanted pests.

Now is the time to prune your trees.

Young trees should be studiously addressed to achieve the desired shape and encourage the dominant leader without bark inclusions. Please see the American Grove article for further information.

To view the rest of the December, 2012 issue of the Parkway Partners newsletter, please visit the link below:
http://tinyurl.com/ParkwayPartners2012dec

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: bayou st john, best, eclectic, faubourg st john, neighborhood, New Orleans, newsletter, nola, parkway, parkway partners, tree troopers, trees

Rotary Club Greens Museum Entrance

June 7, 2012 by Charlie London

Rotary is an organization of business and professional leaders united worldwide, who provide humanitarian service, encourage high ethical standards in all vocations and help build goodwill and peace in the world.

The Algiers Rotary Club will continue its tradition of supporting New Orleans City Park when they present a check for $10,000 to the park for the maintenance and beautification of the entrance to the park along Lelong Avenue.

Where: City Park Administration Building.
When: Friday, June 8th at 1:30 pm

“The Algiers Rotary Club is like the Little Engine That Could”, said park CEO Bob Becker. “The Algiers Rotary Club has been instrumental in raising more than $350,000 for the park since Katrina.

Improvements include the beautiful live oaks and crepe myrtles along Lelong Avenue, softball field construction and lighting of a soccer field. Aside from their financial support, they also regularly roll up their sleeves and volunteer at the park. We are truly indebted to the Algiers Rotary Club.”

Description: Forty live oaks and 160 crepe myrtles greet visitors at the entrance to the park along Lelong Avenue.

Filed Under: More Great Posts! Tagged With: algiers, art, bayou, bayou st john, faubourg, faubourg st john, fsjna, museum, New Orleans, nola, NOMA, rotary

Beetlejuice?

January 10, 2012 by Charlie London

Fairgrinds
3133 Ponce de Leon
New Orleans, LA

"Sunshine" and "Can't Stop the Beet" are two new offerings at Fairgrinds

No, it isn’t beetlejuice but the drink on the right does have beets in it! Click on the lights to learn about Fairgrinds‘ other menu items.

Fairgrinds is at 3133 Ponce de Leon near the corner of the 3100 block of Esplanade. They have coffee, tea, pastries, and more. Click on the new offerings featured on the right to learn more.

Fairgrinds also hosts many community meetings in its upstairs meeting room. You can learn about everything from Occupy NOLA to Yoga.
Click on the link below for a schedule.
http://fg.chieforganizer.org/calendar

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: and more, coffee, community, fairgrinds, juices, meetings, nola, occupy, occupy nola, tea

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