It was great to spend some time with Tony and Kath - Tony has been very busy on the house and done a fantastic job completely renovating the upstairs bathroom (one job amongst many he has completed) he may well be working harder now he is retired than before... Just before I left one of the big trees in their back garden blew over which caused a bit of excitement.
As soon as I got back Rod and I took a group of students to New Orleans. What an interesting place it is. We had seen Spike Lee's documentary "When the Levees Broke" by means of preparation (highly recommended viewing by the way, but make sure you have a box of tissues handy).
We did all the obligatory things such as eating beignet (which Rod is attempting to do in the photo without getting icing sugar everywhere), hanging around the French Quarter eating oysters, alligator sausage and gumbo. (A lot of eating going on...)
We walked around the Garden District (very elegant) but also drove around the 9th Ward which was an area heavily hit by flooding post-Katrina. That was very sobering. The markings made by searchers are still on many of the remaining homes and the place is really devastated.
I had no idea there were so many oil wells - there are 3,500 just off the coast of Louisiana alone. There are over 27,000 abandoned wells in the Gulf, many of which are not properly sealed. It looks like the Deepwater Horizon oil spill was an accident waiting to happen. On the way home we went to look at some oil - we had no trouble finding it (spot the clean-up crews). It is everywhere - brown sticky blobs all over the beaches. The water was also a nasty black colour - I guess because the oil is mixed with dispersants. No way I'd swim there!