
Where to Escape the Tourists in New Orleans
New Orleans sometimes gets a bad rep – as a decadent Disney World for adults, or a less flashy Las Vegas (where you leave smelling of sugary cocktails and regret). In order to avoid this NOLA on your next visit, here are five alternatives to the city's most popular institutions.
Bourbon Street
While Bourbon Street was known for its classy burlesque and jazz clubs in the ’50s and ’60s, the thoroughfare has since become synonymous with sensory-overload and typical tourist fare. Overpriced, cocktails that have been festering in plastic vessels for who knows how long; strip clubs that leave absolutely nothing to the imagination; chain restaurants and overrated local eateries; and a constant quagmire of people, ready to party.
Try this instead: Frenchmen Street is an alternative, less farcical stretch densely populated with bars, restaurants, and music clubs with actual good music that is known as the “locals’ Bourbon Street.” But, be warned that even some locals are starting to grumble about the crowds—another street with several bars and music clubs that is not as dense is St. Claude Avenue.
Most French Quarter tours
Sure, a French Quarter ghost tour might give you some embellished trivia to put in your back pocket, but you will also earn the eyerolls of locals who would prefer to go about their business without the booming voice of a gothy, over-dramatic tour guide. You might as well just watch an episode of “American Horror Story: Coven.”
Try this instead: For a ghost tour that is more historic and less dramatic, try “A Cynic’s Ghost Tour” from Two Chicks Walking Tours. Or forgo the supernatural aspect completely and check out author Elizabeth Pearce’s Cocktail Toursthat allow you to drink your way through New Orleans’ history.
Steamboat dinner cruises
Don’t want to commit to a full tour with potentially mediocre buffet food?
Try this instead: Take the Algiers Ferry, which offers gorgeous views of the Mississippi River for $2 to Algiers Point, a charming hamlet with cozy bars and restaurants.
Café du Monde
Locals actually like this well-known purveyor of New Orleans’ signature beignets. The crispy fried donuts topped with mounds of sticky powdered sugar are delicious, but the cafe’s located in probably the worst part of the French Quarter, crowded with tourists (no offense), mule-drawn carriages (another tourist racket) and street performers trying to squeeze some money out of you. You’ll be waiting a long time for those beignets during peak periods.
Try this instead: Morning Call, another beignet café, is located in the much quieter City Park, where you can eat under live oak trees.
Any store selling Mardi Gras beads outside of Carnival season
Carnival season begins on January 6 (Twelfth Night) and ends on the Tuesday before the Lent. During any time that is not Carnival, you should not be wearing Mardi Gras beads, let alone purchasing them in one of the French Quarter’s many tourist-targeting gift shops that typically also carry “I Got Bourbon Faced on Sh*t Street” shirts. Don’t you know we get beads thrown at us for free for several weeks out of the year?
Try this instead: Find literally any New Orleans local and he will probably have heaps of beads he’d be thrilled to unload. If you want a New Orleans souvenir T-shirt, go to Dirty Coast, which sells locals-approved apparel.
This story was published as part of a partnership with Marriott Traveler. Read the original story: Where to Escape the Tourists in New Orleans
Read more from Marriott Traveler:
- The Last Authentic Steamboat is Cruising the Mississippi in New Orleans
- 6 Ways To Do New Orleans Like Trombone Shorty
- Discover the Magical Lore of New Orleans Voodoo
Comments
All products are independently selected by our writers and editors. If you buy something through our links, Jetsetter may earn an affiliate commission.
Become a Jetsetter.
Use our insider connections to know where to go and what to do.
By proceeding, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Thanks for Signing Up!