I am Chinese. I have lived here for the past five years. People warned me when I moved here about discrimination down south, but I have never experienced that here even once. People here are the best, and my husband loves gumbo.
they are some of the nicest people you will meet , granted in the bigger cities you do not see all that discrimination. it is mainly in the rural areas , even then they are not that discriminatory.
I live here currently, and gave up quite a bit of money to stay and raise a family here. What's not shown, and hard to convey with a video of this format is the people. It's been rated happiest city in America numerous times and it's the people that keep me here. You will never meet a group in America that is as friendly and genuinely happy. I stopped on the road the other night to adjust the ice chest in the back of my pickup at 9:50 PM. Three people passed me, and all three rolled down the window and asked if everything was okay. Two of them were under ~30 which is pretty cool and not entirely common these days.. they raise kids right around here for the most part. I really like your channel man! Subscribed.
I live in Lafayette and I can 100% agree with everything you just wrote about the people here….. its just different. Yes there is a “bad part” of town. But mostly, good people and good food!
As someone born and raised in New Orleans now residing in Baton Rouge I can attest that among Louisianians Lafayette, probably more than any other city in the state, is generally held in esteem as a good place to live and visit. Louisiana is quite a bit different from any other state, and New Orleans and Lafayette, especially, epitomize that.
I resided in Lafayette for about a year in 2019-2020 and actually came back to Houston at the start of COVID-19 shut down. I really fell in love with the town and I’m really considering moving back permanently in the next few years. This video explains exactly why I love Lafayette and surrounding towns. Thank you for sharing.
The French in the flower mural means "We found paradise in Southern Louisiana!" The Cajuns came from Nova Scotia to South LA, we call it paradise. 😀 The faces on the Parish Ink building are there because years back it was a great costume shop.
As someone who works and goes to school in Lafayette (lives in Breaux Bridge), it’s interesting to see the city from a foreigner’s point of view. It’s like you’re showing beautiful things about the city that I’ve just gotten used to and possibly even taken for granted. Thank you!
I moved back to Lafayette a year ago when I retired from the Army. It has always been home. One thing you didn't cover is things like utilities and internet. Electricity is about half the Louisiana average rate, which is already about 60~70% the national average rate. For internet the city has its own municipal fiber network (one of the few in the country). I have a combined package TV/internet with 1gb up/down that is cheaper than what I was paying in central Texas for a package with 40mb up/5mb down. If you call their support line, it is answered by local person living in the same city. Oh, and the Borden's is not "one of the last", it is the last one. Something about the Cajun part of Louisiana is that there are small Mom&Pop places that make ice cream and food scattered all over. That goes all the way down to many of the little towns.
First of all, Joe and Nic..outstanding job to show the real cajun country that I dearly missed! I was born and raised in Arnaudville, Louisiana and currently residing in Connecticut. Coming across your video on CZcams really open my heart of how much I really missed my cajun family and country. Thanks again for bringing me back to my roots!!
Moved to Lafayette in August. Love the city-hate the traffic. Johnston, Pinhook, Congress, University…always bumper to bumper. But? The food scene is the best in the entire country. Cajun? Creole? (There is a difference), high end Italian, quaint “joints”, Lafayette has everything. Maybe my favorite thing? Can drive 10 minutes and be out in “the country”. People are friendly, welcoming and a joy to meet and just sit and talk. I couldn’t be happier.
Lafayette is actually a really pleasant city. It has a very underrated food scene and there's a lot of new things to do popping up. And a nice college culture that does not overwhelm the city like it does with Baton Rouge. There are several rough parts of Lafayette but you never really need to go to those place often anyway. If you want to move to the state of Louisiana, I would suggest either the North Shore or somewhere in or near Lafayette.
The food is great, and I don't think it's underrated. I've always been under the impression that the great food is one of the things the city is known for. :)
@@JoeandNicsRoadTrip 48 years ago I first came to Lafayette, Louisiana on business travel. I fell in love with it then. Many of the French speaking people of the area have now passed on, but there's still descendants that do.
Since you are planning to come to Lake Charles, please note that the city has had several natural disasters in the last year or two. Hurricanes Laura and Delta, an ice storm, a historic flood, and of course COVID. Please bear that in mind. On your way, you should stop in Roanoke, LA, and take exit 59 heading north. You’ll immediately see Peto’s truck stop. Go inside to the counter and ask for a half pound of seasoned cracklins. I think you’ll enjoy them.
@@CosmicStargoat Yeah, I had a guy in my class in high school bring some homemade ones. I only ate one because they hadn’t removed all the hair. Had some hair course enough to pick your teeth with. I did my best to be polite and eat one, but then I was done. Lol
I'm glad you went into the Bordens's Ice Cream place! Borden's advertised with "Elsie the Cow" for years their dairy products in the Chicagoland area 50 and 60 years ago---maybe longer. Thanks to your wife for liking museums! I LOVE THEM! Thanks too for showing us the food you ordered!
Welcome to Lafayette! I moved here in 2011 for school and fell in love with the city and culture and a beautiful Cajun girl. In 2020 we bought a house and now in here to stay. I love this city and it’s people. You don’t have to speak French but it really helps if you can read it because of all the signs and murals. We also have the country’s best public radio station, KRVS. There are several great programs that are entirely in French, including the early morning news show bonjour louisiane. We also have a four hour long blues program every Friday and a really good rock program 11-1 Monday-Thursday called medicine ball caravan. I could go on and on about how great KRVS is as it’s one of my favorite things about living in Lafayette.
From texas too and moved here a few years ago. The roads are soooo thin! Especially pinhook. Not my favorite place but trying to appreciate it for what it is before we move eventually. So many unique and vibrant things. Nice showcase of the city! Def my favorite in louisiana
Hahaha this was a fun lil video! I've been born and raised here in Lafayette and have to admit I love it here. This video definitely hits some iconic spots, with many more to see! Thanks for coming down! Hope yall enjoyed the time here!
My 98 year old mom and I have been enjoying your VIDEOS for the last couple of weeks, we especially liked the US/Mexico border and Elon Musk's house videos. We're Mexican-Americans from California, my mom is originally from El Paso, Texas. (I'm a Native Californian). So Thanks! Stay safe and keep up the great work, and your stats are fun, too. Take care.
Born and raised and wouldn’t have it any other way! I actually work on and walk down Jefferson Street everyday with my coworkers on our breaks just to say hello and good morning to everyone on the strip! Everyone is always so friendly. We joke that it’s like a real life version of Disney’s Main Street 😂Glad you enjoyed your visit!
I literally live like 2 minutes away from downtown. It’s crazy that this popped up on my algorithm. But I love it here. It’s a lot safer than New Orleans and Baton Rouge The French painting basically says we found paradise in south Louisiana. It’s in Cajun and unfortunately after the Louisiana code the US stripped away our original language… only a small population knows it now. The neighborhood you are in is considered fighting ville and yes people live in them. The Broussard house is my 5th great grandfathers house Armand Broussard. He was gifted 451 acres of land by the Spanish. One of the most famous female celebrities is his 3rd great granddaughter who is still greatly famous to this day.
@@HER-kk5xu I’m starting a series on comparing cities in the south. I’m a creole who hasn’t lived in Louisiana in over a decade wanted to know if you were interested in an interview about Lafayette.
2 minutes from downtown as well and born and raised in fightingville. I recently spoke with my mother and she told me my great grandmother was Broussards and our family owned acres of property that was taken. Also was told about the Broussard house and that it has so much history and relevance to our family. Wow we're probably related
@@louisinese I’m down sorry I just saw your message after someone told me to put down the crack pipe. I’m in another state now but I’m more than happy to help
Loved the video. Some great architecture there in Lafayette, from that incredible church, to the downtown area, to the colorful old houses. I loved how they repurposed old buildings too, like the old gas station turned into a restaurant and the old building turned into apartments. I hate when they tear down beautiful old buildings and put up something new that’s plain and boring. I’ll probably never visit Lafayette, so thanks for filming all you did. I feel like I’ve been there now. Loved the old living history village too. I am now a subscriber to your great channel.
The old building repurposed as an apartment building was the first hotel in town. And the Acadian Village was created when I was a child when people realized the old Acadian style houses were rotting away. Some of the places I remember as a child were disassembled and brought there. I used to love to explore those old abandoned houses as a child.
Lafayette is beautiful. Love the architecture. The church is gorgeous. Love the multi colored houses. The ice cream store is nice. The living houses were very cool. It was interesting to see how residents lived back in the day. Thank you for taking us on this amazing tour!
Good job presenting Lafayette. The Borden's Ice Cream shop is very busy in the afternoon when school lets out, and has long lines on the weekends, so it's a thriving business. Lafayette has some great festivals too; Festival International in May and Festivals 'cadian et creole in May and October. There are many dance halls in Lafayette and the surrounding towns. Dancing, Cajun, Zydeco, Jitterbug are very popular entertainments locally starting on Thursday nites and on through Sunday nite. (Cajuns love to dance!)
My home town… so glad you made it to Lafayette. Hope you enjoyed your stay. I live in Utah now am this made me so homesick. Thanks for visiting and doing this video. Have a blessed day.
Thank you very much for taking the time to go into the Cathedral and to walk through the cemetery…absolutely beautiful. Beautiful. And agreed…deeply humbling.
10:51 Thank you for going in. It's always open to anyone. Ive walked the halls of that church my entire life. I was baptized there, played handbells at mass went there for mass most of my life. By far one of the most beautiful churches I've ever seen. A true testament to faith. Im unsure if you can still walk under the oak but we used to for mass. The whole area and even the school next to it is beautiful
I think Lafayette is the best city in La. The people are friendly and helpful and the town is just big enough to have what you need without being crowded. The food is to live for.
Not too crowded? Miss ma'am, you must not leave your house these days....... you can't get anywhere without getting slammed with traffic 🥴 (unless it's a sunday)
All the way from Brazil in 1977 as a student and went to USL. Dearest City in my heart. I miss Lafayette. Met my wife, live in Florida now, but keep an eye on everything about Lafayette and UL. Why the Headline "Can the City be Saved?" it is a thriving town. Saved from what?
Fun facts about the Broussard family: Back in France, they originally lived in the southern region (old France) and were a very easy-going noble family. They basically spent all their time visiting the other noble family's and partying. They had a knack for music, and one of the very first written music compendium's was written by a Broussard.
One thing you missed highlighting in the area...but you kind of have to know...is the abundance of great home cooked Plate Lunches available at many local cafe's or grocery stores. Also, Gas Station food in south Louisiana is some of the best in the USA.
Those sculpture in the cathedral is absolutely stunning,the Jesus one just took my breath away.yes we have a place in Arkansas like this cemetery above ground
When I saw you were at Vermilionville, I had a feeling you might run into my mom who works there... and you did! She does the spinning and weaving at 30:40. She is an amazing woman and it's so cool to see her in a video that has been watched by 100,000 people. I've lived in the Lafayette area all my life and it's a pretty unique place--it's sort of a smaller New Orleans but with its own distinct cuisine and culture. I stumbled across your channel because I love chill and low-key travel videos and yours have been really enjoyable. Keep up the good work!
Very nice video! I would have loved to see more of the antebellum or historic homes and zydeco music. Thank you for filming and sharing so much, I’m living vicariously through these videos.
As someone who just moved to Louisiana from NE Ohio I seriously appreciate you showing me my new state! Here in Metairie and New Orleans people rave about the food there. The food here is some of the best I’ve ever had in my life so I can’t wait to try food in Lafayette 😄
I was born and raised in Lafayette and went to college there. I never appreciated the area when I lived there. I left shortly after college about 19 years ago. Family still lives there and visit often. I live in Austin TX now. It is a slower lifestyle there and really is lovely.
I lived there for about 3 years in the late 70s, early 80s, while doing oilfield work. Back then there were places on the roadside called Daiquiri Factory (they may still be around) where you could drive up, get a huge drink and drive off. I spent most of my waking hours at a bar called the Gaslight 3 and lived in an apartment building off Eraste Landry. The people were wonderful. I used to take a keg to the pool and within just a little while folks were showing up with grills, food and music to have a party. It was great!
My hometown, That neighborhood adjacent to downtown you drove thru is the Freetown neighborhood, it was originally settled by free African Americans during the time of slavery.. it has gone thru a lot of gentrification since the 90's
I am originally from Opelousas, LA, now living in the South Austin area of Texas. My husband and I worked and basically raised our boys in Lafayette. They went to school there from kindergarten until high school graduation. Such a wonderful area. Wonderful faithful people who know the love of God and family. By the way…Boudin is pronounced boo dan, don’t pronounce the “n”.
"We found paradise in southern Louisiana" I just loved Lafayette from your tour, (never been, from what I saw passing by on the freeway many years ago I thought it was much smaller!). Thanks for the tour, it makes me want to go. It's one of the reasons I used to love to go to Montreal, all the French signs and everything. I'm glad Lafayette is so nice. That old neighborhood was great, and thanks for the tour of Vermilionville Historic Village. I put it in my "want to go" folder in Google Maps. I looked up the 3-hole outhouses. They were a luxury back then; a sign of wealth I guess. They say that the holes are different sizes, to accommodate different sized butts I guess, or that if a family had a bunch of kids who couldn't wait they could all go in together. They didn't say anything about adults going in at the same time LOL. Anyway, thanks again. That Le Pavillion Hotel looked really swanky!
French peoples in Canada had two kitchens, one in the house and a summer kitchen outside. The inhouse helped keep the place warm during winters but the summer one was to not overheat the house in the summers.
Overall, nicely done video! It's too bad y'all missed Festival Acadiens et Creoles which was held on Oct. 14-16, incredible free festival at Girard Park with outstanding Cajun and Zydeco music, arts, crafts and food. The weather was great and the crowds were huge. And just so you'll know, the Broussard name is pronounced with the emphasis on the first syllable, BRU-sard, not bru-SARD.
Many years ago, I had a dear friend who played the "Mr. Broussard" character, in the Broussard House at Vermilionville. He would provide guided tour of the home and inform on its history...he loved that job.
Born and raised here. Wouldn't have it any other way. When people ask me where I'm from... I reply... "From the best place anyone can be from, Lafayette." (I'm a little bias.) We have it all here... Food, Culture, Arts, Music, Great People. So we have to put up with a hurricane every now and again, so be it. I love this town.
Hi Lord Spoda You made our day by taking us with your to show city of Lafayette , South Louisiana . The neighborhood near downtown is so nice and peaceful. Weather is equally fine. For a while I thought I should drop at someone as a surprised guest and have a nice coffee over a casual chat with them. The other part of the video of living museum in Vermilionville is equally or even more interesting. Thank you for all those special efforts your made to bring these nice footages of Cajun Culture. Best.
I lived in Lafayette for 15 years, and raised a family there, before moving to Orlando FL. Worked in the Oil Field, probably the best place to live in LA. Right at the beginning you were by the Performing Arts Center, where I got to see The Pink Floyd Laser Light Show, decades ago. I have contemplated moving back here many times. Miss the crawfish et toufee
Native Texan retired in Lafayette 8 years ago with Nola born and raised wife. Love Southern Louisiana. Never going back to Texas. I would eat at Fezzos, Don's, Prejeans. Eat some fresh boudin. You need to eat breakfast at Tcoons(where Lafayette gets their power breakfast) or Edie's Bisquits before you go to New Iberia. You can eat lunch at Avery Island. Enjoy you videos. Much to see and do in Southern Louisiana. Three parts to Louisiana: 1. New Orleans 2. Acadiana 3. The rest of Louisiana.
I have given up a lot of money and career success to stay in Lafayette, I will not leave. Moved away after college for an engineering job in Houston, and couldn't stand it or any of the other cities I visited. Eight years later, finally back!!
My uncle lives in Lafayette. I went there once in 2015. It seems much more prosperous and safer than most other Louisiana cites I've traveled through. I never felt unsafe. and the food there was good.My visit there was positive.It seems like a nice place. Love the old Borden's. The mascot cow's name is Else.
Lafayette definitely ain't safe lol for the most part the tourist areas are great, but there are definitely alot of bad areas. especially the north side.
I been to every state but Alaska. Louisiana got the best Vibes in my Opinion. I miss the Dirty south. I lived in Thibodaux,La worked in Houma. Houma was wat id call a Industrial town. I got lost in Lafayette going down to Mandeville When we 1st came into Louisiana. Alot of history down there and Good Food. Really like boudreau and Thibodauxs just outside Houma,La
My 6th time great-grandfather Jean Mouton is celebrated as the founder of Lafayette, We are truly proud of our town and our people. We try to love and appreciate every type of person here, sort of like the many different threads on the backside of a fine tapestry. We also have many Bible-believing Catholics and Bible-believing non-Catholics who somehow manage to appreciate each other's contribution to the faith and each one's uniqueness as a child of God. Although I am white, I have had many non-white friends. I am 62 now and time is flying by. Thank you for visiting our city and God bless you and your loved ones.
It is truly a beautiful city. I spent some time in South Louisiana and fell right in with the people. They loved to poke fun at this Bama boy. Cheers from Alabama 🙂
I live in New Orleans and have only passed thru Lafayette while going to Texas and Northern Louisiana. I will definitely spend some time there the next time I'm in the area. Thank you for sharing.
Lafayette is a great city to live in if you are friendly, open minded and enjoy the food, culture, arts and history there. I've been here over 30 years and I feel the city would be even better, even more beautiful if the gov and major would put more tlc into the areas. Roadways infrastructure, constructions, businesses, landscaping and the overall development could be many times better if managed properly, but they're not. The city seems to be in limbo status at times where projects would start and then left sitting unfinished. The old culture is still hanging on but not very much is done to preserve it while at the same time modern culture wants to come in with new changes but gets hindered and gets half-assed implemented. Everything feels half-assed really. Parish and city tax combined is significantly higher than compared to other states in the nation so products, properties/homes are higher as well.
In Texas, for some reason, we emphasize the first syllable in pretty much all the words we say, which can make some of the things we say sound wack. My wife, who is from Philadelphia, loves to make fun of it. Which is funny in itself, cause Philly people got some cockamamie ways of pronouncing some words themselves.
@@JoeandNicsRoadTrip Too funny. They really mutilate my last name, Lemoine. Then my address Bayou DesGlaise that really throws them for a loop. All of the people in South Louisiana are some great people. When I was just out of high school I worked for a company Geaudeau Inc. making deliveries in South Louisiana. They were the nicest people. One of my stops was at a real old fashion general store. They sold everything from groceries, live stock feed, clothing material, ammunition and firearms. They did not speak any english Only Cajun French. It was an old man and his wife that owned the store. They had a pot belly stove in the middle of the store with rocking chairs around it. Before I started my route my first day, the owner of the company told me that some of the stores I went to, be prepared because they were going to offer me a Miller High Life beer and a link of boudin. He said don't turn it down or refuse it because it would insult them. So as I would go on my route, unload the merchandise and check it in, sure enough the owners of the stores would give me a beer and a link of boudin. They would keep the links in a hitachi rice cooker to keep it warm. By the time I would get back to the warehouse I was all screwed up. My boss would greet me and asked me how did it go and all he would do is laugh.
41:00 Bon Temps Grill. Previously the Blue Dog Cafe (it was decorated with George Rodriques Blue Dog paintings). Originally built as Chez Pastor in the 60s or 70s.
"Hi to ya folks"...really liked the drive though the streets,. the houses with the mix of colors was nice, everything was interesting to see, ..Safe travels,. Thank you!🌼
I am Chinese. I have lived here for the past five years. People warned me when I moved here about discrimination down south, but I have never experienced that here even once. People here are the best, and my husband loves gumbo.
they are some of the nicest people you will meet , granted in the bigger cities you do not see all that discrimination. it is mainly in the rural areas , even then they are not that discriminatory.
Descrimination towards non whites can be subtle.
I live here currently, and gave up quite a bit of money to stay and raise a family here. What's not shown, and hard to convey with a video of this format is the people. It's been rated happiest city in America numerous times and it's the people that keep me here. You will never meet a group in America that is as friendly and genuinely happy. I stopped on the road the other night to adjust the ice chest in the back of my pickup at 9:50 PM. Three people passed me, and all three rolled down the window and asked if everything was okay. Two of them were under ~30 which is pretty cool and not entirely common these days.. they raise kids right around here for the most part. I really like your channel man! Subscribed.
Awesome! Thank you for the great comment, Donald. :)
Lived here most of my life. Mover 2x and moved back for the people!!
@@ayatollahkhomeini3073 yes, why
I live in Lafayette and I can 100% agree with everything you just wrote about the people here….. its just different. Yes there is a “bad part” of town. But mostly, good people and good food!
@@337_Brandon of your referring to the north side of town it’s not that bad. That’s the side that he was mainly on during his tour.
As someone born and raised in New Orleans now residing in Baton Rouge I can attest that among Louisianians Lafayette, probably more than any other city in the state, is generally held in esteem as a good place to live and visit. Louisiana is quite a bit different from any other state, and New Orleans and Lafayette, especially, epitomize that.
I totally agree.
We love Jesus too 💕 Maw maw made sure we knew the 3 steps of salvation!
@@d-tre4168 Yeah, and many of those "jesus lovers" wish to turn Lafayette, and the rest of louisiana into a theocracy. Pretty grotesque.
I live in Baton Rouge and I can’t wait to move. I do love Lafayette.
Thanks much. I agree as a Cajun lady
I resided in Lafayette for about a year in 2019-2020 and actually came back to Houston at the start of COVID-19 shut down. I really fell in love with the town and I’m really considering moving back permanently in the next few years. This video explains exactly why I love Lafayette and surrounding towns. Thank you for sharing.
The French in the flower mural means "We found paradise in Southern Louisiana!" The Cajuns came from Nova Scotia to South LA, we call it paradise. 😀 The faces on the Parish Ink building are there because years back it was a great costume shop.
As someone who works and goes to school in Lafayette (lives in Breaux Bridge), it’s interesting to see the city from a foreigner’s point of view. It’s like you’re showing beautiful things about the city that I’ve just gotten used to and possibly even taken for granted. Thank you!
I moved back to Lafayette a year ago when I retired from the Army. It has always been home. One thing you didn't cover is things like utilities and internet. Electricity is about half the Louisiana average rate, which is already about 60~70% the national average rate. For internet the city has its own municipal fiber network (one of the few in the country). I have a combined package TV/internet with 1gb up/down that is cheaper than what I was paying in central Texas for a package with 40mb up/5mb down. If you call their support line, it is answered by local person living in the same city.
Oh, and the Borden's is not "one of the last", it is the last one. Something about the Cajun part of Louisiana is that there are small Mom&Pop places that make ice cream and food scattered all over. That goes all the way down to many of the little towns.
First of all, Joe and Nic..outstanding job to show the real cajun country that I dearly missed! I was born and raised in Arnaudville, Louisiana and currently residing in Connecticut. Coming across your video on CZcams really open my heart of how much I really missed my cajun family and country. Thanks again for bringing me back to my roots!!
Our pleasure!
Moved to Lafayette in August. Love the city-hate the traffic. Johnston, Pinhook, Congress, University…always bumper to bumper. But? The food scene is the best in the entire country. Cajun? Creole? (There is a difference), high end Italian, quaint “joints”, Lafayette has everything. Maybe my favorite thing? Can drive 10 minutes and be out in “the country”. People are friendly, welcoming and a joy to meet and just sit and talk. I couldn’t be happier.
Lafayette is actually a really pleasant city. It has a very underrated food scene and there's a lot of new things to do popping up. And a nice college culture that does not overwhelm the city like it does with Baton Rouge. There are several rough parts of Lafayette but you never really need to go to those place often anyway. If you want to move to the state of Louisiana, I would suggest either the North Shore or somewhere in or near Lafayette.
That food!! Yes!! The best!!
The food is great, and I don't think it's underrated. I've always been under the impression that the great food is one of the things the city is known for. :)
Agreed but I would add Metairie. It’s so nice out here.
Lafayette, Louisiana is a top pick in terms of livability and quality of life.
@@JoeandNicsRoadTrip 48 years ago I first came to Lafayette, Louisiana on business travel. I fell in love with it then. Many of the French speaking people of the area have now passed on, but there's still descendants that do.
A statue of the Blessed Mother outside a supermarket?! Hallelujah! I can’t wait to move there!
Since you are planning to come to Lake Charles, please note that the city has had several natural disasters in the last year or two. Hurricanes Laura and Delta, an ice storm, a historic flood, and of course COVID. Please bear that in mind.
On your way, you should stop in Roanoke, LA, and take exit 59 heading north. You’ll immediately see Peto’s truck stop. Go inside to the counter and ask for a half pound of seasoned cracklins. I think you’ll enjoy them.
Will do, Eric.
Sounds good. I buy skin-on pork belly all the time and know how to make these. Delicious.
@@CosmicStargoat Yeah, I had a guy in my class in high school bring some homemade ones. I only ate one because they hadn’t removed all the hair. Had some hair course enough to pick your teeth with. I did my best to be polite and eat one, but then I was done. Lol
petos cheddar and 🌶 boudin balls are 🔥 too.
Famous foods in Lake Charles BEST cracklins, get the spicy wet cracklins. Soooo good never had anything like it.
I'm glad you went into the Bordens's Ice Cream place! Borden's advertised with "Elsie the Cow" for years their dairy products in the Chicagoland area 50 and 60 years ago---maybe longer. Thanks to your wife for liking museums! I LOVE THEM! Thanks too for showing us the food you ordered!
Welcome to Lafayette! I moved here in 2011 for school and fell in love with the city and culture and a beautiful Cajun girl. In 2020 we bought a house and now in here to stay. I love this city and it’s people. You don’t have to speak French but it really helps if you can read it because of all the signs and murals. We also have the country’s best public radio station, KRVS. There are several great programs that are entirely in French, including the early morning news show bonjour louisiane. We also have a four hour long blues program every Friday and a really good rock program 11-1 Monday-Thursday called medicine ball caravan. I could go on and on about how great KRVS is as it’s one of my favorite things about living in Lafayette.
Awesome comment. Thank you for that.
Great comment. KRVS is also one of my favorite parts of living here
Yes shout out to KRVS. I listen all the time. Thank you for these videos! I'm learning so much about Louisiana History ❤️
From texas too and moved here a few years ago. The roads are soooo thin! Especially pinhook. Not my favorite place but trying to appreciate it for what it is before we move eventually. So many unique and vibrant things. Nice showcase of the city! Def my favorite in louisiana
Thank you for visiting my wonderful city! Allóns a Lafayette! Laissez les bon temps rouler!!!! (Come to Lafayette! Let the good times roll!!!)
mais yeah, got dat ting right der!!
We really liked it there. It's a great town, one of the best in the US.
They pronounce it laugh e et. Excellent video. Keep them coming. 👍
Hahaha this was a fun lil video! I've been born and raised here in Lafayette and have to admit I love it here. This video definitely hits some iconic spots, with many more to see! Thanks for coming down! Hope yall enjoyed the time here!
We had a great time, Jon. We love it there. :)
My 98 year old mom and I have been enjoying your VIDEOS for the last couple of weeks, we especially liked the US/Mexico border and Elon Musk's house videos. We're Mexican-Americans from California, my mom is originally from El Paso, Texas. (I'm a Native Californian). So Thanks! Stay safe and keep up the great work, and your stats are fun, too. Take care.
Thank you, Evelyn. Tell your Mom hello for me! :)
Lafayette I'd magical,one of a kind I love my gorgeous city❤️❤️❤️❤️
Born and raised and wouldn’t have it any other way! I actually work on and walk down Jefferson Street everyday with my coworkers on our breaks just to say hello and good morning to everyone on the strip! Everyone is always so friendly. We joke that it’s like a real life version of Disney’s Main Street 😂Glad you enjoyed your visit!
I literally live like 2 minutes away from downtown. It’s crazy that this popped up on my algorithm. But I love it here. It’s a lot safer than New Orleans and Baton Rouge
The French painting basically says we found paradise in south Louisiana. It’s in Cajun and unfortunately after the Louisiana code the US stripped away our original language… only a small population knows it now.
The neighborhood you are in is considered fighting ville and yes people live in them.
The Broussard house is my 5th great grandfathers house Armand Broussard. He was gifted 451 acres of land by the Spanish. One of the most famous female celebrities is his 3rd great granddaughter who is still greatly famous to this day.
Thank you for the great comment. :)
@@JoeandNicsRoadTrip your welcome
@@HER-kk5xu I’m starting a series on comparing cities in the south. I’m a creole who hasn’t lived in Louisiana in over a decade wanted to know if you were interested in an interview about Lafayette.
2 minutes from downtown as well and born and raised in fightingville. I recently spoke with my mother and she told me my great grandmother was Broussards and our family owned acres of property that was taken. Also was told about the Broussard house and that it has so much history and relevance to our family. Wow we're probably related
@@louisinese I’m down sorry I just saw your message after someone told me to put down the crack pipe. I’m in another state now but I’m more than happy to help
Yankee here. Loved Lafayette - the city, the people, the food (!!). All terrific.
Loved the video. Some great architecture there in Lafayette, from that incredible church, to the downtown area, to the colorful old houses. I loved how they repurposed old buildings too, like the old gas station turned into a restaurant and the old building turned into apartments. I hate when they tear down beautiful old buildings and put up something new that’s plain and boring. I’ll probably never visit Lafayette, so thanks for filming all you did. I feel like I’ve been there now. Loved the old living history village too. I am now a subscriber to your great channel.
Awesome! Thank you.
The old building repurposed as an apartment building was the first hotel in town. And the Acadian Village was created when I was a child when people realized the old Acadian style houses were rotting away. Some of the places I remember as a child were disassembled and brought there. I used to love to explore those old abandoned houses as a child.
Dang, y'all were staying 2 blocks from my house! Thanks for visiting Lafayette.
The French sentence in the mural translates to “We found Paradise in southern Louisiana!”
Born and raised here. Right now I am 20 and still live here. I do plan on moving out the state soon, but I can never forget my home here!
Billy's is the best to me.
Lafayette is one of the best City here in LA . Gotta drop by and inform everyone that our channel talks more about Louisianna ☺️
Lafayette is beautiful. Love the architecture. The church is gorgeous. Love the multi colored houses. The ice cream store is nice. The living houses were very cool. It was interesting to see how residents lived back in the day. Thank you for taking us on this amazing tour!
Thank you, Alexandra!
Good job presenting Lafayette. The Borden's Ice Cream shop is very busy in the afternoon when school lets out, and has long lines on the weekends, so it's a thriving business. Lafayette has some great festivals too; Festival International in May and Festivals 'cadian et creole in May and October. There are many dance halls in Lafayette and the surrounding towns. Dancing, Cajun, Zydeco, Jitterbug are very popular entertainments locally starting on Thursday nites and on through Sunday nite. (Cajuns love to dance!)
My home town… so glad you made it to Lafayette. Hope you enjoyed your stay. I live in Utah now am this made me so homesick. Thanks for visiting and doing this video. Have a blessed day.
We did enjoy it. Awesome food!
Thank you very much for taking the time to go into the Cathedral and to walk through the cemetery…absolutely beautiful. Beautiful. And agreed…deeply humbling.
The most beautiful I've seen anywhere.
10:51 Thank you for going in. It's always open to anyone. Ive walked the halls of that church my entire life. I was baptized there, played handbells at mass went there for mass most of my life. By far one of the most beautiful churches I've ever seen. A true testament to faith. Im unsure if you can still walk under the oak but we used to for mass. The whole area and even the school next to it is beautiful
It absolutely is. :)
I grew up in Lafayette in the 1970s and 80s and miss it very much. Thank you for this.
I think Lafayette is the best city in La. The people are friendly and helpful and the town is just big enough to have what you need without being crowded. The food is to live for.
It's definitely one of the ten best I've visited - and I've visited a 171 cities in the past 13 months.
Not too crowded? Miss ma'am, you must not leave your house these days....... you can't get anywhere without getting slammed with traffic 🥴 (unless it's a sunday)
Lafayette is a vibe. Very diverse and lots of fun
All the way from Brazil in 1977 as a student and went to USL. Dearest City in my heart. I miss Lafayette. Met my wife, live in Florida now, but keep an eye on everything about Lafayette and UL.
Why the Headline "Can the City be Saved?" it is a thriving town. Saved from what?
Yeah, that’s what I thought, saved from what?!
This is AWESOME!! You really bring out the beauty in all cities!!! The way us southerners pronounce Boudin is “boo-dan”!😊
Fun facts about the Broussard family: Back in France, they originally lived in the southern region (old France) and were a very easy-going noble family. They basically spent all their time visiting the other noble family's and partying. They had a knack for music, and one of the very first written music compendium's was written by a Broussard.
Hey fellow Broussard, gotta love our family even the ones up north
My moms a Broussard
Wow Broussards are every where. There are Broussards in Abbeville and Lacassine too. Great family name!
I'm from Lafayette and I'm actually pretty good at playing drums and trombone. Never knew the talent came from my Broussard side!
A perfect way to spend a Sunday afternoon is watching these videos
Thank you. :)
One thing you missed highlighting in the area...but you kind of have to know...is the abundance of great home cooked Plate Lunches available at many local cafe's or grocery stores.
Also, Gas Station food in south Louisiana is some of the best in the USA.
Watching from the Acadian village of Grand Barachois, New Brunswick Canada. 💖
Those sculpture in the cathedral is absolutely stunning,the Jesus one just took my breath away.yes we have a place in Arkansas like this cemetery above ground
When I saw you were at Vermilionville, I had a feeling you might run into my mom who works there... and you did! She does the spinning and weaving at 30:40. She is an amazing woman and it's so cool to see her in a video that has been watched by 100,000 people. I've lived in the Lafayette area all my life and it's a pretty unique place--it's sort of a smaller New Orleans but with its own distinct cuisine and culture. I stumbled across your channel because I love chill and low-key travel videos and yours have been really enjoyable. Keep up the good work!
She is awesome. We're big fans of her!
She was a highlight of the video! She seems like a lovely lady!
Very nice video! I would have loved to see more of the antebellum or historic homes and zydeco music. Thank you for filming and sharing so much, I’m living vicariously through these videos.
Thank you for the kind words, A Kelly. :)
As someone who just moved to Louisiana from NE Ohio I seriously appreciate you showing me my new state! Here in Metairie and New Orleans people rave about the food there. The food here is some of the best I’ve ever had in my life so I can’t wait to try food in Lafayette 😄
In my opinion, THE best in the country. :)
Lafayette has better food than the NOLA area. In NOLA it’s predominately creole, Lafayette is Cajun cooking, we add the secret ingredient- love!
@@ktmac7610 true and never any tomatoes lol.
@@awphooey2u519 yes! I hate tomatoes in gumbo!
Food is better in Lafayette.. ❤
I was born and raised in Lafayette and went to college there. I never appreciated the area when I lived there. I left shortly after college about 19 years ago. Family still lives there and visit often. I live in Austin TX now. It is a slower lifestyle there and really is lovely.
I lived there for about 3 years in the late 70s, early 80s, while doing oilfield work. Back then there were places on the roadside called Daiquiri Factory (they may still be around) where you could drive up, get a huge drink and drive off. I spent most of my waking hours at a bar called the Gaslight 3 and lived in an apartment building off Eraste Landry. The people were wonderful. I used to take a keg to the pool and within just a little while folks were showing up with grills, food and music to have a party. It was great!
My hometown, That neighborhood adjacent to downtown you drove thru is the Freetown neighborhood, it was originally settled by free African Americans during the time of slavery.. it has gone thru a lot of gentrification since the 90's
My guilty pleasure is watching tourists stumble over the pronunciations of different things around town lol. Great video!
Great video, Lord Spoda and Nicole. Thanks for including the cathedral tour.
Thank you for watching. :)
I am originally from Opelousas, LA, now living in the South Austin area of Texas. My husband and I worked and basically raised our boys in Lafayette. They went to school there from kindergarten until high school graduation. Such a wonderful area. Wonderful faithful people who know the love of God and family.
By the way…Boudin is pronounced boo dan, don’t pronounce the “n”.
I’m from Lafayette (live here still!) and I was wondering if someone was gonna give him the correct pronunciation of boudin! 😅
"We found paradise in southern Louisiana" I just loved Lafayette from your tour, (never been, from what I saw passing by on the freeway many years ago I thought it was much smaller!). Thanks for the tour, it makes me want to go. It's one of the reasons I used to love to go to Montreal, all the French signs and everything. I'm glad Lafayette is so nice. That old neighborhood was great, and thanks for the tour of Vermilionville Historic Village. I put it in my "want to go" folder in Google Maps. I looked up the 3-hole outhouses. They were a luxury back then; a sign of wealth I guess. They say that the holes are different sizes, to accommodate different sized butts I guess, or that if a family had a bunch of kids who couldn't wait they could all go in together. They didn't say anything about adults going in at the same time LOL. Anyway, thanks again. That Le Pavillion Hotel looked really swanky!
Thank you for the fill in info, Joyce, especially concerning the outhouse. Fascinating!
Welcome to my home! Thanks for visiting! Glad you got to eat some of our food. Y'all have a bless trip visiting all U.S. states! Much love
Today is a great day. Thanks lord for another video
Matthew 24"5 KJV
For many shall come in my name, saying, I am CHRIST, and shall deceive many. 😎🎸
@@69judge27 Deceive.
@@EricT3769
Were you able to absorb any value from this message beside assisting my spell check? 😎🎸
Thank you for that, UC. :)
@@69judge27 Yes, I was. Thought maybe you were trying to deceive us with some deceptive spelling errors. Your spell checker needs some help.
I like to live in this town, it's beautiful ❤️ very kepted up, clean city, lots good restaurants
French peoples in Canada had two kitchens, one in the house and a summer kitchen outside. The inhouse helped keep the place warm during winters but the summer one was to not overheat the house in the summers.
Overall, nicely done video! It's too bad y'all missed Festival Acadiens et Creoles which was held on Oct. 14-16, incredible free festival at Girard Park with outstanding Cajun and Zydeco music, arts, crafts and food. The weather was great and the crowds were huge. And just so you'll know, the Broussard name is pronounced with the emphasis on the first syllable, BRU-sard, not bru-SARD.
That's right I'm a Broussard out of Lafayette and that's how we pronounce it!👍👍⚜️⚜️
I wish he would have learned how to pronounce a few things correctly before . Lol
I'm from Wisconsin and love Zydeco music! I had never heard it until we visited New Orleans at age 55. Can't get enough of it now!
Loved the museum visit!!
Great show thanks,love history.
Many years ago, I had a dear friend who played the "Mr. Broussard" character, in the Broussard House at Vermilionville. He would provide guided tour of the home and inform on its history...he loved that job.
That Borden's Ice Cream Parlor is so cool. I love the Art Decco architecture.
Călătoresc virtual cu plăcere în America prin dumneavoastră! Superb,superb,superb tot! Viva America, Viva Romania🙂
That cathedral is beautiful!
It really is.
Born and raised here. Wouldn't have it any other way. When people ask me where I'm from... I reply... "From the best place anyone can be from, Lafayette." (I'm a little bias.) We have it all here... Food, Culture, Arts, Music, Great People. So we have to put up with a hurricane every now and again, so be it. I love this town.
I live in Shreveport, La. When I visited Laffeyette I found the people to be unusually friendly. It did seem like a happy city!
Hi Lord Spoda
You made our day by taking us with your to show city of Lafayette , South Louisiana . The neighborhood near downtown is so nice and peaceful. Weather is equally fine. For a while I thought I should drop at someone as a surprised guest and have a nice coffee over a casual chat with them. The other part of the video of living museum in Vermilionville is equally or even more interesting. Thank you for all those special efforts your made to bring these nice footages of Cajun Culture. Best.
It's a pretty awesome place, Rajeev. Lots of interesting history, architecture and food that's among the best in the US.
The best tour guide of the USA. A must see. Thank you. Be safe.
Thank you, John. :)
I've lived here all my life and you did a really good job of covering the best parts. Accurate info too
Thank you for that!! :)
I was in Lafayette for a couple of weeks back in the late seventies. I really appreciated the people, food and music, they have their own thing.
May be old.. but so colourful and well maintained. I love this.
I lived in Lafayette for 15 years, and raised a family there, before moving to Orlando FL. Worked in the Oil Field, probably the best place to live in LA. Right at the beginning you were
by the Performing Arts Center, where I got to see The Pink Floyd Laser Light Show, decades ago. I have contemplated moving back here many times. Miss the crawfish et toufee
Come on home brother!
Native Texan retired in Lafayette 8 years ago with Nola born and raised wife. Love Southern Louisiana. Never going back to Texas. I would eat at Fezzos, Don's, Prejeans. Eat some fresh boudin. You need to eat breakfast at Tcoons(where Lafayette gets their power breakfast) or Edie's Bisquits before you go to New Iberia. You can eat lunch at Avery Island. Enjoy you videos. Much to see and do in Southern Louisiana. Three parts to Louisiana: 1. New Orleans 2. Acadiana 3. The rest of Louisiana.
I have given up a lot of money and career success to stay in Lafayette, I will not leave. Moved away after college for an engineering job in Houston, and couldn't stand it or any of the other cities I visited. Eight years later, finally back!!
Tcoons best breakfast in the world 👍👍👍
Love watching your videos,it like taking a vacation everyday. Thanks keep up the good work.
Thank you, Emmanuel!
Lafayette isn't a large town, but has the flavor of a large city.
And the traffic of somewhere like Houston.
wow that was a great tour , thanks so much.🙂
Thank you for watching, Loraine!
My uncle lives in Lafayette. I went there once in 2015. It seems much more prosperous and safer than most other Louisiana cites I've traveled through. I never felt unsafe. and the food there was good.My visit there was positive.It seems like a nice place. Love the old Borden's. The mascot cow's name is Else.
That was my impression as well, RR.
Lafayette definitely ain't safe lol for the most part the tourist areas are great, but there are definitely alot of bad areas. especially the north side.
Never felt unsafe? Maybe you didn’t stay long enough 😂
He should have toured downtown on a saturday night then we could have seen the true "safety" lol
So cool to see someone vist my city!
The Bordens and Conoco buildings, just wonderful little gems.
I agree!
What a great video! That historical village looked quite interesting. Gotta say, the gator bites and that bread pudding looked scrumptious.
Thank you, Laura. The food was excellent. It's one of the things Lafayette is known for!
I been to every state but Alaska. Louisiana got the best Vibes in my Opinion. I miss the Dirty south. I lived in Thibodaux,La worked in Houma. Houma was wat id call a Industrial town. I got lost in Lafayette going down to Mandeville When we 1st came into Louisiana. Alot of history down there and Good Food. Really like boudreau and Thibodauxs just outside Houma,La
My 6th time great-grandfather Jean Mouton is celebrated as the founder of Lafayette, We are truly proud of our town and our people. We try to love and appreciate every type of person here, sort of like the many different threads on the backside of a fine tapestry. We also have many Bible-believing Catholics and Bible-believing non-Catholics who somehow manage to appreciate each other's contribution to the faith and each one's uniqueness as a child of God. Although I am white, I have had many non-white friends. I am 62 now and time is flying by. Thank you for visiting our city and God bless you and your loved ones.
It is truly a beautiful city. I spent some time in South Louisiana and fell right in with the people. They loved to poke fun at this Bama boy. Cheers from Alabama 🙂
That Church and the cemetary are beyond beautiful.
I live in New Orleans and have only passed thru Lafayette while going to Texas
and Northern Louisiana. I will definitely spend some time there the next time I'm in the area. Thank you for sharing.
Lafayette is a great city to live in if you are friendly, open minded and enjoy the food, culture, arts and history there. I've been here over 30 years and I feel the city would be even better, even more beautiful if the gov and major would put more tlc into the areas. Roadways infrastructure, constructions, businesses, landscaping and the overall development could be many times better if managed properly, but they're not. The city seems to be in limbo status at times where projects would start and then left sitting unfinished. The old culture is still hanging on but not very much is done to preserve it while at the same time modern culture wants to come in with new changes but gets hindered and gets half-assed implemented. Everything feels half-assed really.
Parish and city tax combined is significantly higher than compared to other states in the nation so products, properties/homes are higher as well.
To pronounce boudin you can say boo-Dan with not a lot of emphasis on the N. Lol!
I'll remember that!
It reminds me of his Bois d'Arc flub a few weeks ago!
French nasal sounds... an, in, en, ain, ein, on, un... when you can master those you know you've reached a good level in French 😉😉
Used to be a boarding house on Jefferson. It was where I was abandoned at 10 mos. in 1952.
I moved to the outskirts of Lafayette, (Broussard, specifically), almost 2 years ago. I LOVE it!!.
Thanks for sharing. Very interesting! Especially Vermillion Museum.
Crime is lower than its ever been in Lafayette...has cut in half in 8 years, pretty much every city is safer than its ever been
love it when you try and pronounce the french names.
In Texas, for some reason, we emphasize the first syllable in pretty much all the words we say, which can make some of the things we say sound wack. My wife, who is from Philadelphia, loves to make fun of it. Which is funny in itself, cause Philly people got some cockamamie ways of pronouncing some words themselves.
@@JoeandNicsRoadTrip Too funny. They really mutilate my last name, Lemoine. Then my address Bayou DesGlaise that really throws them for a loop. All of the people in South Louisiana are some great people. When I was just out of high school I worked for a company Geaudeau Inc. making deliveries in South Louisiana. They were the nicest people. One of my stops was at a real old fashion general store. They sold everything from groceries, live stock feed, clothing material, ammunition and firearms. They did not speak any english Only Cajun French. It was an old man and his wife that owned the store. They had a pot belly stove in the middle of the store with rocking chairs around it. Before I started my route my first day, the owner of the company told me that some of the stores I went to, be prepared because they were going to offer me a Miller High Life beer and a link of boudin. He said don't turn it down or refuse it because it would insult them. So as I would go on my route, unload the merchandise and check it in, sure enough the owners of the stores would give me a beer and a link of boudin. They would keep the links in a hitachi rice cooker to keep it warm. By the time I would get back to the warehouse I was all screwed up. My boss would greet me and asked me how did it go and all he would do is laugh.
'''on a trouvé le paradis dedans le sud de la Lousiane!'' means We found paradise in southern Louisiana
Awesome! Thank you for the info.
What a lovely place. I love all of the trees.
Thank you for your great commentary, keep these videos up and going. Great Job 👍🏽,
Thank you, Dennis!
I love the colors of these houses
Lafayette looks cool... great video 😎
Awesome video, you have to come back, Lafayette has whole lot more to see, and many more restaurants to spotlight!
I don't doubt that!
41:00 Bon Temps Grill. Previously the Blue Dog Cafe (it was decorated with George Rodriques Blue Dog paintings). Originally built as Chez Pastor in the 60s or 70s.
A absolutely gorgeous town😊
"Hi to ya folks"...really liked the drive though the streets,. the houses with the mix of colors was nice, everything was interesting to see, ..Safe travels,. Thank you!🌼
Thank you for the kind words, Jenny. :)