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MARDIGRASCALENDAR.COM
A bounteous cultural kaleidoscope
Expressed through a range of art forms and a dizzying amalgamation of happenings and habits, Mardi Gras in New Orleans is an amorphous thicket that can be challenging to navigate. Beyond the glitzy float parades, fancy-dress balls and unbridled indulgence of Bourbon Street is a veritable cornucopia of indigenous processions, artistic pursuits and rituals that, collectively, make Mardi Gras one of the most multifaceted extravaganzas on the planet.
MardiGrasCalendar.com’s Carnival Countdown aims to be the most comprehensive and user-friendly source of information on this bounteous cultural kaleidoscope. A detailed compendium of Mardi Gras-related events and activities that are open to the public, Carnival Countdown reveals that revels come in many different guises.
TOPIC CATEGORIES
MardiGrasCalendar.com is designed to help you easily access and relay information. Conveniently share listings via Twitter, social networking sites or e-mail. You can view all events or select specific categories to filter listings by topic:
SUMBIT YOUR LISTING
Is your Mardi Gras-related event missing from Carnival Countdown? Simply upload a description and photo (if available) to the site, and assign it to the appropriate calendar category or categories. We review all submissions, and do our best to post listings in a timely way.
And be sure to check back often. We’re constantly adding new items of interest to help you get the most out of the festivities and channel the true spirit of Mardi Gras!
Click to explore MardiGrasCalendar.com
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Big Chief Charles Taylor and members of the White Cloud Hunters outside the Backstreet Cultural Museum at Mardi Gras 2003
There's a kaleidoscope of intriguing cultural phenomenon to behold beyond the confines of the tourist district.
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MARDI GRAS TIPS & TRICKS
Some Advice & Insights on the New Orleans Mardi Gras Celebration
When contemplating a trip to Mardi Gras, it helps to understand from the git-go that the gala is diffuse and generally lacking in centralized organization. More a cultural phenomenon/art form than an “event,” it encompasses a dizzying amalgamation of habits and happenings that can be experienced on many different levels. Revels range from intimate gatherings with king cake and Champagne to glittering, elaborately choreographed balls; from thematic parades with marching bands and fantastic floats to spontaneous eruptions of dance and joie de vivre in the street; from costume contests to coronation ceremonies; from family-oriented parade-viewing picnics with red beans and rice to debutante tea parties; from krewe-sponsored “extravaganzas” to free concerts in public spaces; from the frenzied spectacle of Bourbon Street to offbeat expressions of indigenous grassroots culture on neighborhood back streets.
While the French Quarter is ground zero for the Mardi Gras tourist, the celebration is a citywide affair and as such, visitors who confine themselves to the Quarter won’t get the full panorama. The tourist district is not where you’ll find magnificently beaded and plumed Mardi Gras Indians strutting their stuff and chanting to hypnotic percussive beats. The Garden District, Uptown and Mid-City (for Endymion) offer some of the choicest settings for parade viewing. And most of the best music venues are found outside the Quarter.
For band listings and club locations, visit Offbeat.com. Another great resource is the celebrated beacon of New Orleans music, WWOZ 90.5 FM (also available online at wwoz.org), which airs local music listings at the top of each odd hour, live event simulcasts, Street Talk (documentary vignettes about New Orleans) and tips on local happenings including Mardi Gras Indian practices.
If you're drinking and reveling in the racy side of the festivities, keep your wits about you and indulge at your own risk. Many people assume that because it's a celebration known for mass inebriation, imbibing to excess at Mardi Gras is perfectly acceptable, if not expected. But just because New Orleans likes to trade on its famously relaxed, laissez-faire reputation—Sin City on the Bayou—doesn't mean the coast is all clear when sailing three sheets to the wind, with a prayer to the god who looks out for fools.
Public drunkenness—often in combination with resisting arrest, disturbing the peace or lewd behavior—is a leading cause of arrest during the festivities. If you pass out on a door stoop or a bench, or get caught urinating in public, there’s a good chance you’ll wind up in a place where there is no happy hour—Central Lock-up.
Porta potty on parade route neutral ground
Even neophyte parade-goers quickly learn
to become mindful of lavatory logistics.
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That said, New Orleans cops generally take a “live and let live” approach to intoxicated partiers caught up in the thrall of Mardi Gras Madness, so long as they maintain some semblance of common sense. Just don’t think it’s okay to act with wanton abandon because it’s New Orleans and “anything goes.”
And don’t think just because the city permits the consumption of alcohol in the streets that police are somehow lax about drinking and driving—far from it. If anything, they’re particularly vigilant during Mardi Gras, because they know people are partying. If you’re driving around the city at night or heading to or from the suburbs of Metairie or Kenner, don’t be surprised to encounter an alcohol checkpoint.
If you do drive, note that parking ordinances are strictly enforced during the festivities—a veritable bonanza for tow companies and the city’s parking violations bureau. Especially during the last five last days of Carnival ending Fat Tuesday, finding street parking in close proximity to the French Quarter or an active parade route is notoriously difficult. Thus, knowing you options regarding taxis and public transportation can save time, trouble and money.
In New Orleans during Mardi Gras, where the gaudiest things in life are free, revelers are consumed by a collective mania to acquire beads and baubles—a feeding frenzy that might seem dangerously maniacal if it wasn’t so darn entertaining. If you want to claim a worthy share of the coveted spoils, consider boning up on proven stratagems and techniques. As for the infamous Mardi Gras barter economy on Bourbon Street, like it or not, the flesh-baring revels have become a bona fide tourist attraction. If you do decide to partake in Mardi Gras immodesty, beware of police, leering paparazzi and the fact that, thanks to the Internet, what is revealed in New Orleans doesn’t necessarily stay in New Orleans.
Hanging with a Zulu masker at the
riverfront Lundi Gras Festival 2009
Many Carnival festivities are free and
open to all who wish to celebrate.
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While there's something to be said for mixing it up with the hoi polloi in the streets, access to grandstands and balconies—the Mardi Gras equivalent of skyboxes at arenas and stadiums—does offer certain advantages. Because let's face it: The Greatest Free Show on Earth draws quite a crowd!
As the celebration’s main event, parades, especially during the last five days of Carnival, draw big crowds and present logistical issues—not the least of which is finding a place to pee. Other considerations: what to bring to parades, where to view them, safety issues and etiquette. For the skinny on all this and more, click here.
A pair of comfortable shoes is a good idea if you plan on attending parades, as you’ll probably be walking quite a bit. Also note that weather in New Orleans during Mardi Gras can vary considerably, so be sure to pack appropriate clothing.
If you plan on bringing the kids, precautions are in order. Don’t allow them to chase after parade floats for throws. Also, because float riders can sometimes be errant or overly aggressive in their throwing, be on the alert and ready to deflect heavy beads and other items hurled in the direction of children. Stepladders are a popular way to provide children with a good view of parades and make it easier for them to snag throws. However, ladder-related accidents happen every Mardi Gras, so be sure to follow safety rules.
Parties and balls come in many guises during the season of merriment that begins on feast of the Epiphany (Jan. 6)—the twelfth day of Christmas, the day the gift-bearing wise men visited the Christ child—and culminates on Mardi Gras (Fat Tuesday). While visitors won't likely have the opportunity to attend a high-society Carnival ball, which tend to be exclusive, invitation-only affairs, some krewe fêtes are accessible to non-members. For information about Mardi Gras parties and events that are open to the general public, check out Carnival Countdown.
Ever wonder what it’s like to ride on a float in a Mardi Gras parade? Well, what’s not to like about reveling in the thrill of playing Santa Claus and bestowing flashy treasures into the outstretched hands of a jazzed crowd? There is a compelling, almost surreal theatricality intrinsic to the whole experience, and some parading krewes let outsiders join in the fun—for a price.
The availability of hotel rooms depends in part on the date of Mardi Gras, which can occur on any Tuesday from February 3 through March 9, and your actual arrival date. For the lowdown on minimum-stay requirements and how hotels manage their room inventory for Mardi Gras, click here.
Now, as they like to say down Louisiana way, Laissez les bon temps rouler (Let the good times roll)—and Happy Mardi Gras!
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