Last fall, I donated a Cajun/Creole dinner party for the Queen Anne Helpline’s annual fundraiser. It was a live auction item which a friend of mine purchased. Last Saturday we had the gathering. Two terrific people, Deborah Paine and Christine Kistler supplied, desserts, salads and a tremendous amount of enthusiasm. Jon Rowley offered up some delicious raw Kumamoto oysters,
and I prepared crayfish Étouffée and Andouille sausage/chicken gumbo. It was truly a special gathering for one and all.
Louisiana, Louisiana
They’re tyrin’ to wash us away
They’re tryin’ to wash us away
Randy Newman, Louisiana 1927
Toward the beginning of the festive evening we took a moment to acknowledge the catastrophe that has landed off the shore of my home state, Louisiana. The oil disaster is now in the Gulf stream and inching its way around the horn of Florida.
In 2008, I started what I’d hoped to be a long-term project to photograph in Southeast Louisiana. I visited with fisherman, shrimpers and permanent residents who were just starting to recover from the severe affects of Katrina and the storms that followed. Grand Isle, a sliver of land, was rebuilding from the winds and waves that battered that island. Life was hard for the residents. Cecil Lapeyrouse’s family lived for generations in the area and ran one of the oldest general stores.
Eighteen months ago he was feeling overwhelmed with the loss of business, the loss of wildlife, the loss of his family’s heritage. I can’t image what is going through his mind today.
A Louisiana friend pointed out that the timing of the oil pipe hemorrhaging could not have been more environmentally disastrous. Along the coast, as everywhere, all the fowl were hatching their young, the crab had begun to revive, oysters were ready to gather. The people dependent on the bountiful Gulf invested their winter days and funds in preparation for the beginning of the harvest season. This is an ecological and economic disaster of the highest proportion.
It’s time we all look at our dependence on oil. From the gas in our cars to the plastic in our containers, crude (what a descriptive word) is used everywhere.
In 1968 the movie, The Graduate, was released. A key moment in the movie happens when Ben, Dustin Hoffman’s character, is given advice from his father’s friend. “Ben I have only one word to tell you, Plastics .” As a teenager, that moment and word resonated with me. As I look back we seemed to have had very little plastic in our lives. It’s time for a redirection of our resources to renewable energy sources and away from the clutches of crude.

I have begun in a personal way to look at where I can reduce crude from my environment. It is really, really difficult. However, when I see the horrendous destruction along our southern coastline, I’m determined to change my dependency. Change sometimes hurts. I encourage you all to do some soul searching.




Davis,
A very sad and yet wonderful blog to read. You know I have always thought you should do your Louisiana Story – and now I believe it even more. You are still very much a part of that place. You know the land, you know the people and the moral of this story affects us all.
I hope you will tell it.
Davis,
I couldn’t agree with you more. I’ve been sooo depressed watching this stuff on the news. It makes me sick. So far it’s missed the Texas coast, but the price of oysters here has sky rocketed, and I just noticed the dearth of shrimp in the supermarket this afternoon. Those items were one of the few things that make living in this god forsaken state tolerable.
Vicki
Great Blog.
Great blog
great website.
Davis what a beautifully written and photographed article. I totally agree with reducing our dependency on crude. How, exactly, are you doing that? I also think you should send this to President Obama. What the people who live along the Louisiana shore must be experiencing is more than one can imagine. The affects of this are long-term and devastating. Their losses are on so many levels. Photographs and the memories might be all that is left of the pristine shoreline.
Really cool blog.