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City tours and river cruises
 

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There is a bewildering variety of tours of New Orleans, from whistlestop jaunts in air-conditioned buses to preposterous moonlit ghost-hunts; stop by the Welcome Center to see the full range.

Walking tours are especially popular - notwithstanding the possibility of showers and, in summer, debilitating heat and humidity. Those led by Le Monde Creole , stopping at French Quarter sites featured in the true-life saga of a Creole family, are superb. They set off from their store at 624 Royal St (2hr-2hr 30min; Mon-Sat 10.30am & 2.30pm, Sun 10am & 2.30pm; $17.50; tel 504/568-1801; reservations required). The Bienville Foundation 's French Quarter walking tours emphasize "alternative" history (2hr-2hr 30min; schedules vary; $18-20; tel 504/945-6789; reservations essential), while those led by the Jean Lafitte National Historic Park Service give scholarly and accessible overviews (1hr 30min; 10.30am; free; tel 504/589-2636; reservations required). Collect a pass from the NPS visitor center, 419 Decatur St, after 9am on the day. In addition, some of their cultural programs (30-45min; 9.30am, 11.30am, 1.30pm & 3pm) include short, themed strolls around the Quarter.

If the weather's bad, or too hot, you may prefer to take a bus tour. Gray Line (tel 504/569-1401 or 1-800/535-7786) offers trips around the city (2hr; $23), to the nearby plantations (4hr-7hr 30min; $33-45), and the swamps (3hr 15min; $38). New Orleans Tours (tel 504/592-0560 or 1-800/543-6332) are similar, but fractionally cheaper.

Many visitors, especially with kids in tow, take a narrated trot through the Quarter in one of the mule-drawn carriages that wait behind Jackson Square on Decatur. These can be fun, though you should take the "historic" commentary with a pinch of salt. Rates range from $10 to $12 per person for a trip of between 30 and 45 minutes. Another pleasant way to while away a few hours on a steamy afternoon is on a river cruise . The Natchez steamboat is by far the best. Leaving from behind Jackson Brewery, it heads seven miles or so downriver before turning back near the Chalmette battlefield (2hr; daily 11.30am & 2.30pm; $15.75 or $21.75 with lunch and live jazz; tel 504/586-8777). The John James Audubon riverboat allows you to combine a cruise with a trip to the aquarium or the zoo, or both. It leaves daily from the aquarium at 10am, noon, 2pm and 4pm, and from the zoo an hour later (1hr one-way; $11.75 one-way, $14.50 round-trip, children half-price; tel 504/586-8777). The only boat that stops at Chalmette, site of the Battle of New Orleans, is the Creole Queen (10.30am & 2pm; 2hr 30min; $16, $22 with lunch; tel 504/524-0814), which leaves from the Plaza d'EspaAħa. Tickets for all cruises are sold at booths behind Jackson Brewery and the aquarium.


Other useful information for tourists (each section contains more specific sub-sections):




United States,
Louisiana,
New Orleans