Thursday, December 21, 2017

A Louisiana Christmas Tradition: Bonfires on the Levee

Knowing the financial hardships that many patients and survivors face, we like to highlight free and low cost events in the area, especially during the holiday season.




The Great River Road between New Orleans and Baton Rouge can lay claim on one of the more unusual public December holiday lighting displays.

It’s here on the earthen levees containing the Mississippi River that local Christmas lights aren’t colored bulbs, but instead dozens of 30-feet-and-higher flaming pyramids of burning logs.

The Christmas bonfires, as locals call them, are mostly teepee-shaped, but some can be odd shapes paying tribute to the river’s heritage—shapes ranging from miniature plantation homes to tiny replica paddlewheel steamships. Bonfires are built by families, friends and co-workers who visit, cook and mingle between the fires. It’s a local celebration with an environment akin to football tailgating, and the practice has continued for generations. Learn how to build a Louisiana bonfire.

Why bonfires on Christmas Eve? It depends on who you ask. Some historians believe they are a carry-down of an ancient European tradition where bonfires initially honored successful harvests and later from Christianity (south Louisiana was originally a French colony, and residents remain predominantly Catholic).

No comments:

Post a Comment