I can smell the barbecue pork that’s already smoking on the
pit as we meet at the KC Hall, 503 E. Highway 90, in the town of Iowa,
Louisiana, around 9 a.m. to pay our $10 fee to ride in the parade.
Smoked meats like sausage and tasso are popular in Cajun Country. |
Everyone is
milling around in their Courir de Mardi Gras costumes made of rags and visiting
as final preparations are made with the decorations on the trailers.
Cory Cart and Lysa Allman-Baldwin enjoy the festivities atop bales of hay in the back of a trailer on the parade route! |
We are in the small town of Iowa, Louisiana for the Iowa Chicken Run on Mardi Gras Day. The parade rolls at 10 a.m.
The parade stops at a member of the community's home while Zydeco music is played and everyone dances. If the family approves the dancing skills, they donate ingredients for the gumbo. |
Right as the captain stops the parade at a particular home and blows his whistle, he tosses a chicken in the air and the children in the parade chase the chicken! There is a lot of whooping, hollering and dancing that takes place during the process! It’s quite an honor to catch the chicken.
Children chase the chickens in Iowa, La. |
Lee Peck with KPLC-TV interviews the child who caught the first chicken. |
It’s a family affair. Rodney Victorian, Berline and Kimmy Bellard welcome us with open arms. There’s no pomp and circumstance or sequined costumes. This is a true, Cajun Country Mardi Gras with laughter, festivity and music that gets your adrenaline pumping.
Berline Bellard encourages the cook stirring the gumbo pot. |
My favorite part about the Iowa Chicken Run is how it cuts through the lines of age, race and socioeconomics. There is no king or queen. The chicken run exemplifies true community spirit and living life to the fullest.
For more information on the Iowa Chicken Run, click here.
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