Spring festival season brings flavour, music and quirky traditions to Louisiana

From juicy strawberries and spicy boudin to jazz riffs, swamp blues, and delightfully quirky celebrations, springtime in Louisiana is festival season at its finest. Across the state, communities come alive with events that showcase the deep cultural roots that make Louisiana unlike anywhere else. Whether you are savouring iconic local dishes, dancing along the banks of a river, browsing art markets or cheering on quirky frog-themed fun, Louisiana’s festivals offer a joyful, flavour-packed way to experience the state’s rich traditions and infectious spirit.

Food Festivals

Springtime brings an abundance of fresh produce in Louisiana. Taste the bounty at the Ponchatoula Strawberry Festival or the Louisiana Peach Festival in Ruston for sweet and juicy fruit, or try some dishes that incorporate them and enjoy all the classic fun that comes with a festival.

Louisiana has quite a few festivals that are centred solely on the state’s signature dishes. See the Étouffée Festival in Arnaudville, highlighting the savoury rice dish that comes smothered in a seafood gravy, or the Gonzales Jambalaya Festival for a bowl of the mouthwatering classic. A traditional Cajun snack, boudin (a spicy pork and rice mixture stuffed into casing), is the star of the Scott Boudin Festival in the heart of Acadiana. More fresh Louisiana seafood awaits at the Amite Oyster Festival as well as numerous crawfish festivals across the state.

Music Festivals

Arguably, the most popular music festival in Louisiana is the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, a seven-day festival that draws some of the best musical acts of all genres, including jazz, rock, R&B and more. The French Quarter Festival is a massive event with 22 stages and 400-plus hours of live entertainment.

Great music can be found outside of New Orleans as well. The Baton Rouge Blues Festival, one of the oldest blues festivals in the nation, honours Louisiana’s own blues artists, specifically the unique sound of swamp blues. In Natchitoches, you can find the Natchitoches Jazz / R&B Festival rocking country and rock n’ roll to zydeco, blues and everything in between on the banks of the Cane River.

Cultural Festivals

Lafayette hosts Festival International de Louisiane, a free festival celebrating south Louisiana’s French cultural heritage. Native musicians as well as performing artists from Europe, Africa, Canada and the Caribbean play on the festival’s multiple stages. Shop Marche des Arts, a fine arts market with artists from around the country, and Marche du Monde, a world market with sculptures, photography, jewellery and more.

While music is a main attraction, Louisiana celebrates all forms of the arts. In New Iberia, explore author James Lee Burke’s hometown through the lens of his character Detective Dave Robicheaux at the Books Along The Teche Literary Festival. Explore local Cajun culture through storytelling, poetry, workshops, music, tours by bus or boat and plenty of good food. The Tennessee Williams & New Orleans Literary Festival has been supporting and shining a spotlight on writers, actors, musicians

and other artists for decades. The organisation is credited with providing professional writing instruction for hundreds of students in New Orleans. Literary fans of all kinds flock to the fest, hosted in the city Tennessee Williams dubbed his spiritual home.

In Krotz Springs, participants at the Sportsmen’s Heritage Festival can see, hear and taste the unique culture created on the banks of the Atchafalaya River. Foodies will love the wild game cook-off, music fans will be entertained by the Cajun, swamp pop and zydeco tunes, and kids of all ages will enjoy carnival rides and games.

Whacky Festivals

Last but not least, you can count on Louisiana to have some quirky festival themes. In Rayne, the Frog Capital of the World, the Rayne Frog Festival honours this title with frog-tastic music, activities, family-friendly entertainment and more. And in Lake Charles, the Louisiana Pirate Festival unfolds with music, food, games and contests, all of which occur around a pirate theme that pays homage to Louisiana’s “patron” pirate, Jean Lafitte.

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