Arrive at the marina launch site, meet your captain/guide, and receive a short safety briefing before heading into the bayou—one of southeast Louisiana’s most fragile and important landscapes.
See alligators along the banks, often basking at the water’s edge, along with a lively cast of migratory songbirds and raptors that use the bayou as a seasonal highway. Watch wading birds such as great egrets, herons, and ibis move and feed in the shallows.
Let your guide help identify species, explain seasonal timing, and highlight why healthy wetlands matter to long-distance migrants. Learn the subtle signs of a stressed wetland and how sediment flow, levees, and river management can starve marshes of the material they need.
Listen as your guide describes on-the-ground restoration techniques such as living shorelines, which use native plants and structural elements to reduce erosion; replanting marsh grasses and cypress seedlings to rebuild habitat; and targeted sediment placement to raise low marshes.
Leave with more than snapshots—you’ll come away with a working understanding of how hurricanes, development, changing river management, and restoration efforts have shaped the delta.