This past October Tricia and I were in Breaux Bridge, Louisiana to celebrate our 35th anniversary at a little restaurant that we enjoy called Cafe' Sydnie Mae. Prior to eating we walked down to the bridge and overlooked Bayou Teche from a deck. The chocolate milk-colored water slowly drifted amongst the lily pads.
After a wonderful meal we walked down the main street and settled into a cafe on the corner and listened to musicians playing cajun french music. It's just an impromptu thing the townsfolk do on Saturday morning. There are all sorts of little shops up and down the street with crafts and antiques and whatnot.
I'm not a shopping type of guy. I don't like to "just look." I know what I want and I go in and get it and get out - quickly. But it's our anniversary and I'm minding my p's and q's. I follow Tricia in a little store to browse, but before we go in, something catches my eye on the porch. It's old pieces of cypress sinkers for sale. I just had to have it. The one I picked out was $35 and it was our 35th wedding anniversary, so I guess it was meant to be.
I asked the lady in the little shop where the cypress came from and she said, "Right here in the Atchafalaya Swamp." The Atchafalaya had tons of old growth cypress that was logged in the 1800's. As you drive over the Atchafalaya Freeway and look out, you can see a multitude of stumps that testify to the time when cypress trees covered the landscape. Cypress is a quality wood that contains oils that make it resistant to rot, insects and decay. We made our purchase and headed home with it. Didn't you know that a piece of cypress wood is an ideal anniversary gift?
What in the world are we going to do with that? Well, we're gonna hang it on our wall over my office. And after sitting in the corner of my office for a little over 3 months, we hung it up. I like to think it adds character to the room.
Speaking of character, if you want to see a character talking about cypress sinker logs and actually pulling one up that's been underwater for a century and then cut it up into lumber, click below. Pretty interesting!


