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18 Jul 2024

Shuga’ Shack

2024-07-18T06:48:47-05:00

Shuga’ Shack is the perfectly sized bed and breakfast for a small family or group of friends looking to take a trip to Sunset, Louisiana. With nearby art galleries and antique stores, as well as the famous Café Josephine, this retro Mid-Century modern cottage built in the late 1920s to early ’30s is a great spot to relax for a nice weekend of shopping.

The Shuga’ Shack has free Wi-Fi, a full kitchen and two bedrooms, one with a king-sized bed and the other a queen-sized one. Enjoy the outdoors on an acre of land with a gas grill (propane included), fire pit, and cozy front porch.

Shuga’ Shack2024-07-18T06:48:47-05:00
14 Jun 2024

Nonc’s Shop

2024-06-14T14:49:45-05:00

Adam “Nonc” Doucet, owner of Nonc’s Shop, is a French speaker, self-taught musician, and self-taught woodturner from Sunset, Louisiana. Doucet prides himself in one-of-a-kind turned pieces made from local Louisiana wood species. Most notably, Doucet is known for his work with sinker cypress, ancient cypress trees ranging from 400-1,000+ years old. His work has been featured in national publications and museums such as The San Felipe de Austin State Historic Site. With a degree in anthropology, Doucet continues finding the unique connections humans have with trees and wood and incorporates these ideas into his work. Nonc’s Shop offers commission work on various products, so please reach out if you would like a custom piece of local art.

Nonc’s Shop2024-06-14T14:49:45-05:00
24 Jan 2023

Knollwood Farm

2023-11-02T13:55:07-05:00

Founded in 1980, Knollwood Farm is a small horse farm in Sunset, Louisiana that’s been in operation for over 40 years. They provide horseback riding, lessons, training, trail rides, birthday parties, and group events. It is the perfect spot to visit for those looking to learn about horses, farm life, or if you’re simply looking for a nice place to ride.

Their facilities include a large round pen, arena, pond, picnic tables, and areas to trail ride in the nearby woods. They also offer boarding and training for those interested in keeping your horse on the farm, or if you need a place for them to rest while traveling.

Knollwood Farm hosts an annual horse show as well as other events catered to the horse community which has a strong local presence. In fact, St. Landry Parish was named the Horse Capital of Louisiana in 2022 and has a long history of horse culture that you can read more about here.

Ici on parle français. French is spoken here.

Knollwood Farm2023-11-02T13:55:07-05:00
25 Oct 2022

The Rustic Retreat Guesthouse

2023-10-04T14:32:42-05:00

Located on the grounds of Bien-Aime Farm between Church Point and Sunset, Louisiana, the Rustic Retreat Guesthouse is a cozy studio for two equipped with its own kitchen, queen bed, and bathroom. This lovingly crafted space was designed and brought to life by the owners, David and Katie Baird. It’s perfect for those who are interested in agritourism. Take a farm tour and learn about all the work that goes into an organic farm that grows and raises most of its own food. They also offer you the opportunity to gather produce and cook a meal with your freshly picked ingredients.

The Rustic Retreat Guesthouse2023-10-04T14:32:42-05:00
30 Aug 2022

Astros Studios

2024-01-31T12:48:29-06:00

Astros Studios is an audio and video production studio in Sunset, Louisiana that also functions as a venue large enough to host hundreds of people for concerts and weddings. Tour their impressive 5,300 sq. ft. green screen room that is equipped for video recording and production. Their facility also includes a sound stage for live music, recording, and live streaming.

Students or those interested in the inner workings of the movie industry and special effects can tour the studio and see what really goes on behind the scenes at a real recording and film studio.

Learn more about renting this space here.

Astros Studios2024-01-31T12:48:29-06:00
30 Aug 2022

Astros Studios

2023-11-14T11:48:54-06:00

This 7 sq. acres of land in Sunset used to be home to the last legal rooster fighting arena in Louisiana, La Place de Chantecleer. Now, this historic hotspot along highway 182 is a high-tech studio, restaurant, and special event venue. The large space and ample parking make it perfect for weddings or large gatherings.

Amenities include on-site catering, a commercial kitchen, 2 full-service bars, dressing room, live sound stage recording studio, outdoor wedding space, Air BnB, 20 RV Hookups, and enough parking for 300 cars.

Astros Studios2023-11-14T11:48:54-06:00
11 Jul 2022

Town of Sunset Mural

2023-01-03T09:48:58-06:00

This mural, located in Sunset, Louisiana, was painted by muralist and Breaux Bridge native, Darryl “Demo” Demourelle. Demourelle is known for his colorful, larger-than-life works. His energetic and loud style fits in perfectly with the artsy community of Sunset and especially along the walls of the former Artworks by Ted Bertrand gallery which is now the Sunset Arts Co-Op.

Painted along the historic early 1900s bank-turned-gallery, the mural displays a man playing a rubboard alongside a swath of sweet potatoes and three large cotton bulbs. The worn rubboard, an iconic zydeco instrument, has taken root in Sunset. The instrument was popularized by zydeco legend Clifton Chenier and his brother Cleveland. In 1946 Chenier approached metalworker Willie Landry to create the frottoir, a wearable rubboard.  Landry’s son, Tee Don Landry, continues his father’s legacy with his Key of Z Rubboard Shop, located just a few minutes away from the gallery. Cotton and sweet potatoes, also highlighted in the mural, were both major exports of the town.

  • 855 Napoleon Avenue, Sunset, Louisiana 70584

Town of Sunset Mural2023-01-03T09:48:58-06:00
21 Jul 2021

Sunset Bicycle Sculptures

2022-10-31T09:25:43-05:00

The Sunset Garden Club, also in charge of their famous Herb & Garden Festival, can be credited for these 15 bicycles sculptures that you can find around the town of Sunset. The colorful bicycles are decorated every holiday and season by the dedicated individuals of the Sunset Garden Club. The bicycles themselves were donated by the Sunset Police Department.

Businesses with bicycles outside of them include the Funky Flea, Bayou Some Stuff Flea Market, and the City Hall. Drive down Napoleon Avenue, passed the World’s Largest Rubboard, and find more of these public artworks.

  • Open 24/7

  • 337-662-5296

  • 211 Marie Street, Sunset, Louisiana 70584

Sunset Bicycle Sculptures2022-10-31T09:25:43-05:00
23 Mar 2021

St. Landry Biking Trails

2024-06-24T16:33:47-05:00

Lafayette to Chretien Point Plantation Loop Tour

This 40-mile tour has a plantation, bayou views, and local artists. While no longer open to the public, the Chretien Point Plantation remains a historic landmark in St. Landry Parish and this bike trail will take you right past the sprawling estate and reportedly haunted site of a Civil War battle. Traveling this trail will also bring you through Grand Coteau and the Academy of the Sacred Heart. This historic school was founded in 1821 and is the site of the miraculous cure by St. John Berchmans of the terminally ill novice, Mary Wilson. It stands as the only Vatican-recognized miracle in North America and is featured on our Spiritual Trail as well.

Grand Coteau is a picturesque community with many other culturally and architecturally significant structures. Along the way, you can also visit the Church of St. Charles Borromeo. To the rear of the church is a cemetery filled with many old and interesting gravesites that reflect architectural styles ranging from Greek revival to Renaissance revival and Egyptian motifs of the 1870s and ‘80s.

Route Description:

Start: Acadiana park on Alexander Street in North Lafayette, the Acadiana Park parking lot.

0.8 Right on Louisiana Avenue.

2.2 Right on Pont de Mouton. Take an immediate left on LaJaunie Road.

4.2 Left on Gloria Switch Road.

5.5 Right on Wilderness Trail.

6.3 Bayou Wilderness Campground & Store. Good stop for drinks and snacks.

6.7 Left on Beau Bassin. Cross bayou and turn right at T.

8.6 Left on Catholique–at dead end sign.

9.8 Right on St. Esprit at T. 11.2 Right at T and stop sign on Hwy. 726.

11.6 Straight ahead on Kidder at Y.

12.5 Left on Brasseaux.

13.8 Right on I-49 Frontage Road.

14.1 Left on Hwy.182. Go under I-49. 14.4 Right on Frontage Road.

15.8 Left on Begnaud Road (near nursery). 17.4 Left at T.

19.1 Right on Hwy. 356.

19.2 Right on Chretien Point Road.

20.3 Chretien Point Plantation.

Start: Chretien Point Plantation to The Academy of The Sacred Heart. Left out of the gate at Chretien Point Plantation.

1.8 Right on Robert Daily Road.

3.1 Left on Sunset Strip (Hwy. 93).

3.5 Right on Hwy. 182 and Hwy. 93 in Sunset.

4.1 Left on Hwy. 93.

5.4 Left on Church Street (Hwy. 93) at the traffic light in Grand Coteau.

6.5 Academy of the Sacred Heart. Retrace your route back into Grand Coteau & continue on to Lafayette.

Start: Grand Coteau to Lafayette, at the traffic light in Grand Coteau. Left on Hwy. 93 East

0.1 Kitchen Shop.

4.5 Right on Bayou Fuselier road (EASILY MISSED!).

8.6 Left on Hwy. 726.

9.8 Right on Wilderness Trail—just after the bridge.

13.8 Bayou Wilderness Campground & Store.

14.5 Left at stop sign on Gloria Switch road.

16.0 Right on La Jaunie Road.

17.8 Right on Pont de Mouton. Cross bayou then turn left on Louisiana Ave. and go under I-10.

19.4 Left on Alexander

20.2 Acadiana Park.

Washington to Eunice to Sunset

Ride through the history of Cajun music on this route that takes you along the Cajun Prairie. Leave the sprawling live oaks and historic homes of Washington and move on to rice fields and crawfish farms as you make your way to Mamou and Eunice. You can pass by Fred’s Lounge in Mamou which has been a hub of Cajun music since 1948.

Near Eunice, consider a stop at the Savoy Music Center, home of well-known musician and accordion-maker Marc Savoy. Nice country roads will be your route back through rice fields until you reach the town of Branch when you will return to sugar cane territory. The only place for food and drink between Eunice and Sunset is a Chevron Station in Branch at the junction of Highways 35 and 365.

Sunset is the Rubboard Capital of the World made so by the largest rubboard in the world marking the town as well as being the base of operations for renowned rubboard maker, Tee Don Landry. Call ahead and you’ll be able to tour his key of Z frottoirs that are so popular in zydeco music.

Start: Washington Tourist Information Center on Main Street.

WASHINGTON to MAMOU and Fred’s Lounge:

Take Hwy. 103 West out of Washington.

0.4 Magnolia Ridge Plantation.

2.2 Arlington Antebellum Home.

6.8 Straight ahead on Hwy. 363.

6.9 Grand Prairie

7.2 Left onto Hwy. 748 at graveyard and church.

11.4 Straight ahead on Hwy. 748 at the junction with Hwy. 1169.

12.9 Junction with Hwy. 167 and Hwy. 10. Straight ahead on LeBois D’Arch Road. Do Not Turn on Hwy. 167 & 10.

14.3 Left at T and stop sign on Bellaire Cove Road.

16.4 Right on Lance De Cavalier Road (EASILY MISSED!). Brick house on right. Street sign with name of road was missing at the time of this writing.

20.4 Right at T onto Hwy.104 (Prairie Ronde Road near the Olivier Store).

22.8 Right at T and stop sign on Hwy. 104 & Hwy. 29.

23.1 Left on Hwy. 104. Follow the sign to Mamou.

31.0 Left at four-way stop and caution light on Sixth Street.

31.7 FRED’S LOUNGE ON THE LEFT.

MAMOU TO EUNICE:

Fred’s Lounge. Go left or south on Hwy. 104.

0.3 Left on Hwy. 95 at T and stop sign toward Chataigner.

3.8 Left on Hwy. 95 at T and stop sign.

8.9 In Chataignier, go right on Hwy. 29 to Eunice.

16.3 Left on Hwy. 13 at stop sign and caution light.

17.0 At the traffic light, cross Hwy. 190 and continue straight ahead.

Start: Cajun Music Hall of Fame

Right at T onto C.C. Duson Street.

0.4 Right on Hwy. 91 South.

0.9 Left on Hwy. 755 Spur (College Street).

1.4 Right on Hwy. 755 (by the Cemetery).

1.8 Left at T and stop on Hwy. 755 (LSUE Street).

6.4 Straight ahead on Hwy. 368 East & Hwy. 370.

9.4 Right on Hwy. 370 (Frey Cove Road) at T.

9.9 Straight ahead on Hwy. 370 West (McCain Road).

12.9 Left on Hwy. 365 East.

14.9 Straight ahead on Shultz Road at junction with Hwy. 13.

15.9 Straight ahead on PR1109.

16.4 Left on Hwy.1109.

17.4 Right on Hwy. 365 (Branch Highway) at T and stop sign.

23.9 In Branch, at the junction with Hwy. 35, continue straight ahead on Hwy. 365 (Branch Highway). Chevron Station & Deli will be on your left.

28.4 Right at T and stop sign on Hwy. 95 & Hwy. 365. Then immediately turn left on Hwy. 365 (Choppy’s Road).

29.6 Left at T on Mary Alice Road

31.5 Right on Hwy. 356 (Peach Bloom Highway)

33.7 Left on Hwy. 356 in Bristol.

35.8 Left on Chretien Point Road (EASILY MISSED!).

36.8 Chretien Point Plantation.

38.6 At yield sign, continue straight ahead. Turn right at stop sign.

38.8 Right on Highway 182 into Sunset.

40.4 Sunset Town Hall on left. Bed & Breakfast available in Sunset and Grand Coteau. Historical attractions and a good restaurant are located in Grand Coteau.

Washington to Breaux Bridge

This 40-mile journey will take you through Opelousas, Sunset, and Grand Coteau along the route from Washington all the way south to Breaux Bridge. Washington was a thriving steamboat town in its heyday and today is home to the Steamboat Warehouse Restaurant and a plethora of historic homes. You can grab a map at the St. Landry Parish Visitor Center that marks some particularly notable locations including haunted locales and antique shopping opportunities.

Opelousas is known as the “Zydeco Capital of the World” and is the home of pioneers of the genre including Amédé Ardoin and Clifton Chenier. You’ll pass by plenty of art downtown denoting its musical history. While in Opelousas you can stop by Yam Country Pies on Grolee street. This family-run business is the destination for sweet dough pies in the area. You can let their spicy tea cakes or sweet cream-filled pies fuel the next leg of your journey.

In Breaux Bridge, you will arrive at the “crawfish capital of the world,” which celebrates the famous crustacean every May with the Crawfish Festival. Stop for a meal and maybe a Cajun two-step in one of the local dance halls.

Start: Washington Tourist Information Center on Main Street. Take Hwy.103 East (St. Landry Veteran’s Memorial Highway) out of Washington.

0.7 Go under Interstate 49.

1.5 Right on Hwy.743.

3.9 Right on Hwy. 744. Easily missed!

4.2 Left on Bay Ridge Road (small country road).

5.0 Left at T and Stop on Frontage Road (following I 49).

7.6 Right at T and Stop. Go under I 49. You will be on East Prudhomme in Opelousas.

8.5 Left on Tunica Street at 4-Way Stop. Tunica changes name to Wallior.

9.1 Right on Grolee.

9.4 Lombard Street. Tony Chachere Seasonings Factory will be to the right on Lombard. Call ahead at 337-948-4691 if you would like a tour of the factory.

Note: At the intersection of Grolee and Main Street, you can walk your bike 1/2 block to the Opelousas Museum on Main Street. At this museum, you can learn the history of Zydeco Music as well as the history of Opelousas.

9.5 Continue on Grolee to reach Market Street.

9.8 Left on Market Street.

10.0 Corner of Landry and Market Street. In this area has Back in Time and Java Square, two cafés with excellent food and great coffee. You also have some shopping options available with Wildchild Essentials.

10.0 Continue on Market Street to leave Opelousas.

10.8 Left on Bertheaud Ave.

11.0 Right on Union Street (Hwy. 182). There will be moderate traffic on this stretch of road in Opelousas, but there is a shoulder. And the traffic will lessen as you leave the city.

19.7 Hwy. 95. You can take this road to reach Chretien Point Plantation. You are now in the town of Sunset.

20.1 Budd Street. La Caboose Gift Shop on Bud Street. Get ready for a left-hand turn.

20.2 Left on Hwy. 93

20.9 Grand Coteau. Follow Hwy. 93 through Grand Coteau.

21.4 Traffic light at the intersection of Hwy.93 and Church Street. To visit the Academy of the Sacred Heart, turn left on Church Street.

22.0 Continue on Hwy.93 East toward Arnaudville.

26.1 Right on Bayou Fuselier Road. Easily missed!

30.2 Left on Hwy. 726.

31.4 Right on Wilderness Trail.

35.4 Bayou Wilderness Campground and Store.

35.4 Left on St. Clair at Y.

37.2 Right at T and Stop on Hwy. 354.

39.6 Straight ahead on Hebert Road. Do not follow 354 to the right!

41.0 Right on N. Berard Street (Hwy.31).

41.5 Junction of Hwy. 94 and Hwy. 31. Continue straight on Hwy.31 to reach downtown Breaux Bridge.

42.4 Left on Bridge Street at traffic light.

42.6 Chamber of Commerce and Visitors Center in Breaux Bridge.

St. Landry Biking Trails2024-06-24T16:33:47-05:00
1 Jul 2020

Tee Don’s Rubboards

2021-10-13T12:38:54-05:00

“Tee Don” Landry is famous for his Key of Z Rubboards. The frottoir, a wearable rubboard that is synonymous with zydeco music, was popularized by King of Zydeco Clifton Chenier and Cleveland, his brother who played that first rubboard masterfully. The story goes that in 1946, Chenier came to Willie Landry, Tee Don’s father and a Cajun metal craftsman, with the plans for the frottoir. Now at his shop in Sunset, Tee Don practices his father’s craft and is the reason the town is touted as the Rubboard Capital of the World.

On his website, you can purchase one of his rubboards or even have one custom made. Set up a time to visit his shop and see the process for yourself. Each one of his rubboards is numbered and registered, even the mini ones meant for decoration.

Tee Don’s Rubboards2021-10-13T12:38:54-05:00
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