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Welcome to our Gourmet Cajun Shop
Live Crawfish, Crawfish Tails, Cooking Crawfish, Crawfish Gumbo
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Live Crawfish Facts
Everything You Ever Wanted To Know
About Louisiana Cajun Crawfish

Where to Get Crawfish - Live, Boiled, Tails & Pies
Whether you call them Crawfish, Crayfish, Mudbugs or Crawdads,
we've tried to put together a few facts on these interesting Cajun critters.
...And if you get hungry in the process, we've added a few
text and image links that will take you to our crawfish shopping pages. We have Louisiana crawfish tails & crawfish pie year round, and in season there's a great
supply of delicious live Cajun crawfish as well as fresh boiled crawfish. ...And we've recently found a crawfish supplier deep in
the Louisiana Atchafalaya swamp that allows us to extend the regular crawfish season, so now we can supply delicious crawfish almost all year round.
On July 14, 1983, Louisianas governor approved a law designating the crawfish and
alligator as the state crustacean and reptile. Louisiana thus became the first state to adopt an official crustacean. The crawfish was adopted because of its commercial importance. Theyre good to eat,
whether they're caught in the swamp or raised in a crawfish pond. Crawfish look like tiny
lobsters, to which they are related. But lobsters live in the sea, while most crawfish are
at home in freshwater.
There are more than five hundred species of crawfish. More than
half of them live in North America. They are especially diverse in the Mississippi Basin
in Louisiana. In Louisiana, wild crawfish are especially abundant in the Atchafalaya
(uh.CHA.fuh.lie.uh) Basin. This is the largest river hardwood swamp in the nation.
Acadians have long harvested and eaten Atchafalaya crawfish. Crawfish are often called
crawdads in Louisiana. Outside Louisiana, they are usually called crayfish.
So how did the lowly crawfish gain such prominence in our culture? Well, actually, Native
Americans in the area were the first credited with harvesting and consuming crawfish even
before the Cajuns arrived on the scene. They used to bait reeds with venison (deer meat),
stick them in the water and periodically pick up the reeds with crawfish attached to the
bait. By using this method, the Native Americans would catch bushels of crawfish for their
consumption. By the 1930s nets were substituted, and by the 1950s the now ubiquitous
crawfish trap was widely used. The trap is still the current method of harvesting mudbugs.
Louisiana leads the nation in the production of crawfish with approximately 100 million
pounds of crawfish per year. About half of the production comes from the Atchafalaya Basin
and half from an extensive aquaculture system which involves some 135,000 acres of ponds
throughout the state.
If you have Real Video Player or Windows Media Player on your computer, we have a video
clip called "Cajun Crawfish: Catching, Cooking and Eating" that we think you'll
enjoy.
Just click one of the links below to play this interesting Cajun video.
RealOne Player
Windows Player
Courtesy of "Folklife in Louisiana" at
http://www.louisianafolklife.org
Sources: Kenneth Delcambre, Breaux Bridge City Historian; Jim Bradshaw, History of
Acadiana; Jimmy Avery and Dwight Landreneau, Louisiana Crawfish, LSU Agricultural
Center, and www.geobop.org
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