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Fit for a Queen

Hot times on Avery Island: Spicy fun, great bird and bear watching in birthplace of Tabasco

Tarra Gaines
Jul 31, 2017 | 3:00 pm

On the Venn diagram of tourist spots perfect for birders and hot sauce lovers, I would bet the only intersection lies on Avery Island, Louisiana.

I come from a family of avid birders. Many of them, born and bred in New Orleans, also love their pepper-laced cuisine. So on my way to Crescent City earlier this summer with some of those said family members, a detour to the birthplace of Tabasco Pepper Sauce, which is also the home of a century old egret refuge, seemed worth a half-a-day-trip.

While I like birds on general they’re-pretty principle and enjoy mild peppery goodness in some dishes, I’m not a fanatic. I do, however, love bizarre and strange Gulf Coast tourist attractions and Avery Island certainly qualifies.

The first wonderfully weird aspect about Avery Island is that the “island” moniker seems somewhat honorific. About a four-hour drive from Houston, and 45 minutes south from Lafayette, this lush (is)land lies on a salt dome that creates a kind of 2,000-acre hill rising 163 feet above the bayous and marsh. So while technically the land is surrounded by water and swamp, we certainly didn’t need a boat to get there. Avery is one of Louisiana’s five salt domes, 200-million-year-old remnants of an ancient saltwater seas, and humans have been digging for salt on it for hundreds of years, continuing to this day.

Spicy Explorations

The “island” offers two main attractions for visitors, the McIlhenny Company Tabasco museum and tour of the facilities for the hot sauce aficionados and Jungle Gardens for nature lovers.

Arriving at Avery, we first hit the visitors’ center to begin our self-guided pepper tour. And yes, the $12 ticket got us cute little Tabasco sample bottles. The “Avery Island Experience” tour allows visitors to take a deep Tabasco dive into salt dome geological, and McIlhenny family, history and then to go step-by-step into the sauce making process.

The Original Red Tabasco Sauce used in a million restaurants across the world contains only three key ingredients, peppers, vinegar and salt, so I wasn’t exactly expecting a dangerous and wacky Wonka factory-type tour, but found myself surprisingly fascinated by the spicy operation throughout, especially while maintaining a vigilant lookout for bears. No really, during the short walk to the greenhouse to view a species selection of pepper plants, we passed by a Louisiana black bear “frequenting area” near a definitely non-indigenous bamboo grove.

Like wine, part of the Tabasco sauce creation requires aging. Once the red peppers are picked and then churned into mash, the resulting mush is aged in white oak barrels for up to three years. Taking a peek into the storage building at the rows upon rows of barrels all covered with Avery Island salt for preserving was a bit like gazing into Tabasco infinity. I also learned that coopering, the making of barrels, casks and buckets is a real job in the 21st century and when I grow up I don’t want to be one as much as put that title on my business cards.

Heading into the main plant facilities, I paused to read what looked to be an official royal seal decreeing McIlhenny Tabasco the official pepper sauce supplier to Queen Elizabeth. I guess even the Queen’s likes it hot on occasion.

We then got an up close — but behind glass walls — look at the blending and bottling process. Also in the main building I got to pet a salt boulder, walk through a simulated salt mine tunnel and admire a giant hanging red jalapeño pepper and mosquito sculptures.

Before ending our Tabasco explorations, we stopped by Avery’s third attraction, the gift shop. Personally, I always consider a good gift shop attractive, especially one that’s less a shop and more of a hot sauced themed emporium. Sure, I found pepper decorated T-shirts and boxer shorts, but the range of types of food that can be laced with Tabasco really astounded me. Go for the sauce tasting station; stay for the jalapeño and raspberry chipotle soft serve ice cream and pepper-flavored cola.

In the Jungle

Next (and nest) up, our tour went to the birds, as we headed two minutes down the road to Jungle Gardens. The 170-acre Jungle Gardens can be explored by foot, but Edward Avery “Ned” McIlhenny who opened the private park for visitors in the 1930s, designed the route for a leisurely sightseeing drive.

The park affords lots of opportunities to stop for short hikes to look for wildlife while wandering along the shores of lagoons and through smaller gardens. I spotted rabbits, deer, and possible a gator, though it might have been a rather gnarly log.

The Jungle highlight and Ned McIlhenny’s conservation legacy is Bird City, a manmade rookery built over a small lake for migrating snowy egrets. McIlhenny began Bird City more than a century ago with eight egret chicks he hand-raised and then released for their fall migration. Six returned in the spring to nest and become the founding egrets of Avery Island’s vast avian-polis of today.

Like the Tabasco tour, Jungle Gardens also presents moments of weird wonderment. For example, a beautiful, 900-year-old (according to the brochure) Buddha statue, with a rather murky history possibly involving the 12th century Chinese Emperor Hui-tsung, warlords, and a late 19th century trip to New York, meditates over a quiet garden of Chinese juniper, bamboo and live oaks.

The journey this Buddha took to land on an ancient Louisiana salt dome – where they make the Queen’s preferred spicy condiment – to hang out with the bears, alligators and egrets remains something of a mystery, but he seemed quite at home in the curious swampy loveliness that is life on Avery Island.

An upstanding citizen of Bird City.

Avery Island: Egret
Photo by Tarra Gaines
An upstanding citizen of Bird City.
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New year, fresh air

Gear up for a 'first day hike' at a Texas park on New Year’s Day 2026

Stephanie Allmon Merry
Dec 30, 2025 | 9:30 am
Couple hiking
Photo courtesy of San Marcos CVB
This beats the stair-stepper at the gym any day.

Here's a way to start your health-focused new year's resolutions that won't make you want to hit the snooze button on January 1: Plan a "first day hike."

According to Texas Parks & Wildlife, First Day Hikes is a nationwide program to encourage hiking on New Year's Day. State parks near Houston and throughout Texas are offering the chance for people of all ages and fitness levels to stretch their legs and explore the great outdoors on the first day of 2026.

"First day hikes vary from short, leisurely nature walks on forested trails; boardwalk strolls through wetlands or to the beach; or climbs into the mountains of the Chihuahuan Desert," the agency says on its website. "Some first day hikes aren't hikes at all: We also lead bike rides, paddling tours, and maybe even horseback rides. Choose the event that's right for you."

State parks offer both guided and self-guided hikes on January 1. If you choose a self-guided hike, look for tables or stop at headquarters for hike information and maps, they advise. "After your hike, stop back by to report on your hike and collect a memento of your visit," they say.

Note that most state parks charge an entry fee or day use fee. For those who plan to visit several times throughout the year, a Texas State Parks Pass could help save money.

Here are all the Texas state parks offering first-day hikes on January 1, 2026, clustered by region. All are self-guided walking hikes that do not require registration, unless otherwise indicated. Find out more details about each one here.

Gulf Coast & Coastal Bend

  • Galveston Island State Park (Sunrise beach walk with a ranger.)
  • Mustang Island State Park (Ranger-guided walk at sunrise.)
  • Goose Island State Park (Bird hikes)
  • Sea Rim State Park (First Day Paddle)
  • Brazos Bend State Park (Guided hike)
  • Sheldon Lake State Park & Environmental Learning Center (Guided hike and dog walk)
  • Huntsville State Park (Chinquapin Challenge)
  • Lake Livingston State Park (Guided hike)
  • Stephen F. Austin State Park

East Texas & Piney Woods

  • Tyler State Park (Guided tour)
  • Daingerfield State Park
  • Lake Tawakoni State Park
  • Martin Creek Lake State Park (Birding hike)
  • Atlanta State Park (Guided hike)
  • Mission Tejas State Park
  • Caddo Lake State Park
  • Cooper State Park (South Sulphur & Doctors Creek. Hike or bike.)
  • Martin Dies, Jr. State Park (Guided and unguided hikes)
  • Village Creek State Park

Hill Country & Central Texas

  • Honey Creek State Natural Area (Registration required.)
  • Blanco State Park
  • Guadalupe River State Park
  • Palmetto State Park (Self-guided hike and sunrise bird hike)
  • Lockhart State Park
  • Pedernales Falls State Park (Guided hike)
  • Government Canyon State Natural Area
  • Lake Somerville State Park
  • Lost Maples State Natural Area
  • Inks Lake State Park (Guided hike)
  • Old Tunnel State Park (Guided hike)Hill Country State Natural Area (Gu
  • Hill Country State Natural Area (Guided hike)
  • Lyndon B. Johnson State Park & Historic Site (First Day Bird Walk)
  • Dinosaur Valley State Park (Guided hike)
  • Meridian State Park (Story Book Stroll)
  • Colorado Bend State Park (Guided hike)
  • Lake Brownwood State Park
  • Bastrop State Park (Ranger-guided birding)
  • Buescher State Park

North Texas

  • Ray Roberts Lake State Park (Johnson Branch & Isle du Bois. Guided and unguided hikes.)
  • Eisenhower State Park
  • Lake Mineral Wells State Park & Trailway (Guided hike)
  • Fort Richardson State Park & Historic Site
  • Palo Pinto Mountains State Park (Registration required)
  • Lake Whitney State Park (Guided mindful walk)
  • Bonham State Park (Guided hike)
  • Lake Arrowhead State Park
  • Purtis Creek State Park
  • Possum Kingdom State Park

South Texas & Rio Grande Valley

  • Falcon State Park (Guided hike)
  • Choke Canyon State Park
  • Lake Corpus Christi State Park
  • Goliad State Park & Historic Site (Guided hikes)
  • Bentsen-Rio Grande Valley State Park
  • Resaca de la Palma State Park
  • Lake Casa Blanca International State Park

West Texas & Panhandle

  • Palo Duro Canyon State Park (Guided and unguided hikes.)
  • Caprock Canyons State Park & Trailway
  • Copper Breaks State Park
  • Abilene State Park
  • San Angelo State Park
  • Big Spring State Park (Guided hike)
  • Davis Mountains State Park
  • Franklin Mountains State Park
  • Hueco Tanks State Park & Historic Site
  • Big Bend Ranch State Park (including Chinati Mountains)
  • Seminole Canyon State Park & Historic Site (Guided and unguided)
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