LSU alumna Sherry (nee Smith) Sanchez (BA 1971, MS 1972, Delta Zeta) decided to share a story of one of her bucket list trips with us. Currently a trial lawyer and recovering librarian, Sanchez is a True Tiger, and will travel to the ends of the earth to share her Tiger Pride. We hope you enjoy her story as much as we did.
I had heard that there were so many oil and gas workers from Louisiana working in Baku, Azerbaijan, that they had a restaurant called the “Ragin’ Cajun” in the old part of the city. So, on my bucket list, was to go to Baku and stand in front of the Ragin’ Cajun and have my picture taken with my LSU jersey.
My husband, a seventh-generation native Californian, and a USC grad, thought I was crazy to do this, but by now he is used to my goofy adventures and went along as a good sport. I am also a seventh-generation native Californian and worry that if I ever order the DNA test for him that I will get an email telling me that I have a distant cousin living at my address. So we will just leave that alone.
We flew nonstop from LAX to Istanbul and spent a few days there before heading out to Baku. I speak bad Turkish, but it is good enough to get around. Azeri is sort of like hearing Turkish in one ear and Persian/Farsi in the other. I speak even worse Farsi, but it was enough to get around in Azeri.
You can’t just fly to Azerbaijan and expect them to let you in. You have to be invited. That means that your travel agent books you into a high-end hotel and the hotel sends you the invite. Then you go down to the Azerbaijan consulate on
The city is drop dead beautiful with a 13th century walled city, a palace, a Zoroastrian fire tower lit from a natural gas seep that has served as a lighthouse on the Caspian Sea for centuries, a “new” city built at the turn of the century with art nouveau buildings and really great architecture. It is as clean as a city can be since it seems that every street has a person assigned to keep it tidy. So if a tiny leaf blows off of a tree and lands on the sidewalk, there is a uniformed person there to sweep it up and dispose of it. Sort of reminds me of the time my husband and I went for a walk in Singapore determined to walk until we found some litter. We almost died of heat exhaustion looking for trash. Stumbled into the Long Bar at Raffles and had long cool drinks until we recovered . . . but that is a story for another time.
Since my husband is 6’3” and looks like his German ancestors more than his Mexican ones, and I have red hair and green eyes due to the O’Connell genes being more in evidence than the Nunez ancestry, people were confused about where we were from in the world. Most people greeted us in German. No one speaks English outside of the front desk clerks. I explained in my bamboo Azeri/Turkish that we were Americans. “Mashallah!” was the response (sort of like ‘Saints be praised’ in Azeri). They would explain, “We knew you weren’t Russian because you smile.” Well, there you have it.