A travel show featuring the Louisiana you won’t read about in tour guides and mainstream travel websites.

Cajun Prairie Farm In Arnaudville, Louisiana: Where Cajun Culture Grows

Aerial view of Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana showing orderly vegetable beds, barn structures, and surrounding farmland.

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The road into Arnaudville winds through open fields and quiet stretches of Acadiana, the kind of landscape that invites you to slow down and pay attention. When I arrived at Cajun Prairie Farm, the land itself felt intentional. Rows were orderly but alive, prairie grasses moved in the breeze, and the air carried that familiar mix of soil, sun, and growing things. This is not a farm designed to impress at first glance. It is a farm designed to endure.

Cajun Prairie Farm is a 12-acre family farm run by father and son Larry and Andre Allain. What they are cultivating here goes far beyond vegetables. This land holds stories about how Cajun families once lived, ate, prayed, and worked with what the prairie gave them. Walking the farm, it became clear that this place is not about nostalgia. It is about continuity.

Larry Allain and his son Andre Allain standing together in the vegetable fields at Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana.
Larry and Andre Allain on the land they farm together.

A Cajun Farm Rooted in Family and Place

Larry Allain grew up in Jeannerette, Louisiana, raised alongside grandparents who spoke French and farmed sugar cane on a small plot of land. Gardening and agriculture were part of everyday life, not a lifestyle choice.

Wooden sign reading “Cajun Prairie Farm” mounted on a green metal barn wall
Cajun Prairie Farm, Arnaudville, Louisiana

“I learned to fall in love with gardening and agriculture as a child growing up next door to my grandparents.”
— Larry Allain

Larry studied agriculture before following his love of nature into biology and eventually becoming a biologist. After retiring, he returned to the land with a deeper scientific understanding and a desire to reconnect with the cultural knowledge he grew up around. Cajun Prairie Farm became the place where those worlds met.

Larry Allain walking through the garden beds with Karen LeBlanc and Andre Allain at Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana.
Karen walking the garden rows with Larry and Andre Allain.

Today, Larry farms alongside his son Andre. Together, they grow vegetables for local farmers’ markets and restore native Cajun prairie across much of the property. Their long-term vision includes grazing sheep on restored grasslands and reconnecting agriculture to the rhythms of this landscape.

Larry and Andre Allain working the fields at Cajun Prairie Farm.

Farming Beyond Organic: Regenerative and Ecological Practices

Cajun Prairie Farm is not registered organic, but that distinction misses the point. The Allains do not use chemicals. Instead, they practice regenerative and ecological farming that starts with soil health.

“We’re not registered organic. That’s a registration controlled by the government. But we use organic practices. We’re beyond organic.”
— Larry Allain

Using a hand tool to cultivate soil between vegetable rows at Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana.
Hand-tool cultivation in the garden beds at Cajun Prairie Farm.

Walking the rows, I noticed how uniform and intentional everything felt. Each bed is standardized at 30 inches wide, with rows stretching 30 feet long. Permanent beds are protected with mulch wherever plants are not growing. The soil is always covered to shield it from heat and sun, which is a core principle of regenerative farming.

Andre Allain and Larry Allain working side by side with hand tools in the vegetable rows at Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana.
Andre and Larry Allain cultivating the garden together.

Larry explained that the standardized beds are intentional. The uniformity makes it easier to show visitors how the permanent beds work, why the soil stays covered with mulch, and how a bed is flipped after harvest and planted again.

When crops are harvested, beds are immediately replanted. Carrots grow alongside kale, collards, Swiss chard, and other greens, with careful rotation that supports soil vitality.

Harvesting a fresh root vegetable by hand in the garden beds at Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana.
Hand-harvesting vegetables at Cajun Prairie Farm.

The farm uses hand tools, homemade compost, fish fertilizer, and seaweed during the growing season. Andre, representing the next generation, is deeply invested in keeping these practices accessible and teachable.

“Inspiring people to farm with hand tools is one of my goals. Keeping traditions basic and growing nutrient-dense food with implements we make ourselves.”
— Andre Allain

Measuring Plant Health Through Science

The vegetables at Cajun Prairie Farm look vibrant and robust, and that is not accidental. Larry combines traditional practices with scientific monitoring to understand plant health at a deeper level.

Rows of leafy greens growing in mulched beds at Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana, with trees lining the edge of the field.
Healthy greens growing in mulched garden beds at Cajun Prairie Farm.

One of the tools he uses is a refractometer to measure Brix levels in plant sap. Brix measures dissolved solids like sugars and minerals and offers insight into nutrient density.

“If the sap Brix is not high, it’s an indicator to us that we need to increase fertility.”
— Larry Allain

Rows of leafy greens growing in rich soil at Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana, with farm structures in the background.
Leafy greens growing in nutrient-rich soil at Cajun Prairie Farm.

Soil tests ensure that every mineral and nutrient plants need is present. The goal is soil that is primarily fungal-dominated, so plants can access nutrients naturally and efficiently. The result is a product that reflects both healthy soil and careful stewardship.

Larry described these methods as very similar to how Cajun ancestors farmed. They did not have fertilizer or sprays, relied on mechanical tools, and grew and stored food according to the seasons.

Exploring Cajun Foodways From Sea to Plate

Food at Cajun Prairie Farm is not just about what grows. It is about how Cajuns historically lived with the land.

Larry and Andre study Cajun folkways, from what foods were seasonal to how families preserved and stored them. Cajun ancestors ate what was available and learned to stretch those resources creatively.

Certified wildlife habitat signs posted among native plants at Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana.
Certified wildlife habitat on the grounds of Cajun Prairie Farm.

“They knew how to turn these raw ingredients with so few ingredients into really delicious food.”
— Larry Allain

Carrots were grown in winter and spring and then buried in dirt for storage. Onions were kept under raised houses for months. Vegetables were eaten in season, canned when possible, and supplemented by hunting and by gathering wild plants, especially medicinal ones.

Andre Allain driving a tractor across the property at Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana.
Andre Allain at work on the farm.

Larry explained that the Cajun diet was fairly simple. When Cajuns were recruited to Louisiana, the state provided corn and vegetable seeds to help them establish themselves. Those seeds largely shaped what they learned to grow, especially since crops from Canada did not survive Louisiana’s climate.

Brown Cotton and Cajun Textiles

Handwoven brown cotton textiles, raw cotton, yarn, and an Acadiana brown cotton cap displayed at Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana.
Brown cotton textiles and fiber grown at Cajun Prairie Farm.

Among the vegetables, Cajun Prairie Farm grows something unexpected: brown cotton, known historically as coton jaune.

Folded handwoven brown cotton textiles displayed on a table at Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana.
Handwoven brown cotton textiles rooted in Cajun tradition.

This cotton mattered because it could be processed by hand without a gin. That practicality made it accessible to Cajun families and enslaved people alike. The natural brown fiber explains why so many historical Cajun garments were khaki-colored.

Acadiana brown cotton fibers and yarn displayed with a cap at Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana.
Acadiana brown cotton grown and shared at Cajun Prairie Farm.

“That’s why all the slaves’ and Cajun clothes were khaki color.”
— Larry Allain

The cotton tells a story about resourcefulness and necessity and about how Cajun culture developed through practical choices shaped by environment and available tools.

Acadian Brown Cotton history.

Job’s Tears and Cajun Faith

One of the most quietly moving parts of the farm is the planting of Job’s Tears, known in south Louisiana as larmes de Job.

Each seed forms with a smooth gray shell and a tiny hole already in place. Nature does half the work, and all that is required is patience and prayer.

Larry Allain standing in the restored Cajun prairie, pointing out native grasses and plants at Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana.
Larry Allain in the restored Cajun prairie.

Cajun families once grew Job’s Tears in backyard gardens and along fence lines to make rosaries and necklaces.

“The women took it on themselves to maintain the spiritual life of the Cajuns.”
— Larry Allain

Larry Allain explains native prairie plants to Karen LeBlanc during a walk through the restored Cajun prairie at Cajun Prairie Farm.
Larry Allain shares the story of the prairie with Karen LeBlanc.

These rosaries were not decorative. They were used for healing prayers, especially for children. The beads carried faith, resilience, and care shaped directly by the land. Seeing them growing here felt like witnessing a living connection between belief and soil.

Preserving Heirloom Seeds and Endangered Plants

Seed saving is central to Cajun Prairie Farm’s mission. The Allains grow heirloom and endangered plant varieties that were once traditional in Cajun gardens.

Larry Allain tending young plants inside a hoop house at Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana.
Larry Allain caring for seedlings inside the farm’s hoop house.

“Maintaining endangered plant genetics and saving seeds from heirloom varieties that were traditional for Cajuns is part of our goal.”
— Andre Allain

Aerial view of the barn and garden beds at Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana, with cultivated rows in the foreground.
The barn and garden beds at Cajun Prairie Farm.

One example is the field pea, a crop that sustained the South through the Civil War and the Great Depression. Larry lost his grandmother’s original variety when he was young and later rediscovered it through a grower in Breaux Bridge. Today, that pea is carefully maintained on the farm.

These plants function as living archives. Each seed carries memory, survival, and adaptation.

The Cajun Garden and Traditional Crops

Aerial view of Cajun Prairie Farm showing vegetable plots, hoop houses, and farm buildings
Cajun Prairie Farm’s vegetable plots, hoop houses, and farm buildings

The farm includes what Larry calls a Cajun garden, dedicated to traditional crops like kasha squash, butter beans, sweet potatoes, okra, mustard greens, and field peas.

Some years, the garden rests. Other years, it produces greens like spinach, arugula, lettuce, baby kale, and baby beets. Rest, like planting, is intentional.

Kasha squash stands out as a cultural bridge between Cajuns and the Choctaw people, who likely cultivated it first.

Overhead view of mulched vegetable beds and walking paths at Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana.
Mulched garden beds laid out in tidy rows at Cajun Prairie Farm.

“The Cajuns learned to grow it from the Indians very early.”
— Larry Allain

Cooked with butter and sugar and sometimes candied, kasha squash remains familiar in Acadiana but is largely unknown beyond the region.

Visiting Cajun Prairie Farm

Cajun Prairie Farm welcomes visitors by appointment. Tours are tailored to the group and focus on regenerative farming, prairie restoration, and cultural practices. Details depend on the group and are arranged when you contact the farm to set an appointment. Guests staying at the farm’s Airbnb are also welcomed into the experience.

Aerial view of organized crop rows and a hoop house at Cajun Prairie Farm
Cajun Prairie Farm’s growing beds

Larry shared that they recently hosted a group of about 50 visitors interested in grazing and livestock management. The discussion focused on cattle and sheep, establishing grasslands, managing perennial plant communities, and understanding how rotational grazing supports long-term land health.

Staying on the Farm

Guests who stay on the property experience Cajun Prairie Farm at a slower and more immersive pace. The on-site Airbnb is a cozy barndominium apartment set directly on the working farm and surrounded by gardens and restored Cajun prairie.

Exterior view of the barndominium Airbnb at Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana, set on the working farm.
The on-site barndominium Airbnb at Cajun Prairie Farm.

What to expect:

  • A quiet and scenic farm stay between Arnaudville and Grand Coteau
  • Space for up to four guests with two bedrooms and a private entrance
  • A full kitchen so guests can cook their own meals
  • Outdoor space that includes a private patio and a fire pit
  • Peaceful surroundings that reflect the farm’s ecological design and natural rhythm
Aerial view of Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana showing orderly vegetable beds, barn structures, and surrounding farmland.
Aerial view of Cajun Prairie Farm’s regenerative garden beds.

The stay feels less like traditional lodging and more like an extension of the farm itself, simple and thoughtful and deeply rooted in place.

Cajun Prairie Farm: Where Cajun Culture Continues to Grow

Cajun Prairie Farm is not trying to recreate the past. It is showing how Cajun culture continues to live through thoughtful stewardship of land, food, and tradition. Here, science and folk knowledge work together. Faith grows alongside vegetables. Seeds are saved for continuity rather than nostalgia.

Karen LeBlanc standing with Larry Allain and Andre Allain outside the barn at Cajun Prairie Farm in Arnaudville, Louisiana.
Karen LeBlanc with Larry and Andre Allain at Cajun Prairie Farm.

Walking the rows with Larry and Andre, I was reminded that culture does not survive by accident. It survives because people choose to tend it, season after season and generation after generation.

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