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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
Jaya Saxena

A day in the life of US alligator museum owners: ‘If it’s green, it sells’

Composite illustration of man and woman outside storefront, smiling and holding stuffed alligators, and overlays of green and blue paper cutouts and pictures of alligators.
Robert and Liz McDade at their Great American Alligator Museum in New Orleans. Composite: Rita Liu/The Guardian/Getty Images/Alligator Museum

Liz and Robert McDade own New OrleansGreat American Alligator Museum, a free museum where visitors can see alligator fossils, paintings – and a couple of live residents. Here’s how they run a unique tourist attraction, and keep their energy up in a party town.

What is your morning routine?

Robert McDade: I’m an early morning person, if you call 7:30 early. I make the coffee and catch up on the news. I have my round of papers. The Guardian actually, and I’m from New York, so I was brought up with the New York Times. The Washington Post, and the local New Orleans papers and NPR. Business Insider has a lot of travel oriented articles – we like to travel, and we’re a tourist attraction. I like to start and end the day with a book – usually fiction. Right now I’m reading John Steinbeck’s East of Eden.

Liz McDade: I’m up around 8:30, 9, and I drink the coffee he makes. I check emails, then the news – we’re both news hounds. And Facebook to keep up with friends. I do Wordle every day with my college roommate and her sister. Then the museum starts at 10 o’clock in the morning.

What are you doing today?

Liz McDade: We are preparing for an event called the Champagne Stroll. Businesses on Magazine Street stay open late and offer sparkling wine to guests. I have to go buy some bubbly for that.

Robert McDade: The museum grew out of a boyhood hobby: natural history and mineral collecting. I love fossils. My wife is a geologist, so it was a natural fit when we met. Most of our travels center around geology, and we come back with a lot of specimens. We had opened a small rock shop selling minerals and fossils, and noticed the alligator is one of a kind – it has a strong geological backing, and a lot of fossils.

Tourists come to town wanting to see an alligator. So one day we thought maybe having an alligator museum would be worthwhile. We acquired a very interesting alligator fossil about 25 years ago from a quarry out in Wyoming. A few years after that we acquired a very large taxidermy alligator, and with those two items we had the beginnings of a museum. People love buying alligator things. We had a joke: “If it’s green, it sells.”

Did you have any challenges today?

Liz McDade: The weather. We rely on tourism, and last year New Orleans had close to 20 million tourists. Right now we’re getting around 200 visitors a day. Summer time is very hot and humid – then the challenge is bringing people into the museum.

What do you do to unwind?

Robert McDade: We are big into our daily exercise. For strength training, we belong to a local health club. We will go up to Audubon Park and walk around – it’s just so beautiful, especially in the spring. And we have been participating in a style of karate called Shotokan. There was a very well-known Japanese martial artist who lived in Metairie, LA, and we’ve been doing it probably three times a week for the last 35 years.

Do you have a sleep routine?

Robert McDade: We usually watch a movie. We go through cycles – sometimes it’s westerns or a film noir. Lately it’s been international black and white movies. Last night we watched a wonderful French film, Jacques Demy’s The Umbrellas of Cherbourg. We smiled throughout the entire movie!

This interview has been edited and condensed

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