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Home/Southwest Louisiana/Frogs Everywhere
mural showing frogs everywhere in Rayne, Louisiana

Frogs Everywhere

It seems that everywhere you look in the Cajun city of Rayne, you see frogs.  They’re on the sidewalks, in front of stores, the police station and fire house, and the courthouse.  And about two dozen frog murals are painted on the sides of buildings.

Watch video to see how Rayne became the Frog Capital of the World

This is a southwest Louisiana city that proudly proclaims itself, “The Frog Capital of the World.” It all started in the late 1800s when Jacques Weil and his brothers started a frog export business.  They were shipping the locally harvested frogs to restaurants in France where they were considered a delicacy.

A mural on the Rayne Chamber of Commerce building

Rayne has been celebrating its amphibian history with an annual frog festival, where queens pose with frogs, not princes. And frogs compete in races and jumping contests, while their less fortunate amphibian cousins end up being served as fried frog legs.

Photo from the 1947 Frog Festival saved in the Chamber’s scrapbook

Today, the frog export companies are gone, but not the frogs.  The flat countryside near Rayne is marked with low levees that confine foot-deep water in crawfish ponds.  These ponds are the perfect breeding ground for large bullfrogs.  And nighttime is the right time for catching frogs.

Crawfish pond near Rayne after a night of frogging

Small aluminum boats that crawl through the ponds on wheels during the day when they are used by crawfishermen to run their nets, double as a frogging transportation at night.  For Laken Bischoff and her fiancé Jacob Zaunbrecher, this is a perfect date night.

Watch this video to see how to catch bullfrogs

 “Since I was a little girl my dad would always bring me, “ Laken says. And the key to catching one of these giant bullfrogs is, “Firm grip. I can’t let it get away”.

Jacob Zaunbrecher shines a spotlight on the grassy shore looking for frogs

Jacob Zaunbrecher admits he has found the perfect partner, “It’s quite nice whenever you can sit back and relax and just point the spotlight knowing that, I mean you saw her miss one time tonight, and that’s a rare occurrence”.

Laken Bischoff grabs a big bullfrog with a belly full of crawfish

The frogs hang out along the edges of commercial crawfish ponds. Their white throads give them away in the spotlight. And within seconds, Laken has jumped out of the boat, waded to the shoreline and snatched the frog from the dark snake-infested water.

For Jacob and Laken, a good night of frogging can fill their small flatboat. “Hundreds,” says Jacob, “when you get in the triple digits you can say it’s definitely a successful night, hands down.”

Watch this video about the two Cajun ‘Astro Frogs’

These Rayne bullfrogs have another claim to frog fame.  Twenty years before NASA had frogs floating in a space shuttle experiment, two bullfrogs from Rayne made a giant leap into orbit in 1970.

Frogs were launched into space in this capsule called OFO 1

NASA strapped the frogs inside a tiny capsule and launched them into space on a one-way mission to test the effect of weightlessness on their inner ears, which are similar to those of humans.  The test was a success and NASA said goodbye to the Cajun frogs. 

More than one-hundred frog statues can be found in Rayne

The Rayne Chamber of Commerce has created a map showing the locations of the frog murals.

107 Oak St, Rayne, LA 70578

Written by:
Dave McNamara
Published on:
September 8, 2020
Thoughts:
7 Comments

Categories: Southwest Louisiana

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. RICHARD

    February 10, 2021 at 3:17 am

    J adore la LOUISIANE

    Reply
  2. Dawn

    February 18, 2023 at 11:32 am

    I’m looking to take my niece frogging for her birthday

    Reply
  3. Barbara Wilkins

    February 13, 2024 at 9:47 am

    I am from north Louisiana and I just love learning the state history. Are any other parts of the frog used for consumption?

    Reply
    • Dave McNamara

      February 22, 2024 at 9:30 am

      I’ve only eaten frog legs, and never seen any other frog body parts on a menu.

      Reply
  4. Roxanne Raine 🦊🌺🌸🌼

    February 21, 2024 at 8:41 pm

    Loved the article

    Reply
  5. Roxanne Raine

    February 21, 2024 at 8:41 pm

    Loved the article!

    Reply
  6. Valerie Miller

    March 31, 2024 at 6:55 pm

    I loved seeing this article and the photos. My Grandaddy Wiltz Chatelain owned Jacques Weil after the Weil brothers did. I have a preserved frog here in my home that is well over 65 years old. My mom helped my Grandaddy process frogs, insects and work in the store.
    Continue sharing history, it’s important that we keep telling these stories!

    Reply

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