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From the west, LA 2 begins at the Texas state line, continuing the route of Texas State Highway 49 (SH 49) into northern Caddo Parish, Louisiana.LA 2 proceeds east as an undivided two-lane highway through the community of Trees then curves to the northeast and back to the east around the tip of Caddo Lake to intersect LA 1 at a point 3.1 miles (5.0 km) north of Oil City.
The U.S. state of Oregon instituted a requirement for commercial fishing licenses in 1899, the same year that the state's sturgeon fishery had collapsed due to over-harvesting. Oregon began requiring recreational fishing licenses in 1901. [5] Indiana began issuing hunting licenses in 1901 and added fishing privileges to its hunting license in ...
Louisiana State Route 3 ran 153.4 miles (246.9 km) in a north–south direction from Baton Rouge to the Arkansas state line north of Lake Providence.The designation existed in two segments as the roadway passed through the state of Mississippi between a point north of St. Francisville and Vidalia (opposite the Mississippi River from Natchez, Mississippi).
The following is a list of state highways in the U.S. state of Louisiana designated in prior to the 1955 Louisiana Highway renumbering. All were part of the original 98 state highways authorized by the state legislature in 1921. [1]
1960 [2] current Southern Louisiana's primary east–west route serving Lake Charles, Lafayette, Baton Rouge, New Orleans, and Slidell I-12: 85.59: 137.74 I-10 in Baton Rouge: I-10/I-59 in Slidell: 1967 [6] current Northern bypass of New Orleans metropolitan area via Hammond: I-14 — — Texas state line near Leesville, LA (undecided)
Entire route co-signed with US 167; only U.S. highway in Louisiana with same number as a current state route US 65: 100.77: 162.17 US 425/LA 15 in Clayton: Arkansas state line north of Lake Providence: 1926 [1] current US 71: 231.099: 371.918 US 190 west of Krotz Springs: Arkansas state line at Ida: 1926 [1] current US 79: 88.246
Louisiana State Route 63 ran 26.2 miles (42.2 km) in a general north–south direction from State Route 1 in Geismar, Ascension Parish to a second junction with State Route 1 in Baton Rouge, East Baton Rouge Parish. [13] [14] [15] SR 63 was renumbered to LA 30 in the 1955 renumbering.
False River has often held the state record for the largest bass caught, and has the largest number of striped bass per acre in the state. Between 1974 and 1981, more than 265,000 striped bass fingerlings were released into the lake which covers approximately 3,212 acres (13.00 km 2). [2]