There’s a version of life in Acadiana that most of us only see from a car window. We live in something of a paradise, it’s just sort of removed from your day-to-day reality. That’s in part because Louisiana’s natural beauty isn’t always so easy to see. Louisiana is flat. Famously so. We don’t have mountain vistas to behold.

So, if you want to really drink in Acadiana’s splendor, you probably need to get on the water. Don’t have a boat? Don’t worry about it. Reed Rudasil has you covered.

Reed is the owner of Wanderlust Rentals, a startup that rents kayaks, right on the water. He grew up in Lafayette and studied civil engineering at UL. But he figured out pretty quick he didn’t want to sit in an office. He tried landscaping, he managed a crawfish restaurant, he started buying rental properties.

Reed Rudasil founded his human-being-free kayak rental business, Wanderlust Rentals, inspired by bike rentals in other cities where you just swipe your card and ride - or in this case, paddle - away.

Reed Rudasil founded his human-being-free kayak rental business, Wanderlust Rentals, inspired by bike rentals in other cities where you just swipe your card and ride – or in this case, paddle – away.

Eventually Reed founded a property management company called Experience Louisiana, focused on short-term rentals that often put guests close to waterways. Renting kayaks came naturally from there. Many of the properties he manages sit on the water — and guests kept asking what to do once they arrived. Reed’s answer was Wanderlust Rentals, Louisiana’s first multi-point service kayak rental system.

The concept is straightforward: kiosks placed by the water, stocked with single and tandem kayaks. Customers sign a waiver, pay, get a code, and they’re on the water. No staff required. No waiting. The whole transaction happens just feet from the bayou.

Don’t have a car to get the bayou? Maybe try an e-bike. They’re everywhere, in case you hadn’t noticed. The electric bike market in the United States was worth $2 billion in 2025 and is projected to more than double in the next decade.

Gerri Simon, Owner of eBikes Plus in Lafayette. The eBike community includes everybody from mawmaws to hunters ("it's quiet and doesn't smell") and everybody in between

Gerri Simon, Owner of eBikes Plus in Lafayette. The eBike community includes everybody from mawmaws to hunters (the e-bike is “quiet and doesn’t smell”) and everybody in between

Gerri Simon is a serial entrepreneur who’s cashing in on that market. She owns eBikes Plus, a one-stop shop for electric bike sales and repair here in Lafayette. She grew up in Vermilion Parish — not far from the water, and not far from the kind of hands-on problem solving that runs in Cajun households.

Gerri’s dad, she’ll tell you, was an engineer who never finished high school. He taught her to build things and to work on things. She took that instinct to UL, where she discovered she was good at math, and came out the other side with a degree in mechanical engineering. She later got an MBA.

She went on to found and operate several businesses before landing on eBikes plus. A big part of her customer base is retirees with RVs who pack up the bikes to take with them on their roving vacations. But more and more people are turning to e-Bikes as their primary means of conveyance.

Christiaan Mader hosts Out to Lunch Acadiana at Tsunami Sushi in downtown Lafayette

Christiaan Mader hosts Out to Lunch Acadiana at Tsunami Sushi in downtown Lafayette

Out to Lunch Acadiana was recorded live over lunch at Tsunami Sushi in downtown Lafayette. Photos by Astor Morgan.

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