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  • 03 November 2021. Le Havre, Normandy, France.<br />
Jondy Ward, Captain of The Cornelis-Gert boards his boat on the quayside where the boat remains at the centre of an international fishing row. The boat was detained for a week and freed after an administrative hearing earlier in the day. The boat sailed out of the harbour later that evening. <br />
Photo ©copyright/credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    03nov21-Jondy Ward Capatin Cornelis ...jpg
  • 03 November 2021. Le Havre, Normandy, France.<br />
Jondy Ward, Captain of The Cornelis-Gert boards his boat on the quayside where the boat remains at the centre of an international fishing row. The boat was detained for a week and freed after an administrative hearing earlier in the day. The boat sailed out of the harbour later that evening. <br />
Photo ©copyright/credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    03nov21-Jondy Ward Capatin Cornelis ...jpg
  • 03 November 2021. Le Havre, Normandy, France.<br />
Jondy Ward, Captain of The Cornelis-Gert boards his boat on the quayside where the boat remains at the centre of an international fishing row. The boat was detained for a week and freed after an administrative hearing earlier in the day. The boat sailed out of the harbour later that evening. <br />
Photo ©copyright/credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    03nov21-Jondy Ward Capatin Cornelis ...jpg
  • 03 November 2021. Le Havre, Normandy, France.<br />
Scallop fishing trawler the Cornelis-Gert captained by Jondy Ward tied up on the quay in Le Havre before her departure. The boat remains at the centre of an international fishing row. The boat was detained for a week and freed after an administrative hearing earlier in the day. The boat sailed out of the harbour later that evening. <br />
Photo ©copyright/credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    03nov21-Trawler Cornelis Gert Jan026.jpg
  • 03 November 2021. Le Havre, Normandy, France.<br />
Jondy Ward, Captain of The Cornelis-Gert aboard his boat on the quayside where the boat remains at the centre of an international fishing row. The boat was detained for a week and freed after an administrative hearing earlier in the day. Mr Ward gave the assembled media a thumbs up as he departed the quay. <br />
Photo ©copyright/credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    03nov21-Jondy Ward Capatin Cornelis ...jpg
  • 03 November 2021. Le Havre, Normandy, France.<br />
Jondy Ward, Captain of The Cornelis-Gert aboard his boat on the quayside where the boat remains at the centre of an international fishing row. The boat was detained for a week and freed after an administrative hearing earlier in the day. Mr Ward gave the assembled media a thumbs up as he departed the quay. <br />
Photo ©copyright/credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    03nov21-Jondy Ward Capatin Cornelis ...jpg
  • 8th Sept, 2005. Hurricane Katrina aftermath. New Orleans. Venetian Isles in East New Orleans, where the tidal surge washed over the land and devastated homes and property. A shrimp boat rests between residential houses.
    084-08sept05-084.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. Rescued dogs relax on the front of a boat which saved them from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina83.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. Rescued dogs relax on the front of a boat which saved them from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina84.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. Daily Mirror's Ryan Parry rides along in Jimmy Delery's boat on a rescue mission in Uptown New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina30.JPG
  • 5th Sept, 2005. Hurricane Katrina aftermath. New Orleans. Animal rescue boat. Dogs greet each other as the sun drops in the horizon over a devastetd New Orleans.
    078-05sept05-078.JPG
  • 12 nov 2006 - New Orleans, Louisiana. <br />
Rose, Lannie, Tammy and Lisa on Emmett's boat heading up the Tchfuncta river in Louisiana. <br />
Photo credit ©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    12nov-friends-river053.jpg
  • 03 November 2021. Le Havre, Normandy, France.<br />
British trawler seized in France.<br />
British scallop fishing trawler the Cornelis-Gert Jan, captained by Jondy Ward and his crew sail out of Le Havre habour, France after being freed by French authorities. The boat remains at the centre of an international fishing row remains detained in the port of Le Havre, France. <br />
Photo ©copyright/credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    03nov21-Trawler Cornelis Gert Jan032.jpg
  • 03 November 2021. Le Havre, Normandy, France.<br />
British trawler seized in France.<br />
Crew prepare for departure. British scallop fishing trawler the Cornelis-Gert Jan, captained by Jondy Ward and his crew sail out of Le Havre habour, France after being freed by French authorities. The boat remains at the centre of an international fishing row remains detained in the port of Le Havre, France. <br />
Photo ©copyright/credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    03nov21-Trawler Cornelis Gert Jan031.jpg
  • 03 November 2021. Le Havre, Normandy, France.<br />
British trawler seized in France.<br />
British scallop fishing trawler the Cornelis-Gert Jan, captained by Jondy Ward and his crew sail out of Le Havre habour, France after being freed by French authorities. The boat remains at the centre of an international fishing row remains detained in the port of Le Havre, France. <br />
Photo ©copyright/credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    03nov21-Trawler Cornelis Gert Jan029.jpg
  • 03 November 2021. Le Havre, Normandy, France.<br />
British trawler seized in France.<br />
British scallop fishing trawler the Cornelis-Gert Jan, captained by Jondy Ward and his crew sail out of Le Havre habour, France after being freed by French authorities. The boat remains at the centre of an international fishing row remains detained in the port of Le Havre, France. <br />
Photo ©copyright/credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    03nov21-Trawler Cornelis Gert Jan028.jpg
  • 03 November 2021. Le Havre, Normandy, France.<br />
British trawler seized in France.<br />
British scallop fishing trawler the Cornelis-Gert Jan, captained by Jondy Ward and his crew sail out of Le Havre habour, France after being freed by French authorities. The boat remains at the centre of an international fishing row remains detained in the port of Le Havre, France. <br />
Photo ©copyright/credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    03nov21-Trawler Cornelis Gert Jan027.jpg
  • 03 November 2021. Le Havre, Normandy, France.<br />
British trawler seized in France.<br />
British scallop fishing trawler the Cornelis-Gert Jan, captained by Jondy Ward (grey sweatshirt) and his crew sail out of Le Havre habour, France after being freed by French authorities. The boat remains at the centre of an international fishing row remains detained in the port of Le Havre, France. <br />
Photo ©copyright/credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    03nov21-Jondy Ward Capatin Cornelis ...jpg
  • 03 November 2021. Le Havre, Normandy, France.<br />
British trawler seized in France.<br />
British scallop fishing trawler the Cornelis-Gert Jan, captained by Jondy Ward (grey sweatshirt) and his crew sail out of Le Havre habour, France after being freed by French authorities. The boat remains at the centre of an international fishing row remains detained in the port of Le Havre, France. <br />
Photo ©copyright/credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    03nov21-Jondy Ward Capatin Cornelis ...jpg
  • 03 November 2021. Le Havre, Normandy, France.<br />
British trawler seized in France.<br />
British scallop fishing trawler the Cornelis-Gert Jan, captained by Jondy Ward and his crew sail out of Le Havre habour, France after being freed by French authorities. The boat remains at the centre of an international fishing row remains detained in the port of Le Havre, France. <br />
Photo ©copyright/credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    03nov21-Jondy Ward Capatin Cornelis ...jpg
  • 5th Sept, 2005. Hurricane Katrina aftermath. Animal rescue boat. William Jones hauls a dog from the water in Uptown New Orleans as he sweeps the area with friends looking for people or animals to rescue.
    074-05sept05-074.JPG
  • 5th Sept, 2005. Hurricane Katrina aftermath. New Orleans. Animal rescue boat. A horse is rescued from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans by the Kentucky Dept of Fish and Wildlife Dept.
    073-05sept05-073.JPG
  • 5th Sept, 2005. Hurricane Katrina aftermath. New Orleans. Animal rescue boat. Local man Jimmy Delery (rt) and his merry band of locals assist in the search and rescue animals from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans.
    071-05sept05-071.JPG
  • 26 May 2010. Barataria Bay to Grand Isle, Jefferson/Lafourche Parish, Louisiana. <br />
A shrimp boat decked out with oil skimming booms east of Grand Isle. The economic impact is devastating with shrimp boats tied up, vacation rentals and charter boat fishing trips are cancelled. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. <br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley<br />
www.varleypix.com
    26may10-barataria bay059.JPG
  • 26 May 2010. Barataria Bay to Grand Isle, Jefferson/Lafourche Parish, Louisiana. <br />
A shrimp boat decked out with oil skimming booms east of Grand Isle. The economic impact is devastating with shrimp boats tied up, vacation rentals and charter boat fishing trips are cancelled. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. <br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley<br />
www.varleypix.com
    26may10-barataria bay058.JPG
  • 5th Sept, 2005. Hurricane Katrina aftermath. New Orleans. Animal rescue boat. Daily Mirror's Ryan Parry rescues a puppy from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans.
    072-05sept05-072.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. Jimmy Delery, captain of a private rescue boat works all hours to save people and animals  from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina82.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. Local man Jimmy Delery (rt) and his merry band of locals assist in the search and rescue animals from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina27.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
A private search and rescue boat patrols Uptown New Orleans off Napolean Ave following the devastating floods.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina21.JPG
  • 03 November 2021. Le Havre, Normandy, France.<br />
British trawler seized in France.<br />
British scallop fishing trawler the Cornelis-Gert Jan, captained by Jondy Ward and his crew sail out of Le Havre habour, France after being freed by French authorities. The boat remains at the centre of an international fishing row remains detained in the port of Le Havre, France. <br />
Photo ©copyright/credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    03nov21-Jondy Ward Capatin Cornelis ...jpg
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. Dogs greet each other as the sun drops in the horizon over a devastaed New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina88.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. Local man Jimmy Delery gives directions to soldiers bobbing in the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina36.JPG
  • 20 August 2015. New Orleans, Louisiana. <br />
Hurricane Katrina revisited. <br />
A decade later and recovery remains largely elusive for the area hardest hit by Katrina. A boat filled with debris remains on an abandoned lot flooded in the storm.<br />
Photo credit©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com.
    20aug15-Katrina revisited027.JPG
  • 21 August 2010. Barataria Bay, south Louisiana. <br />
Fishing grounds reopen. A shrimp boat sits in the current deploying nets instead of oil boom in the water as recreational fishermen return to fish for speckled trout enjoying a day out in the bay.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    21aug10-BP oil027.JPG
  • 21 August 2010. Barataria Bay, south Louisiana. <br />
A shrimp boat sits in the current deploying nets instead of oil boom in the water, <br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    21aug10-BP oil026.JPG
  • 21 August 2010. Jean Lafitte, Louisiana. <br />
One of just a handful of shrimp boats, laden with nets instead of oil boom returns to fishing as the worst environmental disaster in US history continues to unfold in south Louisiana. Many shrimpers have not returned to work thanks in part to regular pay from contractors working the BP clean up operation. The disaster has taken a heavy toll on fishing. Processing plants remain closed and BP has leased many boat slips and fish landing sites that have been converted into BP oil response staging areas.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    21aug10-BP oil011.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Venice, Louisiana. Deepwater Horizon, British Petroleum environmental oil spill disaster.<br />
Captain Peace marvel, a sport fishermen guide lands yellow fin tuna and other predator species caught to the west of the giant BP oil spill. Nobody is sure how much longer they will be able to catch fish in the region. Charter boat captains, rental camps and hotels are reporting mass cancellations of fishing trips and other vacations to the Gulf  Coast region.<br />
Photo credit;Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    07may10-fish venice012.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Venice, Louisiana. Deepwater Horizon, British Petroleum environmental oil spill disaster.<br />
Captain Peace marvel, a sport fishermen guide lands yellow fin tuna and other predator species caught to the west of the giant BP oil spill. Nobody is sure how much longer they will be able to catch fish in the region. Charter boat captains, rental camps and hotels are reporting mass cancellations of fishing trips and other vacations to the Gulf  Coast region.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    07may10-fish venice010.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Venice, Louisiana. Deepwater Horizon, British Petroleum environmental oil spill disaster.<br />
Sport fishermen land yellow fin tuna and other predator species caught to the west of the giant BP oil spill. Nobody is sure how much longer they will be able to catch fish in the region. Charter boat captains, rental camps and hotels are reporting mass cancellations of fishing trips and other vacations to the Gulf  Coast region.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    07may10-fish venice007.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Venice, Louisiana. Deepwater Horizon, British Petroleum environmental oil spill disaster.<br />
L/R; Locals Ben Varley (3yrs), Bobby Warren and Evan Ballay (3 yrs) admire yellow fin tuna and other predator species caught by sport fishermen to the west of the giant BP oil spill. Nobody is sure how much longer they will be able to catch fish in the region. Charter boat captains, rental camps and hotels are reporting mass cancellations of fishing trips and other vacations to the Gulf  Coast region.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    07may10-fish venice006.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Venice, Louisiana. Deepwater Horizon, British Petroleum environmental oil spill disaster.<br />
Sport fishermen land yellow fin tuna and other predator species caught to the west of the giant BP oil spill. Nobody is sure how much longer they will be able to catch fish in the region. Charter boat captains, rental camps and hotels are reporting mass cancellations of fishing trips and other vacations to the Gulf  Coast region.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    07may10-fish venice027.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Venice, Louisiana. Deepwater Horizon, British Petroleum environmental oil spill disaster.<br />
Sport fishermen land yellow fin tuna and other predator species caught to the west of the giant BP oil spill. Nobody is sure how much longer they will be able to catch fish in the region. Charter boat captains, rental camps and hotels are reporting mass cancellations of fishing trips and other vacations to the Gulf  Coast region.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    07may10-fish venice026.JPG
  • 20 August 2015. New Orleans, Louisiana. <br />
Hurricane Katrina revisited. <br />
A decade later and recovery remains largely elusive for the area hardest hit by Katrina. A boat filled with debris remains on an abandoned lot flooded in the storm.<br />
Photo credit©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com.
    20aug15-Katrina revisited013.JPG
  • 8th Sept, 2005. Hurricane Katrina aftermath. New Orleans. A shrimp boat in East New Orleans, where the tidal surge washed over the land and devastated homes and property dumping ships on the Chef Menteur highway.
    081-08sept05-081.JPG
  • 06 June 2010. Jean Lafitte, Louisiana. <br />
A long list of paperwork required by BP to apply for work or compensation on the wall at BP's community outreach center housed in the Jean Lafitte town hall. Ironically there was nobody from BP to speak with at the center. Much of the local fishing business, especially for smaller boats is a cash industry. Providing the necessary paperwork is often impossible for many boat owners and deckhands. The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and are the most fertile of their kind in the world.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    06june10-oil france-soir 071.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Venice, Louisiana. Deepwater Horizon, British Petroleum environmental oil spill disaster.<br />
Sport fishermen land yellow fin tuna and other predator species caught to the west of the giant BP oil spill. Nobody is sure how much longer they will be able to catch fish in the region. Charter boat captains, rental camps and hotels are reporting mass cancellations of fishing trips and other vacations to the Gulf  Coast region.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    07may10-fish venice009.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Venice, Louisiana. Deepwater Horizon, British Petroleum environmental oil spill disaster.<br />
Bobby Warren and Evan Ballay (3 yrs) admire yellow fin tuna and other predator species caught by sport fishermen to the west of the giant BP oil spill. Nobody is sure how much longer they will be able to catch fish in the region. Charter boat captains, rental camps and hotels are reporting mass cancellations of fishing trips and other vacations to the Gulf  Coast region.<br />
Photo credit;Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    07may10-fish venice004.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Venice, Louisiana. Deepwater Horizon, British Petroleum environmental oil spill disaster.<br />
AP photographer Alex Brandon getting images out! <br />
Sport fishermen land yellow fin tuna and other predator species caught to the west of the giant BP oil spill. Nobody is sure how much longer they will be able to catch fish in the region. Charter boat captains, rental camps and hotels are reporting mass cancellations of fishing trips and other vacations to the Gulf  Coast region.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    07may10-fish venice001.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Venice, Louisiana. Deepwater Horizon, British Petroleum environmental oil spill disaster.<br />
Sport fishermen land yellow fin tuna and other predator species caught to the west of the giant BP oil spill. Nobody is sure how much longer they will be able to catch fish in the region. Charter boat captains, rental camps and hotels are reporting mass cancellations of fishing trips and other vacations to the Gulf  Coast region.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    07may10-fish venice025.JPG
  • 21 Apr 2013. Mobile, Alabama..General Dynamics' fast, highly maneuverable Littoral Combat Ship (LCS class) Navy boat at the Austal dock in Mobile Bay..Photo; Charlie Varley.
    21apr13-mobile ala013.JPG
  • 29 August 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Lower 9th ward. A tug boat moves a barge full of scrap metal up the Industrial Canal. The levee wall (to the rt out of frame) burst during hurricane Katrina, swamping the Lower 9th ward, killing hundreds of victims.<br />
Photo Credit©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    29aug06-kat-anniv571.JPG
  • 03 November, 2005.  New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina.<br />
A boat lies askew in a trash filled drainage ditch in Saint Bernard parish. Hurricane Katrina caused a 20ft tidal surge to sweep over the land, devastating much of the parish.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    03nov05-St Bernard postK021.JPG
  • 25 Sept, 2005. Lake Calcasieu, Louisiana.  Hurricane Rita aftermath. <br />
Lake Calcasieu shipping canal close to Cameron, Louisiana one day after the storm smashed the coastline. The shrimp boat the 'Cajun Queen' lies sunk in the town of Hackberry.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    25 sept 05027.JPG
  • 25 Sept, 2005.  Carlyss, Louisiana.  Hurricane Rita aftermath. <br />
Local cajun man Aaron Stokes and friend Chase Reider put in their boat to tour the swamps and bayou's checking on neighbours and their homes.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    25 sept 05015.JPG
  • 08 Sept 2005.  New Orleans, Louisiana. Hurricane Katrina aftermath. <br />
Venetian Isles in East New Orleans, where the tidal surge washed over the land and devastated homes and property. A shrimp boat in East New Orleans, where the tidal surge washed over the land and devastated homes and property dumping ships on the Chef Menteur highway.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    08sept05-postkatrina051.JPG
  • 08 Sept 2005.  New Orleans, Louisiana. Hurricane Katrina aftermath. <br />
Venetian Isles in East New Orleans, where the tidal surge washed over the land and devastated homes and property. A shrimp boat rests between residential houses.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    08sept05-postkatrina031.JPG
  • 08 Sept 2005.  New Orleans, Louisiana. Hurricane Katrina aftermath. <br />
Venetian Isles in East New Orleans, where the tidal surge washed over the land and devastated homes and property. A shrimp boat rests between residential houses.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    08sept05-postkatrina030.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. Daily Mirror's Ryan Parry rescues a puppy from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina75.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. Daily Mirror's Ryan Parry rescues a puppy from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina73.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. Local man Jimmy Delery assists the The Kentucky Dept of Fish and Wildlife resources team as he rescues animals from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina71.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Rescued dogs relax on the front of a boat which saved them from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina44.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. Local man Jimmy Delery assists the The Kentucky Dept of Fish and Wildlife resources team as he rescues animals from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina43.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. Local man Jimmy Delery assists the The Kentucky Dept of Fish and Wildlife resources team as he rescues animals from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina42.JPG
  • 06 June 2010. Barataria Bay to Grand Isle, Jefferson/Lafourche Parish, Louisiana. <br />
Jimmy Terrebonne Snr sits surrounded by oil boom on his boat in Barataria Bay. The shrimp boater should be sweeping the waters for up to $5,000 worth of beautiful Gulf shrimp a day but the fishing grounds are all closed. Instead he is making around $1,000 a day for oil for BP contractors instead, a fraction of what he would ordinarily be making with bills mounting at home. The fisherman does not have a fixed contract within BP and does not know when BP will stop hiring him. He does however know that his life will never be the same again. The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and are the most fertile of their kind in the world.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    06june10-oil france-soir 042.JPG
  • 28 May 2010. Barataria Bay to Grand Isle, Jefferson/Lafourche Parish, Louisiana. <br />
Kirt Alexie takes a break from laying oil boom at the entrance to Barataria Bay. The ecological and economic impact are devastating with Alexie's shrimp boat tied up, his earnings have plummeted. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and are the most fertile of their kind in the world.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley<br />
www.varleypix.com
    28may10-BP-oil003.JPG
  • 28 May 2010. Barataria Bay to Grand Isle, Jefferson/Lafourche Parish, Louisiana. <br />
Kirt Alexie takes a break from laying oil boom at the entrance to Barataria Bay. The ecological and economic impact are devastating with Alexie's shrimp boat tied up, his earnings have plummeted. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and are the most fetile of their kind in the world.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley<br />
www.varleypix.com
    28may10-BP-oil002.JPG
  • 10 June 2020. <br />
<br />
Collect Photo from VCSM Escaut rescue craft (French Coastguard) between Calais and Dover, France.<br />
<br />
A spokesman for France’s Channel Prefecture said the photo was shot on Wednesday June 10, three miles off Calais.<br />
<br />
‘Three men and a woman were attempting to paddle across the channel on two windsurf boards that had been tied together with rope,’ adding: ‘Shovels were being used as oars.’<br />
<br />
A Mayday was put out by a Dunkirk Seaways ferry after the group was spotted at 6.35am, in a relatively calm sea. <br />
<br />
The VCSM Escaut rescue craft attended the scene, and rescued the migrants, who were all suffering from mild hypothermia. <br />
<br />
The group was returned to France, and later ‘processed’ by Border Police, who could provide no further details of what happened to them.<br />
<br />
The Prefecture spokesman said migrants were increasingly using makeshift crafts because of the difficulty of getting hold of motorboats.<br />
<br />
So far in June, 250 migrants have reached Britain by boat - including a record single-day figure of 166.<br />
<br />
Photo© courtesy; French Coast Guard/VCSM Escaut rescue craft/Channel Prefecture provided to Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    26june20-Calais migrant crisis035.png
  • 01 October, 05.  New Orleans, Louisiana. Lower 9th ward. Hurricane Katrina aftermath. <br />
The remnants of the lives of ordinary folks, now covered in mud as the flood waters recede. A Nike sneaker hangs in a tree, a washed up boat in the background.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01oct05-post Katrina019.JPG
  • 25 Sept, 2005. Cameron, Louisiana.  Hurricane Rita aftermath. <br />
Local man Aaron Stokes from nearby Carlyss surveys the damage at Hackberry on the way to hard hit Cameron. A shrimp boat lies awkwardly against a dock.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    25 sept 05007.JPG
  • 08 Sept 2005.  New Orleans, Louisiana. Hurricane Katrina aftermath. <br />
Venetian Isles in East New Orleans, where the tidal surge washed over the land and devastated homes and property. A shrimp boat rests between residential houses.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    08sept05-postkatrina032.JPG
  • 08 Sept 2005.  New Orleans, Louisiana. Hurricane Katrina aftermath. <br />
Venetian Isles in East New Orleans, where the tidal surge washed over the land and devastated homes and property. John and Peggy Lala survey the damage of their mud filled flood ravaged home with the new addition of a shrimp boat across the canal.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
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  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. William Jones hauls a dog from the water in Uptown New Orleans as he sweeps the area with friends looking for people or animals to rescue.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
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  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat.  The sun drops in the horizon over a devastated New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
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  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. Daily Mirror's Ryan Parry rescues a puppy from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina74.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. Local man Jimmy Delery assists the The Kentucky Dept of Fish and Wildlife resources team as he rescues animals from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina72.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. Local man Jimmy Delery assists the The Kentucky Dept of Fish and Wildlife resources team as he rescues animals from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina70.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. A horse is rescued from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans by the Kentucky Dept of Fish and Wildlife Dept.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina69.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. A horse is rescued from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans by the Kentucky Dept of Fish and Wildlife Dept.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina68.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. A horse is rescued from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans by the Kentucky Dept of Fish and Wildlife Dept.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina67.JPG
  • 06 June 2010. Barataria Bay to Grand Isle, Jefferson/Lafourche Parish, Louisiana. <br />
An oyster boat converted to collect oil using booms is hard at work as oil seeps into Barataria Bay, the fragile eco system that separates the Gulf of Mexico from Louisiana wetlands. The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and are the most fertile of their kind in the world.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    06june10-oil france-soir 051.JPG
  • 06 June 2010. Barataria Bay to Grand Isle, Jefferson/Lafourche Parish, Louisiana. <br />
Shrimpers surrounded by oil boom on their boat in Barataria Bay. The shrimp boaters should be sweeping the waters for up to $5,000 worth of beautiful Gulf shrimp a day but the fishing grounds are all closed. Instead they are making around $1,000 a day for  BP contractors instead, a fraction of what they would ordinarily be making. The fishermen do not have  fixed contracts with BP and does not know when BP will stop hiring them. The debt collectors have been calling asking for their money. The shrimpers advise them to call BP. They know their lives will never be the same again. The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and are the most fertile of their kind in the world.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    06june10-oil france-soir 044.JPG
  • 06 June 2010. Barataria Bay to Grand Isle, Jefferson/Lafourche Parish, Louisiana. <br />
Jimmy Terrebonne Jnr sits surrounded by oil boom on his boat in Barataria Bay. The shrimp boater should be sweeping the waters for up to $5,000 worth of beautiful Gulf shrimp a day but the fishing grounds are all closed. Instead he is making around $1,000 a day for oil for BP contractors instead, a fraction of what he would ordinarily be making with bills mounting at home. The fisherman does not have a fixed contract withn BP and does not know when BP will stop hiring him. He does however know that his life will never be the same again. The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and are the most fertile of their kind in the world.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    06june10-oil france-soir 041.JPG
  • 06 June 2010. Barataria Bay to Grand Isle, Jefferson/Lafourche Parish, Louisiana. <br />
A police boat patrols Barataria Bay which has been closed to all fishermen, commercial and recreational for the past two weeks. The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and are the most fertile of their kind in the world.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    06june10-oil france-soir 002.JPG
  • 28 May 2010. Barataria Bay to Grand Isle, Jefferson/Lafourche Parish, Louisiana. <br />
Sunday Telepgraph reporter Philip Sherwell covers the BP oil spill story from a boat on  Barataria Bay. The ecological and economic impact are devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and are the most fertile of their kind in the world.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley<br />
www.varleypix.com
    28may10-BP-oil006.JPG
  • 28 May 2010. Barataria Bay to Grand Isle, Jefferson/Lafourche Parish, Louisiana. <br />
Kirt Alexie takes a break from laying oil boom at the entrance to Barataria Bay. The ecological and economic impact are devastating with Alexie's shrimp boat tied up, his earnings have plummeted. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and are the most fertile of their kind in the world.<br />
Photo credit;Charlie Varley<br />
www.varleypix.com
    28may10-BP-oil004.JPG
  • 25 Sept, 2005. Carlyss, Louisiana.  Hurricane Rita aftermath. <br />
 Local cajun man Chase Reider takes his boat to unload meat from a family convenience store to a family home where a generator powering freezers and refrigerators will stop the meat from spoiling.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
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  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Animal rescue boat. Daily Mirror's Ryan Parry rescues a puppy from the devastating floods in Uptown New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina85.JPG
  • 06 June 2010. Barataria Bay to Grand Isle, Jefferson/Lafourche Parish, Louisiana. <br />
Shrimpers surrounded by oil boom on their boat in Barataria Bay. The shrimp boaters should be sweeping the waters for up to $5,000 worth of beautiful Gulf shrimp a day but the fishing grounds are all closed. Instead they are making around $1,000 a day for  BP contractors instead, a fraction of what they would ordinarily be making. The fishermen do not have  fixed contracts with BP and does not know when BP will stop hiring them. The debt collectors have been calling asking for their money. The shrimpers advise them to call BP. They know their lives will never be the same again. The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and are the most fertile of their kind in the world.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    06june10-oil france-soir 045.JPG
  • 03 July 2013. St Michael's, Maryland.<br />
Clam boats on their way out of the marina.<br />
Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    03july13-Maryland018.JPG
  • 03 July 2013. St Michael's, Maryland.<br />
Clam boats on their way out of the marina.<br />
Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    03july13-Maryland017.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
The US military patrol the streets in Uptown New Orleans on Napolean Ave in boats as they look for survivors to evacuate.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina28.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Lines of search and rescue boats wait to put into water east of the city along <br />
Interstate 10 following the devastating hurricane. <br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina06.JPG
  • 05 May 2010. Venice, Louisiana. Deepwater Horizon, British Petroleum environmental oil spill disaster.<br />
Commercial fishing and shrimp boats lie idle at the Venice marina. BP's disgraceful oil spill has forced the closure of all fishing from the west of the mouth of the Mississippi river all the way to the Florida state line.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05may10-oil-spill058.JPG
  • 29 August, 2005. New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Hurricane Katrina hits New Orleans. Scared and relieved, 4yr old Anfernya Figueroa is rescued from the 9th ward after it disappeared under water.Fern was saved by local police and firefighters using boats to reach victims of the flooding.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley.
    29aug05-hurricane katrina031.JPG
  • 1 June, 2006. Lakeview, New Orleans, Louisiana. The first day of hurricane season 2006. Boats smashed by hurricane Katrina lie smashed in and out of the water at the New Orleans Marina, continuing to pollute the water and potentially provide debris problems in the event of a hurricane this season.
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  • 23 July 2010. Grand Isle, Louisiana. <br />
On what should be the busiest weekend of the year at the Grand Isle marina, there are just a few boats. More seagulls than people visited the marina on what is traditionally the weekend of the Tarpon Rodeo, Grand Isle's fishing 'Mardi Gras,' and greatest cash earner of the year. Ordinarily the marina would be overflowing with people and boats but with fishing still restricted and a potential tropical storm in the gulf, the marina is mostly deserted. The local economy has taken a massive hit. It will be years before the town and the area is able to recover from BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. <br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    23july10-BP oil004.JPG
  • 28 May 2010. Barataria Bay to Grand Isle, Jefferson/Lafourche Parish, Louisiana. <br />
U.S. Fish and Wildlife boats sit just off Cat Island in an otherwise deserted Barataria Bay. Ordinarily the bay would be filled with shrimp boats, sport fishermen, and sea birds, especially in the run up to memorial day weekend. The ecological and economic impact are devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and are the most fertile of their kind in the world.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley<br />
www.varleypix.com
    28may10-BP-oil007.JPG
  • 05 May 2010. Venice, Louisiana. Deepwater Horizon, British Petroleum environmental oil spill disaster.<br />
Commercial fishing and shrimp boats lie idle at the Venice marina. BP's disgraceful oil spill has forced the closure of all fishing from the west of the mouth of the Mississippi river all the way to the Florida state line.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05may10-oil-spill010.JPG
  • 06 June 2010. Barataria Bay to Grand Isle, Jefferson/Lafourche Parish, Louisiana. <br />
A storm builds over eerily deserted Barataria Bay.  Ordinarily the bay would be filled with fishermen and shrimp boats. The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and are the most fertile of their kind in the world.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    06june10-oil france-soir 065.JPG
  • 07 June 2010. Pointe aux Chenes, Louisiana.<br />
Fading away. Oil contractors prepare boom for loading into local boats as Jesus looks over them in the isolated town of Pointe Aux Chenes in Southe Louisiana. The town clings to the little land that remains along the bayous and waterways of southern Louisiana. Oil washes up on the  marsh grasses just south of tribal homes. If the grass dies, there is nothing left to hold the land. All of this was solid ground just 100 years ago. Diversion of the mighty Mississippi River diverted sediment from the wetlands and deposited precious land building material deep out at sea.  At present, all these fishing grounds are closed. Members of the Pointe aux Chenes Indians, settlers that can trace their roots beyond 5 generations back to France face extinction of their very way of life, their very existence. French cajun is the language of the elders, but is dying out in the children of today. BP's catastrophic oil spill threatens everything, their way of life and the land on which they live. Not recognised by the federal government, the 680 member tribe struggles for funds in a small community that survives only because of fishing and oil extraction in the Gulf of Mexico.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    07june10-point aux chenes 059.JPG
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