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  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France041.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France040.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France038.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France035.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France034.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France027.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France021.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France014.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France006.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France046.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France045.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France044.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France043.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France036.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France037.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France033.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France032.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France031.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France030.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France029.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France025.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France026.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France024.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France023.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France022.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France018.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France019.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France016.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France015.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France017.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France013.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France012.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France009.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
Interesting graffiti - 'It's time to unfuck the world' on a wall in the ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France010.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France007.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France005.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France002.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France001.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France003.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France039.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
The ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France028.jpg
  • 14 Jan 2022. Annecy, Haute-Savoie, France.<br />
Interesting graffiti - 'It's time to unfuck the world' on a wall in the ancient alpine town of Annecy in South West France. Annecy sits on Lake Annecy which feeds into the Thiou River. The town is famous for its Vieille Ville (old town), with cobbled streets, winding canals and pastel-coloured houses. The medieval Château d’Annecy, once home to the Counts of Geneva overlooks the town.<br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com<br />
All rights managed.
    14jan22-Annecy France011.jpg
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Perhaps the last of local fresh blue crabs to arrive at the Westwego Fish market just outside New Orleans. All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood112.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Westwego Fish Market. All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood104.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Perhaps the last of local fresh blue crabs to arrive at the Westwego Fish market just outside New Orleans. All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood165.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Wayne Hebert of Ruth's seafood at the Westwego Fish market just outside New Orleans. All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood114.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Ashley Palmisano, a 22 year old single mother of two sells shrimp from A&B's seafood at the Westwego Fish market just outside New Orleans. Ashley worries that she may not have a job to go to in a couple of weeks. All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood103.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Westwego Fish Market. All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood102.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Westwego Fish Market. All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit;Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood099.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Westwego Fish Market. All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit;Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood097.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Westwego Fish Market. All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood096.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Westwego Fish Market. All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood094.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Perhaps the last of local fresh blue crabs to arrive at the Westwego Fish market just outside New Orleans. All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit;Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood089.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Ashley Palmisano, a 22 year old single mother of two sells shrimp from A&B's seafood at the Westwego Fish market just outside New Orleans. Ashley worries that she may not have a job to go to in a couple of weeks. All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood091.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Redfish at Ruthann & Rob's seafood. Currently $3.50 per lb at the Westwego Fish market just outside New Orleans. All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood169.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Red snapper at Ruthann & Rob's seafood. Currently $4.75 per lb at the Westwego Fish market just outside New Orleans. All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley.
    10may10-seafood168.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Red snapper at Ruthann & Rob's seafood. Currently $4.75 per lb at the Westwego Fish market just outside New Orleans. All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood167.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Perhaps the last of local fresh blue crabs to arrive at the Westwego Fish market just outside New Orleans. All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit;Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood113.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Angel Langlinais at Ruthann & Rob's seafood loads shrimp on the scales. Currently $4.25 for 10/15 count per lb at the Westwego Fish market just outside New Orleans. All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood170.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit;
    10may10-seafood172.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit;Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood171.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood078.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood086.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood166.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood163.JPG
  • 07 May 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
All seafood prices have risen 25% in the past 7 days alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. Today was the opening day of the inshore shrimp season. The season was closed before it could open thanks to BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 210,000 barrels of oil per day is leaking uncontrollably into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Stocks are running low. With no new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10may10-seafood079.JPG
  • 11june 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
The Shrimp Lot in Westwego just outside New Orleans. Ordinarily the market would be crammed with people on a Friday aftrenoon. Today it is virtually deserted. Incomes have crashed as all seafood prices have risen over 30% in the past 4 weeks alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico threatens  the livelihood of many thousands of workers affiliated to the fishing industry in Louisiana. Earnings are down as much as  50% of those pre BP's oil disaster. Thousands of barrels of oil per day continues to leak into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught out of state or earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Louisiana stocks are virtually non-existent. With few new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    11june10-seafood031.JPG
  • 11june 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Wayne Herbert (l) and his Lenny Cook, market traders  at the Shrimp Lot in Westwego just outside New Orleans.  Incomes have crashed as all seafood prices have risen over 30% in the past 4 weeks alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico threatens  the livelihood of many thousands of workers affiliated to the fishing industry in Louisiana. Earnings are down as much as  50% of those pre BP's oil disaster. Thousands of barrels of oil per day continues to leak into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught out of state or earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Louisiana stocks are virtually non-existant. With few new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    11june10-seafood028.JPG
  • 11june 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Wayne Herbert (l) and his Lenny Cook, market traders  at the Shrimp Lot in Westwego just outside New Orleans.  Incomes have crashed as all seafood prices have risen over 30% in the past 4 weeks alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico threatens  the livelihood of many thousands of workers affiliated to the fishing industry in Louisiana. Earnings are down as much as  50% of those pre BP's oil disaster. Thousands of barrels of oil per day continues to leak into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught out of state or earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Louisiana stocks are virtually non-existant. With few new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    11june10-seafood027.JPG
  • 11june 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Wayne Herbert, market trader  at the Shrimp Lot in Westwego weighs shrimp just outside New Orleans.  Incomes have crashed as all seafood prices have risen over 30% in the past 4 weeks alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico threatens  the livelihood of many thousands of workers affiliated to the fishing industry in Louisiana. Earnings are down as much as  50% of those pre BP's oil disaster. Thousands of barrels of oil per day continues to leak into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught out of state or earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Louisiana stocks are virtually non-existant. With few new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    11june10-seafood022.JPG
  • 11june 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Seafood salesman Roy Rivet  at the Shrimp Lot in Westwego just outside New Orleans.  Incomes have crashed as all seafood prices have risen over 30% in the past 4 weeks alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico threatens  the livelihood of many thousands of workers affiliated to the fishing industry in Louisiana. Earnings are down as much as  50% of those pre BP's oil disaster. Thousands of barrels of oil per day continues to leak into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught out of state or earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Louisiana stocks are virtually non-existant. With few new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    11june10-seafood018.JPG
  • 11june 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Seafood salesman Roy Rivet  at the Shrimp Lot in Westwego just outside New Orleans.  Incomes have crashed as all seafood prices have risen over 30% in the past 4 weeks alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico threatens  the livelihood of many thousands of workers affiliated to the fishing industry in Louisiana. Earnings are down as much as  50% of those pre BP's oil disaster. Thousands of barrels of oil per day continues to leak into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught out of state or earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Louisiana stocks are virtually non-existant. With few new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    11june10-seafood016.JPG
  • 11june 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Children play on coolers full of fish at the Shrimp Lot in Westwego just outside New Orleans.  Incomes have crashed as all seafood prices have risen over 30% in the past 4 weeks alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico threatens  the livelihood of many thousands of workers affiliated to the fishing industry in Louisiana. Earnings are down as much as  50% of those pre BP's oil disaster. Thousands of barrels of oil per day continues to leak into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught out of state or earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Louisiana stocks are virtually non-existant. With few new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    11june10-seafood014.JPG
  • 11june 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Crawfish at the Shrimp Lot in Westwego just outside New Orleans.  Incomes have crashed as all seafood prices have risen over 30% in the past 4 weeks alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico threatens  the livelihood of many thousands of workers affiliated to the fishing industry in Louisiana. Earnings are down as much as  50% of those pre BP's oil disaster. Thousands of barrels of oil per day continues to leak into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught out of state or earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Louisiana stocks are virtually non-existant. With few new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    11june10-seafood009.JPG
  • 11june 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Shrimp imported from Texas at the Shrimp Lot in Westwego just outside New Orleans. Incomes have crashed as all seafood prices have risen over 30% in the past 4 weeks alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico threatens  the livelihood of many thousands of workers affiliated to the fishing industry in Louisiana. Earnings are down as much as  50% of those pre BP's oil disaster. Thousands of barrels of oil per day continues to leak into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught out of state or earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Louisiana stocks are virtually non-existant. With few new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    11june10-seafood002.JPG
  • 11june 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Ivis Fernandez sells shrimp from A&B's seafood at the Shrimp Lot in Westwego just outside New Orleans.  Incomes have crashed as all seafood prices have risen over 30% in the past 4 weeks alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico threatens  the livelihood of many thousands of workers affiliated to the fishing industry in Louisiana. Earnings are down as much as  50% of those pre BP's oil disaster. Thousands of barrels of oil per day continues to leak into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught out of state or earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Louisiana stocks are virtually non-existant. With few new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    11june10-seafood001.JPG
  • 11june 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Shrimp imported from Texas at the Shrimp Lot in Westwego just outside New Orleans. Incomes have crashed as all seafood prices have risen over 30% in the past 4 weeks alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico threatens  the livelihood of many thousands of workers affiliated to the fishing industry in Louisiana. Earnings are down as much as  50% of those pre BP's oil disaster. Thousands of barrels of oil per day continues to leak into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught out of state or earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Louisiana stocks are virtually non-existent. With few new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    11june10-seafood063.JPG
  • 11june 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Shrimp imported from Texas at the Shrimp Lot in Westwego just outside New Orleans. Incomes have crashed as all seafood prices have risen over 30% in the past 4 weeks alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico threatens  the livelihood of many thousands of workers affiliated to the fishing industry in Louisiana. Earnings are down as much as  50% of those pre BP's oil disaster. Thousands of barrels of oil per day continues to leak into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught out of state or earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Louisiana stocks are virtually non-existant. With few new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    11june10-seafood025.JPG
  • 11june 2010. Westwego, Louisiana. <br />
Shrimp imported from Texas at the Shrimp Lot in Westwego just outside New Orleans. Incomes have crashed as all seafood prices have risen over 30% in the past 4 weeks alone as stocks run low thanks to closed fishing grounds affected by oil pollution. BP's disastrous environmental catastrophe out in the Gulf of Mexico threatens  the livelihood of many thousands of workers affiliated to the fishing industry in Louisiana. Earnings are down as much as  50% of those pre BP's oil disaster. Thousands of barrels of oil per day continues to leak into the Gulf because of the explosion and collapse of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform 46 miles out to sea. The closure of fishing grounds both east and west of the Mississippi river outflow is crippling thousands of local fishermen and all affiliated businesses and families who rely on the seafood industry. None of the shrimp or other seafood offered at the market are fresh catch from today. Everything has been through the IQF (Instant Quick Freeze) process and is seafood caught out of state or earlier in the season and brought from storage freezers in Venice and Grand Isle. Louisiana stocks are virtually non-existant. With few new catches, the market will be forced to rely on farmed shrimp shipped in from Texas and Georgia. Local traders refuse to stock Chinese import fish raised with growth hormones, pesticides, fungicides and other contaminants widely found in Chinese farm raised seafood. Many fear losing their jobs and everything they own as a result of BP's Gulf Coast environmental disaster.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    11june10-seafood007.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .NFL branded merchandise fills Lids Locker Room store. The store is just a stone's throw from the Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints playing host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over downtown as the big game comes to town..Photo; Charlie Varley
    31jan13-NFL Brand019.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .NFL branded merchandise fills Lids Locker Room store. The store is just a stone's throw from the Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints playing host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over downtown as the big game comes to town..Photo; Charlie Varley
    31jan13-NFL Brand018.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .NFL branded merchandise fills Lids Locker Room store. The store is just a stone's throw from the Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints playing host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over downtown as the big game comes to town..Photo; Charlie Varley
    31jan13-NFL Brand013.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .NFL branded merchandise fills Lids Locker Room store. The store is just a stone's throw from the Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints playing host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over downtown as the big game comes to town..Photo; Charlie Varley
    31jan13-NFL Brand012.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .NFL branded merchandise fills Lids Locker Room store. The store is just a stone's throw from the Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints playing host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over downtown as the big game comes to town..Photo; Charlie Varley
    31jan13-NFL Brand009.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .NFL branded merchandise fills Lids Locker Room store. The store is just a stone's throw from the Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints playing host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over downtown as the big game comes to town..Photo; Charlie Varley
    31jan13-NFL Brand008.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .NFL branded merchandise fills Lids Locker Room store. The store is just a stone's throw from the Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints playing host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over downtown as the big game comes to town..Photo; Charlie Varley
    31jan13-NFL Brand006.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .NFL branded merchandise fills Lids Locker Room store. The store is just a stone's throw from the Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints playing host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over downtown as the big game comes to town..Photo; Charlie Varley
    31jan13-NFL Brand004.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .NFL branded merchandise fills Lids Locker Room store. The store is just a stone's throw from the Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints playing host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over downtown as the big game comes to town..Photo; Charlie Varley
    31jan13-NFL Brand003.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .The Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints plays host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over the downtown icon as they prepare for the big game..Photo; Charlie Varley
    31jan13-super bowl041.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .Besnon Tower, overlooking the Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints playing host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over downtown as they prepare for the big game..Photo; Charlie Varley
    31jan13-super bowl033.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .The Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints plays host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over the downtown icon as they prepare for the big game..Photo; Charlie Varley
    31jan13-super bowl028.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .The Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints plays host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over the downtown icon as they prepare for the big game..Photo; Charlie Varley
    31jan13-super bowl021.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .The Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints plays host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over the downtown icon as they prepare for the big game..Photo; Charlie Varley
    31jan13-super bowl002.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .The Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints plays host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers.. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over the downtown icon as they prepare for the big game..Photo; Charlie Varley
    30jan13-super bowl023.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .The Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints plays host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers.. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over the downtown icon as they prepare for the big game..Photo; Charlie Varley
    30jan13-super bowl021.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .The Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints plays host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers.. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over the downtown icon as they prepare for the big game..Photo; Charlie Varley
    30jan13-super bowl008.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .NFL branded merchandise fills Lids Locker Room store. The store is just a stone's throw from the Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints playing host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over downtown as the big game comes to town..Photo; Charlie Varley
    31jan13-NFL Brand017.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .NFL branded merchandise fills Lids Locker Room store. The store is just a stone's throw from the Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints playing host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over downtown as the big game comes to town..Photo; Charlie Varley
    31jan13-NFL Brand015.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .NFL branded merchandise fills Lids Locker Room store. The store is just a stone's throw from the Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints playing host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over downtown as the big game comes to town..Photo; Charlie Varley
    31jan13-NFL Brand014.JPG
  • 31 Jan 2013. New Orleans, Louisiana USA. .NFL branded merchandise fills Lids Locker Room store. The store is just a stone's throw from the Mercedes Benz Superdome, home of the New Orleans Saints playing host to the XLVII (47th) Annual Super Bowl with the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49'ers. With just days to go, NFL branding has taken over downtown as the big game comes to town..Photo; Charlie Varley
    31jan13-NFL Brand010.JPG
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