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What remains of the 1832 cotton press, where much of the south's cotton was processed and shipped to England and elsewhere. The new brick near the top is a repair made after damage from Hurricane Betsy in 1965. I went by this on a run and it appeared to be in a transition into work spaces, artists studios, and/or living spaces. The burned posts in the water are the remnants of a pier that burned in a chemical fire caused by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. That fire led to some especially dramatic morning-after photographs of the city with a huge smoke cloud rising from the river.
Recent Shoot with the lovley Katrina
Simple Headshots taken outside on a dull day!
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These are pictures I shot while driving though St. Bernard's Parish during the week of April 3rd, 2006. The devastation is beyond words and pictures, and this area has remainded mostly untouched since Katrina.
An example of an "X Code" used by emergency and rescue personnel in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. This one is on a home at the intersection of Audubon Street and Fountainebleau Drive.
unsorted photos from trips home after katrina.
unsorted photos from trips home after katrina. these show some of the destruction in lakeview, broken levee, and downtown new orleans
Katrina's visit to my backyard here in sunny South Florida! This is a scan that was taken with my film camera, a Canon T50.
Part of a collection of photos I took when I went down to Grand Isle, LA. These were all taken about 4 months after the hurricane. The destruction caused never really hit home (so to speak) until this trip.
You couldn't tell by looking at the French Quarter, but the work to rebuild after the destruction of Hurricane Katrina is far from finished. Venture out past the usual "touristy" areas and you'll find that even after almost five years, the city is still rebuilding. It's hard to believe...
3 October, 2005...the first day we were officially allowed back into New Orleans after Katrina. This is our street....our fridge....
As with most in Pascagoula, MS. I didn't expect the water to rise this high. House at 13' above sea level, it rose to 17'. This is my den door trying to hold the water back - the water pressure eventually pulled to door off the frame but didn't break the glass.