Your #1 source for blades and firearms news and updates…

  • Home
  • Knives
  • News
  • Hunting
  • Tactical
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Videos
Subscribe
Font ResizerAa
Blade ShopperBlade Shopper
  • News
  • Knives
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Tactical
  • Hunting
  • Videos
Search
  • Home
  • Knives
  • News
  • Hunting
  • Tactical
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Videos
banner
Create an Amazing Newspaper
Discover thousands of options, easy to customize layouts, one-click to import demo and much more.
Learn More

Stay Updated

Get the latest headlines, discounts for the military community, and guides to maximizing your benefits
Subscribe

Explore

  • Photo of The Day
  • Opinion
  • Today's Epaper
  • Trending News
  • Weekly Newsletter
  • Special Deals
Home » 16 Powerful Photos of the Sportsmen and Game Wardens Who Helped Rescue Hurricane Katrina Survivors

16 Powerful Photos of the Sportsmen and Game Wardens Who Helped Rescue Hurricane Katrina Survivors

Adam Green By Adam Green August 29, 2025 14 Min Read
Share
16 Powerful Photos of the Sportsmen and Game Wardens Who Helped Rescue Hurricane Katrina Survivors

Sign up for the Outdoor Life Newsletter

Get the hottest outdoor news—plus a free month of onX Hunt Elite.

Twenty years ago, Guy Riordan was sitting at his farm in New Mexico watching news broadcasts of the crisis unfolding in New Orleans. Hurricane Katrina had made landfall on August 29, 2005, and the resulting flooding and destruction would go on to claim more than 1,300 lives and cause more than $108 billion in damages (in 2005 dollars). Even with first responders and government agencies pitching in, it was clear to Riordan that civilians were needed, too.

“I just got motivated,” says Riordan, then 55 and the chairman of the New Mexico Game and Fish Commission. “I saw people standing on roofs and nobody helping them. There was no one there yet.”

So Riordan called his buddy Steve Padilla (“one of the most unselfish individuals I’ve ever known”) and asked what he was doing for the next few days. The two men trailered Riordan’s duck boat — outfitted with a Gator-style motor suited for shallow waters — and hit the road. At a Walmart, they loaded up on water, granola bars, lanterns, and bug dope. When they reached a blockade outside New Orleans, law enforcement allowed Riordan and Padilla through because of his affiliation with New Mexico Game and Fish.

“It was basically a deserted city. When we first pulled in from an off-ramp from Highway 10, there were federal police standing behind a car, we got out, and all of a sudden shots were fired at us. The police hunkered down and so did we.” Riordan still doesn’t know what to make of the gunfire, though no bullets struck his truck or boat. “There were a lot of shots, and we weren’t sure where they were coming from. I’m not sure if they were residents shooting at us. You just can’t tell what goes on in people’s minds anymore.”

Undeterred, Riordan and Padilla launched in the Lakeview area.

“We entered the water and it was — I hate to use this word but it was — surreal. The water was up within 6 to 8 inches of the street signs. We started looking to see if anybody needed help.”

Guy Riordan, who towed his duck boat with one buddy from New Mexico, closes his eyes as he concentrates on picking up a signal on his flip phone. Riordan was shot at upon his arrival in the city, and he says he carried his .357 with him while searching over the next few days. Photo by Liz Hafalia
New Orleans, UNITED STATES: A plea for help appears on the roof of a home flooded in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, Louisiana, 04 September 2005. New Orleans began counting its dead 04 September as US troops turned to the gruesome task of harvesting bloated corpses from the hurricane-torn city's flooded streets and homes. AFP PHOTO/POOL/Robert GALBRAITH (Photo credit should read ROBERT GALBRAITH/AFP via Getty Images)
A plea painted on the roof of a New Orleans home. This photo was taken on Sept. 4, 2005, and reveals a chain link fence like many of the ones snagged by Riordan’s motor. Robert Galbraith / AFP, via Getty Images

The floodwaters ran black and putrid, strewn with garbage and bubbling with gas from broken lines. The bugs were constant. Once, Riordan passed a cemetery carpeted with floating plastic flowers. Something huge — an alligator, he suspects — startled at their approach and fled, bouquets rippling in its wake.

Downed electrical lines frightened Riordan the most; the two men were sitting in a metal boat. Padilla removed one of his rubber gloves and kept a hand on the gunnel to remain vigilant for the slightest tingle of electricity. Chain-link fences kept catching their motor until they learned to stay above the flooded streets as best they could, where the motor bumped submerged vehicles instead. Riordan wondered how many people were below them, trapped and drowned inside their cars.

“We didn’t find anybody alive,” says Riordian of their first morning in the city. “We saw lots of dead people. We saw abandoned pets. They were out on a porch of the second story, and we would throw them granola bars, whatever we had. They were frantic, just barking, barking, barking. You could see their fear.”

In those early days after the storm, their priority was not recovering stray dogs or the dead, but trying to aid any people who were still alive. At times, the two men were alone on the water. Other times, they would see volunteer boats like theirs: civilian rescuers searching the flooded city, trying to help where they could. Most residents, he remembers, refused to leave. They typically accepted water, food, and bug spray, but didn’t want to be evacuated. One friendly man, named Mark, stands out in Riordan’s memory for that reason.

“I had a hard time understanding him because of his rich Creole accent. I don’t know if he ever found his family. He was looking for his wife and two kids.”

katrina_235_mac.jpg Evacuation continued today with volunteers arriving with their own watercraft, pulling stranded people, like this boat full from the Airline Highway at I-10 Freeways, in Orleans Parrish near downtown. Chris Roy, volunteer,(on the boat motor, from Lafayette, La.) transports, l to r-George Lovan, Jermaine Pittman, David Andrew and Kurt Landry to dry land down the Airline Freeway. The aftermath of Hurricane Katrina that ravaged the gulf coast states, hitting hard in New Orleans, Louisiana. 9/1/05 New Orleans , La Michael Macor / San Francisco Chronicle
Chris Roy (on the motor) is one of many volunteers who arrived with their own boats; here he transports locals who had been stranded on a highway. The Cajun Navy Relief, now an organized non-profit made up of civilian volunteers who own boats, was founded in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Photo by Michael Macor / San Francisco Chronicle, via Getty Images
A man rescues two women from hurricane katrina flooding
Gary Smitt steers his boat away from a swamped home after rescuing Marion Lee, center, and Charlene Mutz, who are both wearing camo lifejackets. Their home in New Orleans survived the initial flooding caused by Katrina, but flooded the following day. Photo by Brett Coomer / Houston Chronicle, via Getty Images
A man eating an apple tows people in his fishing boat.
Al Duvernay tows another boat behind his own while rescuing residents from their flooded houses on Aug. 30, 2005. Photo by Chris Graythen / Getty Images

After their first day trolling the floodwaters, Riordan and Padilla stopped for gas. A local, who recognized them as civilian volunteers, refused to let them sleep in their truck. Instead, he insisted they return to his home, where he and his wife put them up and fed them hot meals. Riordan can’t remember their names.

“I’ll never forget,” Riordan says of these countless displays of kindness. Despite being shot at and seeing two men who appeared to be robbing a bank, he mostly recalls how selfless everyone was. Even today, it gives him a feeling of hope — of Americans coming together to assist their fellow Americans. “I saw the humanity where people were trying to help other people and disregarded race.”

Eventually, Riordan started seeing the National Guard and other official responders in the areas he was searching.

Two boats receive stranded people rescued from a rooftop during Hurricane Katrina.
A Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries conservation officer signals during a helicopter rescue. Photo by James Nielsen / AFP, via Getty Images
Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries law enforcement ferry people to dry land after Hurricane Katrina hit.
Survivors are ferried ashore in a LDFW boat after being rescued from their homes in high water in Orleans parish on Aug. 30, 2005. Game wardens at the bow prepare to land. Photo by Mario Tama / Getty Images
Game wardens from Louisiana ferry three elderly women ashore.
Three women are taken ashore by Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries officers after being rescued from their homes in the Ninth Ward. Photo by Mario Tama / Getty Images
A game warden ferries children to shore.
Mark Benton of LDWF ferries more children to dry land. Photo by Mario Tama / Getty Images
New Orleans, UNITED STATES: A family is brought to dry land by the the Department of Fish and Wildlife of Kentucky after they were relunctantly evacuated from their flooded home in the Garden district of New Orleans 05 September 2005. At least 273,600 people have been forced from their homes by Hurricane Katrina and put into temporary shelters in 16 US states, the US Department of Homeland Security said 05 September 2005. AFP PHOTO/Nicholas KAMM (Photo credit should read NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP via Getty Images)
Game wardens from out of state responded, too. Here, officers from the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife escort three people to dry land on Sept. 5, 2005. Nicholas Kamm / AFP, via Getty Images
A game warden from Kentucky rescues a woman during Hurricane Katrina
A KDFW officer assists a woman and her daughter after they were reluctantly evacuated from their flooded home in New Orleans’ Garden District. Nicholas Kamm / AFP, via Getty Images
PORT SULPHUR, LA - SEPTEMBER 10: Staff Sergeant Paul Miera checks for bodies in homes destroyed after Hurricane Katrina September 10, 2005 in Port Sulphur, Louisiana. Most of the homes throughout the Plaquemines parish are destroyed or heavily damaged. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
New Meixco National Guard staff sergeant Paul Miera checks for bodies in Port Sulphur, Louisiana, on Sept. 10. Many of the National Guardsmen wore duck waders to protect themselves from debris and toxic floodwaters. Photo by Joe Raedle / Getty Images

“We were giving people food and water. A National Guardsman came up to me, he was a captain, and he said, ‘Sir I would appreciate it if you wouldn’t feed people. We’re trying to get them out of here.’” Riordan was polite but firm. “I said, ‘You’re the ones with the guns. You have the authority. If you want to move them, move them. But I’m not going to sit here and not give somebody assistance if they need assistance.’”

Riordan, who served in the Marine Corps as a helicopter crew chief, was particularly impressed by the Coast Guard’s chopper-led rooftop rescues that he witnessed. More official responders arrived on the scene, and after several days doing what they could in the flooded city, Riordan and Padilla returned to New Mexico. Padilla has since passed away. Riordan hasn’t talked about his experience with Hurricane Katrina relief before today, on the 20th anniversary of the storm.

“I think when it all comes down to what you’ve done in life, you want to say, ‘Did I contribute? Did I do a good job? Did I live a good life?’” says Riordan, now 75. “​​It was an experience I’ll never forget. I’m happy I was able to go there and I hope I relieved some people’s anxieties and made life a little easier for them. But the heroes are the heroes themselves. Those are the people who got through it, helping their own families. I can’t imagine how many people lost their kids or their parents.”

A resident of Port Sulphur, Louisiana, checks on his home after Hurricane Katrina.
Deputized resident Jimmy Zito carries a shotgun (to shoot snakes, according to the photographer) as he wades through water to check on his home in Port Sulphur, Louisiana, on Sept. 10, 2005. Most of the homes throughout the Plaquemines parish were destroyed or heavily damaged. Photo by Joe Raedle / Getty Images
katrina5_281_mac.jpg Mark Longo guides his brother Paul and Father Joe through trees and water left behind by Hurricane Katrina. The three were checking on the condition of their dad's home, which turned out to have 3 feet of water still inside, a full week after the hurricane struck. Atherton Dr. Jefferson Parish. The aftermath of Hurricane Katrina that ravaged the gulf coast states, with New Orleans, Louisiana taking the brunt of the killer storm. 9/5/05 New Orleans , La Michael Macor / San Francisco Chronicle
Mark Longo hauls his brother Paul and father, Joe, who don’t have waders, around the trees left behind by Hurricane Katrina. The three were checking on the condition of their dad’s home, which turned out to have 3 feet of water still inside, a full week after the hurricane struck. Photo by Michael Macor / San Francisco Chronicle, via Getty Images
A man sits with his dog and his shotgun.
Hurricane survivor Alan Sessum sits with his dog and shotgun on the deck of his neighbor’s camp house where he was temporarily living in the devastated Plaquemine’s Parish in Venice, Louisiana. Sessum’s home on the bayou, only accessible by boat, was completely wiped out by Hurricane Katrina. “I ain’t found even one little piece of my place,” he told the photographer at the time. Sessum also lost his two boats which he used to run charter fishing, bird watching and swamp tours. He had no insurance on the boats or the house, and was reportedly not reimbursed by the government. Photo by Mario Tama / Getty Images
A gone fishing sign after Hurricane Katrina
A sign art a property in Pearlington, Mississippi, that was destroyed by Hurricane Katrina. Photo by Mario Tama / Getty Images

Read the full article here

Share This Article
Facebook X Copy Link Print
Previous Article Dead Air Silencers Exhibiting at TacOps East 2025 Dead Air Silencers Exhibiting at TacOps East 2025
Next Article Ammunition Payment Gateways Alternative: Blue Payment Agency CEO on Why He Follows Up on Every Emergency Call Personally Ammunition Payment Gateways Alternative: Blue Payment Agency CEO on Why He Follows Up on Every Emergency Call Personally
Leave a Comment Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Wake up with our popular morning roundup of the day's top blades, firearms and survavial news and updates.

Flying with Guns [Episode 22] – Slight Hiccup at Check-In

August 29, 2025

Cole Fine Guns and Gunsmithing Launches the Cole Exclusive Rizzini BR220 Limited

August 29, 2025

Alaskan Guide Sued for Ripping Off 32 Moose Hunters Has Already Booked Trips for 2025

August 29, 2025

Minneapolis School Shooter Chose Target For Being A Gun-Free Zone

August 29, 2025

Parasite Screwworm Infects Its First American

August 29, 2025

You Might Also Like

TrueTimber® Announces Partnership with Michael Waddell and Bone Collector

TrueTimber® Announces Partnership with Michael Waddell and Bone Collector

Hunting
Families Enjoy Free Youth Fishing Event in Pennsylvania

Families Enjoy Free Youth Fishing Event in Pennsylvania

Hunting
Top 10 Guns Will be the Best CCW gun in 2025 – You'll Regret Not Owning!

Top 10 Guns Will be the Best CCW gun in 2025 – You'll Regret Not Owning!

Hunting
Fishing With Heart: Their Life, My Lens Returns for Season 4

Fishing With Heart: Their Life, My Lens Returns for Season 4

Hunting

2025 © Blade Shopper. All rights reserved.

Helpful Links

  • News
  • Knives
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Tactical
  • Hunting
  • Videos

Resources

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Popuplar

Flying with Guns [Episode 22] – Slight Hiccup at Check-In
Everything You Need to Know About Joining the Air Force
Bournemouth Air Festival: The UK’s Largest Air Festival
We provide daily defense news, benefits information, veteran employment resources, spouse and family resources.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?