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Red Cross worker Dana Goldsmith signals the children to get up and go outside for a fire safety drill. Photo by Joe Coleman/American Red Cross
51st Expeditionary Signal Battalion (ESB) Change of Command ceremony held on Raptor Field, Joint Base Lewis-McChord, WA, on 30 June 2021. COL Bernard Brogan, Reviewing Officer; LTC Joel M. Feltz, Outgoing Commander; LTC Stuart W. Jones, Incoming Commander, CSM Dwayne D. Allen, Command Sergeant Major.
Threat Signal at the House of Blues Hollywood on February 18, 2010 - Photo: Mike Ruiz (Nuclear Blast USA)
With the signals returned from storage one is put to good use. Currently it has to be manually set so is of little use operationally but adds a lot of aesthetic value.
AVT-STOYE LED Bicycle signal
meine Sammlung / my Collection
HD Video: www.youtube.com/watch?v=CkJCpVH_moo
This is a pedestrian signal in crossroad. Red hand shows "stop". There is
no language, but this sign is known by everyone in the US. But when I
arrived US, I did not know what this sign means. Also, I did not know how
to change the signal, because I could not find the button.
51st Expeditionary Signal Battalion (ESB) Change of Command ceremony held on Raptor Field, Joint Base Lewis-McChord, WA, on 30 June 2021. COL Bernard Brogan, Reviewing Officer; LTC Joel M. Feltz, Outgoing Commander; LTC Stuart W. Jones, Incoming Commander, CSM Dwayne D. Allen, Command Sergeant Major.
A home made frabrication. unfornuately the quadrant plate holes were in correct. pluged with M10 and re-drilled and tapped 1BA
From the sign:
"Trees with unusual shapes were often used by Indians as landmarks to identify important trails. This 300 year old Bur Oak (quercus macrocarpa) marked the northernmost point of the portage trail, which connected the Cuyahoga (whose coarse was once much closer to the tree) and Tuscarawas rivers. The Erie, Seneca, Shawnee, Ottawa, Delaware and Mingo tribes traveled to the Ohio River by this route. They removed their canoes from the Cuyahoga River here and carried them overland for eight miles--south to Summit Lake. Later, white settlers used the same signal tree to find their way between the rivers."
While Mom and I sat admiring this tree, a bald eagle circled high in the air above us. We watched until it flew off and became a dark speck in the clear blue sky.
Still dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic, Mom and I took a trip to Cuyahoga Valley to again see the fall color (sadly, not as extravagant as it could have been) and enjoy some time away from home.