View allAll Photos Tagged ladder
Ladder 118's 1990 Seagrave (EX-Ladder 110, EX-Ladder 210, EX-Ladder 258, EX-Ladder 25) serving as Ladder 2.
Ladder 212's 1998 ALF (EX-Ladder 163, EX-Ladder 11) serving as Ladder 2 at what was a 4 Alarm fire at Front St. and Girard Ave. in Fishtown
Ladder 163's 1998 ALF (EX-Ladder 11), serving as Ladder 15. Seen here on Bustleton Avenue at the Frankford Transportation Center.
I mounted two fiberglass ladders to the side of our tool shed. It's nice to get them off the ground and out of the way. Drilling through the shipping container wasn't as bad as I thought it would be, but making enough room on the other side to tighten the nuts was no easy task. I should have used rivets.
© All rights reserved.
Early morning box alarm on the west side. Engines 17,35,40 Ladder 28, Squad 5
Piedmont, AL
2018 E-ONE Typhoon
480gal/20F/1750gpm/75'
Job #141907
Ladder 1 serves citywide.
Piedmont Fire Department:
312 N. Center AVE
Piedmont, AL 36272
Ladder 16 responding to a fire behind Home Depot on Castor Ave. Seen here at Aramingo Ave & Somerset St. Ladder 16 is a 2003 ALF.
Ladder 9's current 1998 ALF (EX-Ladder 24) which will soon be replaced by a new 2010 Spartan on Ladder 9's former 2007 LTI body.
Ladder 118's 1990 Seagrave (EX-Ladder 110, EX-Ladder 210, EX-Ladder 258, EX-Ladder 25) serving as Ladder 2.
Mary Branson's compelling Ladders of Light installation is inspired by ideas of social mobility, equality and generosity. Mary's work both mirrors the grandeur and aspirations inherent in the Cathedral's Gothic architecture, and speaks of the fragility of human society.
Ladder 118's 1990 Seagrave (EX-Ladder 110, EX-Ladder 210, EX-Ladder 258, EX-Ladder 25) serving as Ladder 2.
Ladder 91 of the Lenexa Fire Department (LFD) tucked away in its bay waiting for the next call at Station 91 in Lenexa, Kansas 1-19-2015.
Ladder 7 is a 1992 Seagrave. From the front, it looks strikingly different from Ladder 29. It also has a lower-profile halogen lightbar.
Just a ladder that was across the street from my studio a while back. I liked the texture on the wall.
Some say one should strive for more than he has. Is it worth it?
I guess there should be some balance to it, just like on the ladder. If you fial to keep the balance, you will most probably fall down.
As one wise man once said:
"We sacrifice our health to make money. Then we sacrifice our money to recapture health. And then we are so anxious about the future that we don't enjoy the present. The result being that we do not live in the present or the future. We live as if we are never going to die and then die never really lived..."
DALAI LAMA
Mary Branson's compelling Ladders of Light installation is inspired by ideas of social mobility, equality and generosity. Mary's work both mirrors the grandeur and aspirations inherent in the Cathedral's Gothic architecture, and speaks of the fragility of human society.
In 2009, former Transwestern team member Tommy Van Zandt fell from a ladder while trimming trees in his backyard, leaving him a quadriplegic. Transwestern’s Dallas office united the Dallas real estate community to raise money for his long road of treatments and care, hosting the first “Tommy’s Nite Out” event in June 2009 and raising more than $200,000 for the Van Zandt family. Five years later, with the Van Zandt Family Trust depleted, Transwestern, Hall Financial Group and other commercial real estate professionals banded together once again and on May 22 held the “Tommy’s Nite Out – The Reunion” fundraiser. The goal was to raise $240,000 – enough to cover 12 months of care, and “Tommy’s Nite Out – The Reunion” exceeded this goal, raising a total of $264,919 to date.