View allAll Photos Tagged ladder
A ladder that enables descent to the underground cable pathways. It was being used by a crew from Bezeq, Israel's telephone company, as they installed new infrastructure to enable very high-speed Internet
Sometimes I'm simply dazzled by how beautiful Taj has become. She's much more playful too. Like some of you mentioned under her last photo - she's very graceful, with extra long legs, tail, ears, etc. and these contribute to her grace. Do catch the tip of her tail here in this one. (there's a note for it)
Her best pal, Kita, a.k.a. Captain Kitchen is next. Watch out!
Ladder Company #9 responds to a call on St. Marks Place at First Avenue. I am on my way to a burlesque show a few blocks up, and stop to watch the response. There's a smell of smoke in the air.
There doesn't seem to be any actual fire, but the response is full and ready - that smell of smoke has the whole street curious. The firemen raise the ladder and break a few top-floor windows. The company goes in both through the apartment side and through the window, and when I leave some time later they are still in the apartment, taking out the broken windows and presumably dealing with whatever was making the smoke.
Ladder sitting in the basement of the Loveland Feed and Grain building. I liked the different angles, and lighting that could be captured from this one site.
That is when Brent wasn't busy walking in front of my shot =}
this is a picture of the ladder that has been in front of our stairs for the whole summer. i liked the texture of the rope against the metal and the wood in the background.
This was my first attempt at photographing a random object with artistic flare. It was taken with a 3 megapixel Kodak easyshare.
Well, glad I kept snapping. Here's the Ladder. The picture was taken in Glostrup, a suburb of Copenhagen, Denmark.
Tűz a Mammut bevásárló központban (2010. április 28., Budapest, Magyarország) / Fire in the Mammut shopping center (2010.04.28., Budapest, Hungary)
Just an old ladder really. It made me think though: it's just a ladder, but who's climbed it? How many people? How many years has it been there? How many tides and waves have licked at its rungs?
Ladders were provided to get around additional obstacles, though where the ladders were broken some scrambling was required.