We have been staying busy with fires in our next due area this week. We had a house fire that was pretty much limited to one room and its contents on Tuesday. And today, we were initially dispatched to a garage fire.By the time, we were in route, it was changed to a barn fire. The barn just happens to be located across
from a garage!
I would post some pictures of Tuesday's fire but the photos from today are much more interesting. What we were told when we got there was that the fire was in a beam. So that meant as the second truck crew, we got to do the destruction
and overhaul.
There really was not that much fire there but the barn was in pretty bad shape to start with in the first place. We did a little creative re-arranging of the stall that was involved. We also shoveled out some hay. The guys from one of the other engines were finally able to get up on the second floor of the barn and move some the stuff off the beams that we were interested in. And just moving the weight helped things quite a bit. The beams moved when the weight was taken off of them.
The best part of this fire for me was that the barn was home to some pygmy goats
and two llamas!
Yes, I can go
to a fire and find some thing fiber related. I am going to try and go up to this barn at some point and get some better photos
of the goats and the
llamas.
Added later - I have added the photos from this week's fire plus another one from last month to my albums. I will be adding descriptions to all of the photos slowly over the next week or so. The funny thing is that all of the fires have been in our next due's area.
And here is the description from IAFF Local 3666 website on the fire - On Thursday February 23rd 2006 just after lunch, Box alarm 22-01 was struck for the house fire accross from 11026 Hessong Bridge Road. First arriving E221 went on scene with smoke showing from a barn to the rear of the house. The crew from E221 stretched a 200' 3" leader line back the drive way and began an interior attack. Interior crews found a small fire in the alpha-bravo corner of the structure with extension into the second floor. The fire was knocked in approximately 10 minutes, and the crew from T1 checked for hot spots with a thermal imager. Units cleared in about an hour. Pictures soon
Your life is so much more exciting than mine! Maybe the llamas will share some of their coats with you!
Posted by: Gracie | February 25, 2006 at 09:49 AM