Brush fires in February

We had a few nice days of warmth and sunshine, and one guy decided to do some burning early, while another set his wood stove ashes out and forgot about the wind when it came up. First call was on Landon Road, out near my parents, so I decided to forego a nap and drive out to see how bad it was…it was about a block from them and I stayed to shoot some photos for the local newspaper….guy was burning brush piles for his brother he told me, and it got away from him, luckily it stayed on his brother`s property….

02 Arrival

 

…Dave Konys and his crew hit it pretty fast on arrival, with leaf blowers, which you can use quite effectively in grassy fields to blow the fire out….

06 Dave Uses Blower

 

07 Dave Uses Blower

 

08 Dave Uses Blower

 

09 Dave Uses Blower

 

10 Dave Uses Blower

 

…Dave had his hands full with the south side of the fire til Ray joined up with him on the east side….

11 Dave and Ray Blow Out Fire

 

12 Dave and Ray Blow Out Fire

 

I left shortly after and returned home to get a nap in….woke up a couple of hours later by a passing fire truck, Dave`s crew once again, responding to assist Bourbon Fire Department on a brush fire with a barn in danger of catching fire on Strothcamp Lane off Hwy AE. When I arrived behind Bourbon`s second pumper, I found several large round hay bales on fire and initial crews were out in the woods containing the sixty acres of natural cover fire. The farm owner, Norman Ruwwe, was assisting Bourbon`s crew with pulling the bales out away from the stack, with his tractor….

01 Norris Ruwwe on Tractor

 

…and doing a very good job of it I might add….

02 Norris Ruwwe on Tractor

 

…those things are very heavy and when they catch on fire, you have to be very careful in rolling them out, to either extinguish them with alot of water at your disposal, or simply letting them burn out on their own…either way, the danger is getting close to them to get them away from the stack…a tractor with a front end loader or hay spike is a good way of doing so safely, however the downside is one has to eat a lot of smoke…Mr Ruwwe pulled the first few out into the open where firefighters could get ahold of them and push them on out with their pike poles, and then they took over with their crews after he made it very easy for them to get into the stack and pull the others out……

03 Dozen Round Bales Burning

 

04  Bales Flare Up

 

06  Bales Flare Up

 

08  Bales Flare Up

 

Sullivan`s initial response was with a brush truck, pumper, and tanker….

09 Pumper 814  & Tanker 813

 

Beaufort Leslie Fire District also responded with a brush truck and crew, and once Sullivan`s brush crew came out of the woods, everyone joined together to work on the bales….

11 BFD and SFD Team Up

 

12  BFD and SFD Team Up

 

15 Purtting Water on Some Bales

 

18  Eric Works Bales Fire

 

…it`s much easier to let them burn up if you have a good burn area around them, as there was in this case, and all you have to do is help them burn by pulling off layers to get to the unburned hay as Eric is seen doing here….

21  Eric Works Bales Fire

 

22  Eric Works Bales Fire

 

23 Eric and Chase Work Bales

 

…all in all, it was a good team effort by all those on the scene…after all, twelve large round bales is no easy feat, so everyone involved had a good workout….

26 Team Effort

 

27 Team Effort

 

…and even managed to create some art while fighting fire….

28 Team Effort Art

 

30 Team Effort Art

 

35 Art

 

34 Team Effort

 

38 Bale Art

 

39 Team Effort

 

41 Team Effort

 

 

 

St Clair Historical Museum Consumed by Fire

A week ago Sunday night, I was sitting here watching tv when I heard Central County Fire Alarm tone out St Clair Fire District for a possible house fire in the area of their Main Fire Station…a few minutes later, as firefighters arrived at their Main Station, they apparently looked half a block down the street behind their station and from what they saw, they struck a second alarm working Commercial Structure Fire. I grabbed my camera and scanner,  as Missy and I headed for the truck and headed east to St Clair. I also heard Sullivan Pumper 854 dispatched by Franklin County to assist St Clair by moving up to their Station One and standing by, in case they received other fire calls. As I passed under our east overpass, I observed 854 at the stop sign on top of the overpass…a move up is usually a casual, non emergency drive to the fire district you are moving up to. 

Missy and I arrived at St Clair`s Fire Station One about fifteen minutes later, twenty minutes after St Clair arrived on scene and struck their second alarm…I found a parking spot and left Missy to guard the truck, grabbed my camera and walked to the scene, half a block behind the Fire Station. As I walked up on the scene, I came upon a couple of St Clair firefighter friends, Dale Sullivan and Brian Hinson,  visited with them a bit, and they gave me some background on the fire.

This was the St Clair Historical Museum, the two story heavy wood frame construction building was believed to be approximately 125 years old, and it was obvious there was a lot of heat and fire trapped under the corruguated metal roof on the second floor….

02 Soon After Arrival

 

…as you can see in the image above. there is a breach from the roofline down to the ground along the wall, and within a few minutes, flames broke out near the second floor level….

06 Fire Vents N Side at Roofline

…the firefighter walking across the street in the image above with the white helmet, is Les Crews, St Clair`s new Fire Chief, who came on board around the first of the year…Les is a great guy and has about forty years of firefighting and command experience, getting his start with St Clair around the same time I started with Sullivan. Soon after the flames vented the sidewall, firefighters scrambled to re-position a hoseline to knock it back down….

08 FFs Begin Aggressive Attack

 

…and you see St Clair firefighters climbing up on the porch roof to access the upper story windows, to knock out the glass panes which would enable Union`s Ladder pipe to spray a heavy volume of water inside the front of the building….soon after, St Clair`s Ladder Truck positioned near the back of the structure, and Union`s Ladder Truck positioned near the front of the building, to prepare for a massive surround and drown operation, what they call an exterior attack.

11 Trying to Get a Foothold

 

14 Fire Building Up Once Again

On their arrival, St Clair firefighters entered the ground floor of the building and climbed the stairs, only to be met with extreme heat and heavy fire buildup on the second floor, which forced them back down the stairs and out of the building…the age of the building and metal roof worked against them in providing heavy fuel loads and holding in the heat and fire…an exterior attack was the only option left to fight the fire. As the fire began to build again, a couple of St Clair firefighters climbed their seventy five foot stick and tried to find some spots to access the fire with their ladder pipe stream….

15 Fire Building Up Once Again

 

15 Firefighters On Ladder

 

18 Firefighters On Ladder

 

…and even though firefighters were up there for a bit, they were unable to find any access points for the ladder pipe stream….while up there, the color of the smoke changed quite a few times, depending greatly on what was burning inside the museum….

21 FFs on Ladder...Smoke Shifts

 

20 FFs on Ladder...Smoke Shifts

 

…and then they came back down the ladder….

24 FFs Coming Down Ladder

 

…and their ladder was re-positioned and lowered to the side of the building, possibly to aid in the attack on the side of the building where the fire vented earlier….

26 Still Trying to Access Fire

 

…and in the next image, you see Union`s Ladder Truck positioned at the front of the building and directing their Ladder Pipe Stream into the front of the building through the second floor windows….

27 Union Ladder Hits Front of Bldg

 

…within a few minutes of the Ladder Pipe assisted exterior attack at the front of the building, heavy fire vented out the back of the building at the roofline…..

30 Fire Blows Out Back of Bldg

32 Heavy Fire Vents Roof at Rear

 

36 Heavy Fire Vents Rear Roofline

 

37 Heavy Fire Vents...Ladders Flow

 

40 Heavy Fire Vents...Ladders Flow

 

42A Trying to Regain Control

 

…pretty soon the fire began growing as it vented out the back wall and roofline, and within a few moments resembled a blowtorch and even sounded like one…I was standing in a vacant lot across the street talking to the Electric Lineman who had just finished disconnecting the power at the pole behind the building…he would have been real close to those flames had he still been there and we could easily feel the heat coming from those flames where we were standing, approximately fifty feet away…..believe me, he was very glad he had finished the task when he did….

43 Trying to Regain Control

 

47 Heavy Fire Blows Out Back

 

48 Heavy Fire Blows Out Back

 

…you can see the ground hoseline streamline coming up from the left and aimed up and over the heavy fire, to give the Ladder operators some protection as they realized the need to re-position the ladder and hit this growing body of fire….the next image shows the fire coming out like a blowtorch….

51 Heavy Fire Blows Out Back

 

52 Heavy Fire Blows Out Back

 

..and as the Ladder moves around, a ground hoseline crew positions behind the Ladder Truck to assist in hitting the heavy fire as well….

53 FFs Concentrate on Rear Flames

 

55 FFs Concentrate on Rear Flames

 

56 FFs Concentrate on Rear Flames

 

59 FFs Concentrate on Rear Flames

 

61 FFs Concentrate on Rear Flames

 

64 FFs Concentrate on Rear Flames

 

65 FFs Concentrate on Rear Flames

 

67 Hose Crew Fights Fire

 

68 Ladder Crew Fighting Flames

 

…within a few minutes, fire started breaching the metal roof all over the place, front, back, and sides…

70 Fire Vents Front & Back

 

72 Fire Vents Front & Back

 

73 Ladder Pipe Attack

….everyone on the fireground and everyone watching figured it was all over and just a matter of time now…because most exterior attacks do not turn out well at all and most result in one thing only….a burned out shell of a building….but all of the firefighters on scene persisted and stayed the course, putting up a great fight, never letting up front, back, and all around….

75 Flames Flare Back Up

 

76 Union Ladder in Operation Again

 

80 Flames Again Venting

 

81 Flames Again Venting

 

82 St Clair Ladder Operating

 

…and within thirty minutes, this fire was brought under control and crews were able to begin mopping up, and much more than the shell of the building remained standing….

84 Under Control & Salvaging Records

Firefighters were also able to enter the back door off the sidewalk and remove some file cabinets as well, trying to salvage some records for the museum staff, however many physical historical items and displays were a total loss.  

Firefighters from Union, Boles, Pacific, Cedar Hill, and Sullivan assisted St Clair with the operation and were on scene for some time throughout the night. 

 

 

 

 

Sunbeams in February

Sunbeams are another of my favorite subjects to photograph and view…I was on my way home from a shed fire last week on Erni Road, when I looked to the west and saw these beautiful ” Windows to Heaven ” forming up…and stopped on a hilltop to photograph them…

Erni Road 0220

 

…I then drove to Cracker Barrel to get some supper before I left for work and as I made the turn off the overpass to the parking lot, there were the ” windows ” in front of me once again….

West Overpass 0220

 

…that is the lighter version and I prefer the darker version below….

West Overpass 0220A

Sunsets in January and February

We also had some spectacular sunsets during January and February, I`ll let the beauty of them speak for themselves….starting with my favorite tree in the City Park near the pool….

0116 City Park Tree

 

0121 B  City Park View\

0121 E  City Park View

 

0121 F  City Park View

 

0121 G  Elmont Bridge

 

0121 H  West Springfield Rd

 

0121 J  Carden Tower

 

0121 N  FF Overpass

 

0121 M  FF Overpass

 

0121 O  FF Landon Road

 

0121 P  FF Landon Road High Lines

 

0121 R  Landon Road High Lines

 

0121 S  Landon Road Pond

 

0121 V  Landon Road Pond

 

0120 FF Overpass

 

 

0126 Viburnum 4

 

0126 Viburnum 5A

 

0126 Viburnum 6

 

0126 Viburnum 9

 

0202 WOW 2

 

0202 WOW 4

 

0202 WOW 9  Mobil

 

0202 WOW 10A  Mobil

 

0202 WOW 11B  CB

 

0202 WOW 13  B & B

 

0202 WOW 14 Baymont

 

…and these last three were taken on my way back home from shooting a brush fire, great location for reflection images as you can see….

0227 Erni Road Pond

 

0227 Erni Road Pond 3

 

Gorgeous Sunrise in January

Well as usual, I find myself a bit behind on my blog site and really no excuses for it…I can`t blame it on work or rockhunting or snow or anything really, so I`ll try and catch up on several photo opportunities in the past couple of months, tonight. 

I came home from work the morning of January 14th, and believe me when I left it was still dark, but as I drive home, I always check the sunrise to see if it looks like it`s going to be photo worthy…this one kind of snuck up on me, as I didn`t notice anything about it til I was a few miles from home, and boy, it sure looked GREAT then. I got home, grabbed my camera after letting Missy outside in the backyard, and walked out into the street to photograph it looking south….

Elmont Road 0114

 

Elmont Road 0114 C

 

Elmont Road 0114 D