Posted on 12/28/2019 10:57:39 PM PST by robowombat
I wonder what a fire hydrant goes for :)
Good images and videos of this fire.
House has no curb appeal. Looks like a apartment complex.
Those water haulers are usually equipped with vacuum pumps or directly hose up to the river with strainer.
I guess maybe they did not want to get mud on the house or something. Just does not make sense to me
Is this the one owned by a Hearst relative?
Boy i don’t know anything about this stuff.
I just wonder if the owners ever thought of that.
There are so many where I live that it never occurred to me.
But when I went to a house in PA regularly, I never even considered something like that.
Boy those were the woods in Saw Creek in PA.
I wonder how they would have put out a fire there.
The owner needs a refund on his property taxes
Should have used the swimming pool(s) for water.
Anyone know if the house was listed on the National Register?
A hundreds years ago, Mechanical Engineers were the highest paid profession. Lawyers were well paid, but far from the highest paid.
Not today.
They used 10,000 gallons of water to put out the fire according to the article. Had to run down the street to get it.
Anyone see the problem with this story buy looking at the photo?
There’s a swimming pool in the back yard with probably 20,000 gallons in it, right there to pump for the fire.
...unless the pool was empty
December in Concord? Pool was almost certainly empty. BTW, my morning commute is mostly through Concord, by back roads, but nowhere near this. Concord is swampy and much of it is subject to flooding in spring. The current version of the Old North Bridge is about the fourth or fifth, the others long since washed away.
Where I live is more rural, and we have no, zero, fire hydrants. Pumpers draw water from ponds, streams and swamps. There are even strainers near the roadside for them to draw from in places.
A few years ago I was talking with the chief of a very well equipped and trained VFD. He told me they had a mutual aid call 20 miles away in the more urban area. Thats when they realized none of their guys had ever connected to a hydrant.
Part of the reason many rural homes have ponds is for fire control. Built in water supply
Near my house. My house is a couple of hundred yards to behind the woods.
The white pipes are for the fire department. My town of 5,000 did not come to Concord’s aid, but we only have one pumper. The town to south, in the line of sight direction in that view, Stow, did. We were probably covering for them and West Acton.
I have a trout pond right outside the house. Those trout can easily give their lives for the sake of my burning house. I wont even ask for their permission.
The smoke house would be busy the next day, though...
6500 sqft is considered a mansion? Mines just over 3200 and we just call it a house, and I’m still tripping over dogs and cats.
Needed more buckets.
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