Always good to see a large response to an active fire. Never know what may be found when crews first arrive. Easy enough to clear extra crews once the scene has been assessed for resources and / or the fire is under control.
I saw that on the news. The inhabitant was injured; I hope not too seriously. I built a tiny house for my sister-in-law using a Tuff Shed, and made it as fireproof as I could. She smokes though, and isn't the tidiest person, so I am constantly concerned about her safety.
Another great catch! Hope the person recovers okay...When I lived in Seattle, esp. in Ballard, I noticed fires seem to "cluster" in certain neighborhoods; e.g. I recall several fires in Greenwood about 1999-2000...the most spectacular blazes I ever saw were the Sunset Hotel fire, April 2000, and the old Polson Bldg. downtown (Columbia and Western) in the Summer of '74. It caught fire again in '96; arson both times...
Thanks Craig, I hope they do too! I've only been in Seattle since 2012 or so, but I remember hearing about the Greenwood arsons in 2009. I'm really hoping the two fires yesterday were a coincidence, and not the start of another arson spree...
@@lucaslaughing Hopefully, no more arson sprees...I was in Seattle when the infamous Paul Keller was starting several fires every night; the most serious was the Four Freedoms House retirement home, where three residents lost their lives. This was in Autumn, 1992. One evening, after I'd gotten home from a night class, I heard sirens, and sure enough, I could see flames across the street. Fortunately, the fire was started in trash next to a detached garage, and SFD had it knocked down in seconds, but that night we ALL had our porch lights on, and brought our recycling containers indoors!
@@craigmclean8260 I left Seattle in 1996 (now retired in Central Arkansas) and I remember that too. There was a made for TV movie about that but can’t remember when it was aired.
We have an on-going "issue" with homeless encampments and from time to time there are "rubbish fires" at these places. Last year, one was pretty serious, and half of the encampment was destroyed. There's a push by some to get these "tiny houses" built in order to solve the encampment issue, but the city continues to stall. In part I think something like this happening may be a concern. If the city provides space for them and supports it, if there is some sort of calamity, then perhaps they could be held liable.
Seattle fd your service and time and time and efforts are deeply appreciated thanks to everyone who responds keep them safe out there job well done you should be proud appreciate you guys thanks ! Joe
I love videos seeing the crew show up to the fire, Pre-arrivals...thats a major response , beautiful at the 0:23 mark seeing them come through the smoke
Right? I really like how that turned out. I agree, that rider should have given the SPD unit more space, especially considering how busy the scene was.
Nice having 30 or so FF on scene to essentially overwhelm the fire. Irritating that drivers absent mindedly drive over hose, which should be tested before reuse. One time after battling a house fire for 4+ hours I was at, 700' of 4" supply was drained and laid out in the street ready to be loaded after the engine had finished overhaul. A resident got in their car and backed over all the hose. Firefighters were yelling at the driver to stop so the hose could be moved. Nope, over all the hose they went. The chief in charge told the cop to give the driver as many tickets as possible. Ended up rolling the hose up and taking it back to the station and loading hose from the rack😞
We don't answer those calls anymore. We leave that to animal control at least in my city. But if your pets are caught in a fire we do attempt to rescue them if possible and if they're hurt we treat them just like we do the human patients
*These here aren't nothing like the Hillbilly's from our parts of the woods, Things like this just don't happen here in the great state of Kentucky - We limit 1 man per Pick um up Truck and that's it and folks are expected to have there own hoses ready*
I totally support all the fire departments all the way home and that is straight facts 💯 much love and support for all the fire departments straight facts
How many firefighters does it take to fight a tiny house fire ?? Omg must of been a slow boring day Dam my volunteer company had one the other day it took one pumper one chief that's it no other trucks rolled everyone else was standing by in quarters we was on scene for 36 mins .
Yep, exactly - there were lots of exposures to protect. The fire at the very end is from a different incident - I just use it as my outro video. Thanks for watching!
Shout-out to the driver of the light-colored SUV on the side street who turned around at @1:06 rather than running over the just-laid, not pressurized, supply line from the pumper.
I don't know about the tip load - my guess is SFD goes with the tandem axle to spread out the weight on our road/bridges, but I'm not sure. Thanks for watching!
@@lucaslaughing As the old saying goes, "beauty is in the eye of the beholder". The Quest almost managed to make the 1st-gen Pierce Quantum look attractive. Almost. However, if it was last call at the ol' fireman's pub and the choices for who I had to take back to the barn to get me through the overnight shift were between those two or that butt-ugly plug-and-play monstrosity that Rosenbauer gave to LAFD for testing, I'd pick one of the Qs any day of the week and twice on Sunday. I will say this about the Quest: That aggressively raked windshield provided excellent visibility. Looked stupid from the outside but worked great from the driver's seat. Keep up the good work, Lucas!
It's a typical response to a house fire that may have more than one building around it. My city has a lot of apartments and the response you see on this videos about the same thing that we sent for one apartment fire. Because we know if we don't spend enough people and that thing gets out of hand the whole project could burn. That has happened here.
Would like to have seen the police block the road in both directions to ensure firefighter safety. We all know what the flashing lights do to drivers concentration.
Thank you so much for pre Arrival. The officer asking a question that was NOT Fire related. Great shot of that. Only wish he had his (RED) helmet on. You did great on this Filming my friend. Did the BIG Rescue come on this call. It's interesting to see Seattle Fire with the utility type pickup, with that great pop out cover, being the (IC) just guessing till the Batt Chief got on the scene. I have to get you to my Home in south King county, see my Restoration of my 1971 SeaGrave. It's a work in progress. I filled all the (Air-Pack) compartments with Different size fire extinguishers. It's my Baby. Loved the SeaGrave cab over Design from that era.
@@lucaslaughing Thank you for asking. I have two videos to load up of a parade for Kids in my wife's old home area. My wife call her the ( Admiral) she was controlling the Federal "Q" and the Bell. I was operating my "TWO Electronic Siren. One is the old school Federal PA 300 with the hipper "YELP". I will load them up. Then text you when done. Again thank you for Asking. She the SeaGrave is my baby.
Yep, like Nubby G said, all tillers except for Rescue 1 Aerial - and I'm not sure R1A still gets used now that they have a new walk-in rescue rig. Thanks for watching!
I know most fire department run, three person crews to save money, but you look at a scene like this or so many rigs have to show up to get enough personnel on the fire you’ve got the wonder if it’s worth it. Excellent video. Thanks.
Firetrucks, as expensive as they are, are cheaper than paying firefighters. If they could run one man companies, they would. I think someplace actually did. Someplace in the mid-west.
When I was on a Kansas and a Missouri volunteer departments it was usually just a point of getting an engine to the scene and worry about crews as they rolled in. Both departments had mini pumpers with a 350 and a 300 gallon water supply and I had myself assigned to both of them. The hope was for me and hopefully someone else to get on scene with the mini and hope the tankers or bigger engines arrived before my tank ran dry. Anywhere you can think of that held water was open game and we drained many swimming pools and lowered the water level of some farm ponds. Growing up near the pine barrens,, I was just comfortable with the brush trucks so the mini's was in my comfort zone. They got to the point where they went home with me so if there was a call it was a direct response to the scene. We just never knew who or if anyone else was going to respond and many times we had 5 or 6 firefighters from 4 or 5 departments and we did things with those mini pumpers that they were not designed to do but when you respond with a mini and mutual aid responds with a service truck or brush truck or a personal vehicle to a structure fire you do what you have to do. Many times I was on scene alone for 10 or 15 minutes or more and as long as 30 minutes waiting for backup but at least we had water flowing on the fire even if it was coming from the horse troughs thru my porta pump.We did get the counties money's worth from those used mini's.
It was dispatched as a structure fire, and based on the amount of smoke I'm sure there were multiple callers so they probably didn't know how many structures were involved. They also had a patient so that takes extra resources. They did start returning units pretty fast - you can see E16 clearing the scene in this video.
with probably only three fire fighter per rig, that’s what it takes to staff a structure fire. The rigs aren’t necessarily needed, but the people in the are.
Thank you for watching, I appreciate it! I was going to say I hope it warms up for you soon, but I just looked at the 10 day forecast and it looks like it's going to get worse 😬. Good luck!
Typical for a working house fire. 3 engines, 2 trucks, 1 battalion chief, medical unit. From that point it is the battalion chiefs call for additional units.
The big flames at the very end of the video are from a different incident - I just use that as my video outro. This one probably was too heavy a response based on the size of the structure, but Seattle FD tends to frontload the response with a lot of resources, and then quickly scale back if they aren't needed. Thanks for watching!
I hope so too! Not sure why the dude was in the street - it almost looked like he was trying to tell them where the fire was, as if it wasn't obvious from the huge cloud of smoke... Thanks for watching!
Can you enlighten me on the reason for such a large response? I know it was an encampment from reading other comments, but was there a huge risk for fire spread?
Better to have more than enough than not enough, They know the area and risk of the fire spreading. My great uncle was a FIRE CHEF in an area that had DUPONT CORNING and a very large lumber mill.
It was a "tiny house" encampment, so it was a bunch of wood structures very close together, and also right up against a multi-story, multi-family dwelling. That plus the fact that there was a burn patient was the main reason for a full response.
I listened to this response on the scanner and it was dispatched as a tiny house fire with exposure, which means other structures were in danger. The person who was in the tiny home was said to have "extensive burns."
Always good to see a large response to an active fire. Never know what may be found when crews first arrive. Easy enough to clear extra crews once the scene has been assessed for resources and / or the fire is under control.
Yep, exactly - thanks for watching!
Exactly right. But you get some people here who would disagree with that.
I saw that on the news. The inhabitant was injured; I hope not too seriously. I built a tiny house for my sister-in-law using a Tuff Shed, and made it as fireproof as I could. She smokes though, and isn't the tidiest person, so I am constantly concerned about her safety.
Yeah, that sounds like a stressful situation with your sister-in-law; good of you to build it and make it as safe as possible. Thanks for watching!
Why are you worried? If they want to live like that it's on them!
Occupant (structure). Not inhabitant (land)
@@smittyj23 Because they're family???
Another great catch! Hope the person recovers okay...When I lived in Seattle, esp. in Ballard, I noticed fires seem to "cluster" in certain neighborhoods; e.g. I recall several fires in Greenwood about 1999-2000...the most spectacular blazes I ever saw were the Sunset Hotel fire, April 2000, and the old Polson Bldg. downtown (Columbia and Western) in the Summer of '74. It caught fire again in '96; arson both times...
Thanks Craig, I hope they do too! I've only been in Seattle since 2012 or so, but I remember hearing about the Greenwood arsons in 2009. I'm really hoping the two fires yesterday were a coincidence, and not the start of another arson spree...
@@lucaslaughing Hopefully, no more arson sprees...I was in Seattle when the infamous Paul Keller was starting several fires every night; the most serious was the Four Freedoms House retirement home, where three residents lost their lives. This was in Autumn, 1992. One evening, after I'd gotten home from a night class, I heard sirens, and sure enough, I could see flames across the street. Fortunately, the fire was started in trash next to a detached garage, and SFD had it knocked down in seconds, but that night we ALL had our porch lights on, and brought our recycling containers indoors!
@@craigmclean8260 I left Seattle in 1996 (now retired in Central Arkansas) and I remember that too. There was a made for TV movie about that but can’t remember when it was aired.
We have an on-going "issue" with homeless encampments and from time to time there are "rubbish fires" at these places. Last year, one was pretty serious, and half of the encampment was destroyed. There's a push by some to get these "tiny houses" built in order to solve the encampment issue, but the city continues to stall. In part I think something like this happening may be a concern. If the city provides space for them and supports it, if there is some sort of calamity, then perhaps they could be held liable.
Seattle fd your service and time and time and efforts are deeply appreciated thanks to everyone who responds keep them safe out there job well done you should be proud appreciate you guys thanks ! Joe
So proud of my city, Seattle. We love our first responders. You're the best
Awesome footage Lucas-great catch of this incident. That truly was a busy day for the SFD.
Thank you Jeff! Yeah, this was an unexpectedly busy day - I'm glad I was home!
I love videos seeing the crew show up to the fire, Pre-arrivals...thats a major response , beautiful at the 0:23 mark seeing them come through the smoke
Great couple of catches and on scene footage! I really hope everyone is alright in the end.
Thank you - I hope so too!
HUUUUGEEEE
Looks like a huge cluster...must have been a slow day...be safe
It's a cluster f*** if the civilians don't get out of the way. We know what we're doing for the most part.
That “huge response” is due to this call being in a heavy commercial district
Makes a lot of sense. This is literally the worst place to have a blaze, so many people and combustibles. Great comment.
Lots of shiny red trucks with flashing lights and loud sirens. Wow, wonder if there was a fire somewhere? I didn't see any.
Did you watch to the end
firetrucks driving through smoke looks really cool lol
Also at 2:58 that motorcycle is riding really close to the police car. Seems dangerous for him
Right? I really like how that turned out. I agree, that rider should have given the SPD unit more space, especially considering how busy the scene was.
Big response due to exposure of surrounding buildings
Yep, those tiny houses are pretty close together. Thanks for watching!
Nice having 30 or so FF on scene to essentially overwhelm the fire.
Irritating that drivers absent mindedly drive over hose, which should be tested before reuse.
One time after battling a house fire for 4+ hours I was at, 700' of 4" supply was drained and laid out in the street ready to be loaded after the engine had finished overhaul. A resident got in their car and backed over all the hose. Firefighters were yelling at the driver to stop so the hose could be moved. Nope, over all the hose they went. The chief in charge told the cop to give the driver as many tickets as possible. Ended up rolling the hose up and taking it back to the station and loading hose from the rack😞
The odd not see the police officer blocking traffic great video
Thanks for watching!
Terrible traffic control. Sideways and stop all the traffic.
Meanwhile, on the other side of town a cat is stuck in a tree and there are no firemen to rescue the cat.
We don't answer those calls anymore. We leave that to animal control at least in my city. But if your pets are caught in a fire we do attempt to rescue them if possible and if they're hurt we treat them just like we do the human patients
*These here aren't nothing like the Hillbilly's from our parts of the woods, Things like this just don't happen here in the great state of Kentucky - We limit 1 man per Pick um up Truck and that's it and folks are expected to have there own hoses ready*
🤣🤣🤣
1:49 Thought that was a missle for a second hahhahahahha
LOL, Seattle isn't *that* dangerous 😂
It has been a while since I have been to a Smokey working house fire LOL the last smokey working fire i was at was in the 5th batt's for that 2-11
Yeah, this one was super smoky - I was glad for the zoom on my camera so I could keep my distance from it!
the fact AP media has put this video in his Short Humor Videos playlist:
So beautiful to see all those hero’s comin in to save and help people ❤❤❤❤
I agree - thanks for watching!
I couldn't believe they let cars drive down the street were the fire trucks were responding to the fire
Yeah, it took them a while to get the street closed off, and this is one of the major north-south routes through this part of the city.
That is so awesome
The real tragedy here is that Camaro at 2:00 , what the actual?!
I totally support all the fire departments all the way home and that is straight facts 💯 much love and support for all the fire departments straight facts
For sure - thanks for watching!
@@lucaslaughing u are very welcome and I will always watch your videos and that is straight facts 💯 and much love and support straight facts 💯
@@malcolmgardner5292 .My Facts may be a little twisted at times but by golly still facts I tell ya. twisted facts are the best facts
I could be because there is family housing and other buildings (multistory )so close and if it caught on fire it it would be a mess
How many firefighters does it take to fight a tiny house fire ?? Omg must of been a slow boring day Dam my volunteer company had one the other day it took one pumper one chief that's it no other trucks rolled everyone else was standing by in quarters we was on scene for 36 mins .
You don't know the exact circumstances of that fire and there were multiple exposures in the area. But good job on your end
All of that equipment to keep the surrounding area safe. Such a big fire for a little shack!
Yep, exactly - there were lots of exposures to protect. The fire at the very end is from a different incident - I just use it as my outro video. Thanks for watching!
Shout-out to the driver of the light-colored SUV on the side street who turned around at @1:06 rather than running over the just-laid, not pressurized, supply line from the pumper.
Good eye - thanks for watching (and sorry for the late reply)!
Do those tandem axle aerials have a monster tip load? Seattle seems to have a bunch of them.
I don't know about the tip load - my guess is SFD goes with the tandem axle to spread out the weight on our road/bridges, but I'm not sure. Thanks for watching!
The Young Pride Landers from The Lion Guard symbolized firefighters with royal shields and fire trucks with mopeds!
Awesome to see firefighters arriving on scene to a fire.
I agree - thanks for watching!
@@lucaslaughing you're welcome
1:01 what truck company manufacturer is that? I love the bug eye windows lol
That beauty is a 2008 E-One Quest. Thanks for watching!
@@lucaslaughing As the old saying goes, "beauty is in the eye of the beholder". The Quest almost managed to make the 1st-gen Pierce Quantum look attractive. Almost. However, if it was last call at the ol' fireman's pub and the choices for who I had to take back to the barn to get me through the overnight shift were between those two or that butt-ugly plug-and-play monstrosity that Rosenbauer gave to LAFD for testing, I'd pick one of the Qs any day of the week and twice on Sunday. I will say this about the Quest: That aggressively raked windshield provided excellent visibility. Looked stupid from the outside but worked great from the driver's seat. Keep up the good work, Lucas!
My goodness. It looks like the entire Seattle fire department was there. 😲
Lol, Seattle has a big department, so this was just a portion of it. Thanks for watching!
It's a typical response to a house fire that may have more than one building around it.
My city has a lot of apartments and the response you see on this videos about the same thing that we sent for one apartment fire.
Because we know if we don't spend enough people and that thing gets out of hand the whole project could burn.
That has happened here.
@@rolandmiller5456 Understood!
Omg I love the T9 ladder how many do you guys have like that I'm from Newark NJ by the way
SFD has 12 ladder companies - all running tillers like that one. Thanks for watching!
Tolles Video, danke! Gab es Probleme mit der Wasserversorgung?
Thank you! No water supply problems, they just had to go about one block away for the nearest hydrant.
@@lucaslaughing Ah, ok. Dankeschön
Must have been a favourite resident of Seattle, due to the turnout.
Would like to have seen the police block the road in both directions to ensure firefighter safety. We all know what the flashing lights do to drivers concentration.
That’s a lot of trucks for a small house fire holy smokes
Yeah, it sure was. I think it was a combo of numerous exposures, plus one burn victim. Thanks for watching!
Nice catches that’s crazy what model is E18?
Thanks! Engine 18 is a 2008 E-One Quest. She's a beauty, if something of an acquired taste 😂
Thank you so much for pre Arrival. The officer asking a question that was NOT Fire related. Great shot of that. Only wish he had his (RED) helmet on. You did great on this Filming my friend. Did the BIG Rescue come on this call. It's interesting to see Seattle Fire with the utility type pickup, with that great pop out cover, being the (IC) just guessing till the Batt Chief got on the scene. I have to get you to my Home in south King county, see my Restoration of my 1971 SeaGrave. It's a work in progress. I filled all the (Air-Pack) compartments with Different size fire extinguishers. It's my Baby. Loved the SeaGrave cab over Design from that era.
Thanks so much for watching! Do you have any videos of your restoration? It sounds like an awesome project.
@@lucaslaughing
Thank you for asking. I have two videos to load up of a parade for Kids in my wife's old home area. My wife call her the ( Admiral) she was controlling the Federal "Q" and the Bell. I was operating my "TWO Electronic Siren. One is the old school Federal PA 300 with the hipper "YELP". I will load them up. Then text you when done. Again thank you for Asking. She the SeaGrave is my baby.
So did you ever get the final score?
Lol, yeah, the Hawks ended up losing to SF, 23-41.
Nice! Does Seattle have any non tiller trucks or all tillers?
All tillers except 1 tower special response
Yep, like Nubby G said, all tillers except for Rescue 1 Aerial - and I'm not sure R1A still gets used now that they have a new walk-in rescue rig. Thanks for watching!
I know most fire department run, three person crews to save money, but you look at a scene like this or so many rigs have to show up to get enough personnel on the fire you’ve got the wonder if it’s worth it. Excellent video. Thanks.
Firetrucks, as expensive as they are, are cheaper than paying firefighters. If they could run one man companies, they would. I think someplace actually did. Someplace in the mid-west.
@@komohale3522 Duluth, MN had a 1 man company for the longest time on Park Point. They closed it sometime after 2005.
When I was on a Kansas and a Missouri volunteer departments it was usually just a point of getting an engine to the scene and worry about crews as they rolled in. Both departments had mini pumpers with a 350 and a 300 gallon water supply and I had myself assigned to both of them. The hope was for me and hopefully someone else to get on scene with the mini and hope the tankers or bigger engines arrived before my tank ran dry. Anywhere you can think of that held water was open game and we drained many swimming pools and lowered the water level of some farm ponds. Growing up near the pine barrens,, I was just comfortable with the brush trucks so the mini's was in my comfort zone. They got to the point where they went home with me so if there was a call it was a direct response to the scene.
We just never knew who or if anyone else was going to respond and many times we had 5 or 6 firefighters from 4 or 5 departments and we did things with those mini pumpers that they were not designed to do but when you respond with a mini and mutual aid responds with a service truck or brush truck or a personal vehicle to a structure fire you do what you have to do. Many times I was on scene alone for 10 or 15 minutes or more and as long as 30 minutes waiting for backup but at least we had water flowing on the fire even if it was coming from the horse troughs thru my porta pump.We did get the counties money's worth from those used mini's.
Any coverage left for the rest of the city?
They got wind free donuts would be getting passed out
Yes there is. Any sensible questions?
Why the huge turnout? Were they afraid of exposures? It seemed like an equipment overkill.
It was dispatched as a structure fire, and based on the amount of smoke I'm sure there were multiple callers so they probably didn't know how many structures were involved. They also had a patient so that takes extra resources.
They did start returning units pretty fast - you can see E16 clearing the scene in this video.
Probably to keep surrounding structures from igniting.
with probably only three fire fighter per rig, that’s what it takes to staff a structure fire. The rigs aren’t necessarily needed, but the people in the are.
Awesome catches! BTW what is the main siren on engine 31?
Thank you! I'm afraid I don't know what kind of siren they use - I think it might be an e-Q2B, but I'm not positive.
it's the EQ2B Aka "FDNY Federal Q"
Howdy from stpaul👍🥶a great video...apparatus every 15 sec ...
Thank you for watching, I appreciate it! I was going to say I hope it warms up for you soon, but I just looked at the 10 day forecast and it looks like it's going to get worse 😬. Good luck!
How about the guy walking down the middle of the street right in front of the engine not getting out of the way
Yeah, not sure what was going through his head (or bloodstream). Thanks for watching!
Watched the whole video, didn't see the SFD battle anything whatsoever.
Great video ❤
Thank you!
@@lucaslaughing Anytime, and I subbed!
Overkill as always. This is the kinda crap taxpayers should think about.
For a supposed tiny house fire, looked like nearly every fire company in Seattle responded
Typical for a working house fire. 3 engines, 2 trucks, 1 battalion chief, medical unit. From that point it is the battalion chiefs call for additional units.
@@mr.wilson8340 That's exactly what the normal response is in most cities.
I'm sorry but they should've had the other side of the road closed to
That many firetrucks could probably put out a decent house fire in probably a minute
Punctuation removed to remove authority and credibility.
In My Town 1 truck and 2 fireman will do the same work
Kentucky as well eh?
Beautiful trucks!!
I agree - thanks for watching!
At first I thought they sent too many trucks, thill the end where it shows the fire.
The big flames at the very end of the video are from a different incident - I just use that as my video outro. This one probably was too heavy a response based on the size of the structure, but Seattle FD tends to frontload the response with a lot of resources, and then quickly scale back if they aren't needed. Thanks for watching!
You even turned out to comment.
i don't think thats tiny (not to be rude) anyway nice video man!
Hope all r ok and who was the dumdum just standing in middle of st
I hope so too! Not sure why the dude was in the street - it almost looked like he was trying to tell them where the fire was, as if it wasn't obvious from the huge cloud of smoke... Thanks for watching!
@@lucaslaughing lol ik
It was your brother in law......Clarence.
Mountains out of molehills...
Very little traffic until the gawkers show up then congestion.
Yep, although they also started closing down lanes which didn't help. Thanks for watching!
We love to gawk. Button it.
@@RLTtizME Seattle has been hooked on Led Zeppelin reruns and ranch dressing for 51 years.
@@markpreston6930 Groovy mannnn.....bitchen yo....I am a senile hippy btw. Brain is fried and I love Seattle. I love ranch dressing.
Orlando Gamboa ❤
Seems like overkill in the FD's part. But a great video nonetheless.
Thank you for watching!
Testing out new editing tools
Cool tiller truck
I agree - thanks for watching!
3:21 dudes bumper hanging on a thread
Lol, good eye - it was.
Liked and shared
Thanks Neil, I appreciate it!
@@lucaslaughing It's no problem mate 🧑🏻👍🏻
America is a FIRE good911❤ I like America❤
Thank you for watching!
senkyu so mut
Heart mark senkyu so mut
seattle likes trailer ladders huh
Yep, they work well with the narrow streets (in certain parts of town) and with getting through the heavy traffic.
Let’s see the fire
Sorry, the fire itself was behind a fence - here's a picture of the aftermath though: twitter.com/SeattleFire/status/1614439586519998465/photo/1
Thay where board so thay all came
HUUUUUGEEEEEEEE
A little over kill.
Cowboys
Can you enlighten me on the reason for such a large response? I know it was an encampment from reading other comments, but was there a huge risk for fire spread?
Better to have more than enough than not enough, They know the area and risk of the fire spreading. My great uncle was a FIRE CHEF in an area that had DUPONT CORNING and a very large lumber mill.
It was a "tiny house" encampment, so it was a bunch of wood structures very close together, and also right up against a multi-story, multi-family dwelling. That plus the fact that there was a burn patient was the main reason for a full response.
@@lucaslaughing ..No zoning laws I guess, or not being enforced currently.?
I listened to this response on the scanner and it was dispatched as a tiny house fire with exposure, which means other structures were in danger. The person who was in the tiny home was said to have "extensive burns."
Wow!!! That was really terrible camera work.