Fire hydrants are like the interstate highway system: No one thinks about them until they don't work. (kind of like referees of NFL games). And I don't usually think about fire hydrants until the summer, when you see water flowing out of one when the temperature gets too hot, or dogs peeing on one, or you notice them when you're looking for parking and finally seem to find street parking but realize there's a fire hydrant in front of that spot and it's illegal to park there. (I think I once had to go to the impound lot because I got towed for parking at night in front of a fire hydrant I didn't see) One of the biggest themes of the past week with the LA fires was the lack of water in the fire hydrants, a cruel twist of fate that really impeded firefighters and made stopping the fires even more difficult (as well as the strong winds blowing the winds, see last entry). I think I'm echoing what others are thinking that, it's nice fire hydrnats exist and for emergency purposes, so I'll give up on that as a parking spot and respect the rules against parking there, but hopefully those hydrants work when they're really needed! Otherwise what's the point? I realize I've never actually see a fire hydrant put to work in person, but I think in movies fire trucks just come and attach a hose and water shoots out. Makes me want to become a voluntary firefighter, if only because firefighters have a pretty good reputation: no one ever wants to defund the fire department, they fight obvious bad guys of fire and smoke and bad situations of cats stuck in trees, and they're always the first to step up in times of crisis. It's an obvious net benefit to society, but according to some LA mayor Karen Bass did actually defund the LA Fire department so that they couldn't react quickly enough to the fires? It's like paying into an insurance policy: it seems like a waste of money until something really bad actually happens, then it's dire. That's the thing about this fire too: it happened in the dead of winter, when people on the East Coast had the coldest temperatures of the year, everyone's stuck at home, and even in L.A. it's not even fire season yet, no one expected it on January 7.
Fun facts about fire hydrants: they were invented in 1869 (or at least patented) by mechanical engineer Birdsill Holly (engineers doing good work! Every profession is better than lawyer, and I knew that before going to law school but now I understand what people were talking about, in terms of value of your profession to society) and still looks pretty much the same with the same design nowadays...no iPhone 15 or any newer, slicker versions needed, it's just water coming out of a pump. I did not know that not all fire hydrants are red, and the color actually matters: red ones have a lower water flow and other colors have a higher water flow.
By the way, there are apparently indoor service dog relief areas at some airports like Baltimore's BWI airport for service dogs to go pee, and there's a green patch there with a fire hydrant to emulate a real place dogs need to go pee. Well thought out! Comes in handy because I often walk past areas that have been HEAVILY visited by dogs on their walk needing to relieve themselves, and during the winter it's pretty obvious which areas are most populated because there's yellow (and unfortunately also brown) in the snow. Apparently dogs pee on fire hydrants not only to mark their territory, the normal reason they pee anywhere, but also because there are dyes on the hydrant that attract them! Never thought of that, dogs' lives are interesting. Speaking of which, the fires have caused many dogs to run loose within LA county after their homes were burned, another negative side effect of the fires, and dog pounds have gotten overloaded during this week with dogs loose in the streets with no homes to go back to. Dogs have homes too!