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They don’t have parades like they used to Or do they?

The one Saturday in Bareville and Leola came pretty darned close

Around 140 pieces of emergency equipment growled past in a 55- minute show of fire-crushing might

Flags rippled and horns tooted Diesel perfumed the air

People lined the route of the procession through Bareville. fake converse Fifteen official red-shirted judges, sweat towels tucked into belts, critically eyed each piece of apparatus

Six months in the planning, the spectacle was hosted by the Upper Leacock Fire Company and the Bareville Fire Company, which is celebrating its centennial

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The parade was the public side of the 90th convention and parade of the Lancaster County Firemen’s Association Events began Friday night with a memorial service and awards program at the Conestoga Church of the Brethren in Leola

LCFA’s 2010 business meeting took place Saturday morning Please see details of the meeting, memorial and judging below

The trucks were scheduled to hit town at 2 pm

Across from the Bareville station, New Holland resident Kenneth Seitz planted a folding chair and settled in for the show Two Amish boys climbed atop a rail fence, sodas in hand, and gazed expectantly down the blocked-off main drag

Distant strobe-crowned police cars rapidly drew close and cruised quietly past

They were followed by two men lugging Bareville’s quaintly diminutive 1910 hand pumper

Upper Leacock’s 1910 cart appeared a little later in the show

The Gap Fire Company’s 1910 pumper was piggybacked in aboard a flatbed truck. schaffhausen watches

“It looks like a lot of fire companies started up in 1910,” announcer Dave Glick quipped. (Dsquared2 ).

Quarryville, established in 1903, was an exception

State Rep Scott Boyd and a bevy of other public officials walked or rode past in horse-drawn wagons

But the parade wasn’t all about bells and bowties and round- fendered antiques

There were modern-day Macks, too, and Pierces and Peterbilts with glossy red and yellow hides The newer, brawnier rigs were replete with dials and gauges and hoses coiled in nautical precision

Many of the massive vehicles floated down the street with their equipment bay doors fanned open, like miniature fins Their insides were stuffed with bolt cutters, shovels, axes

You could read all about them as they crawled

Londonderry Fire Company: “Home of Three Mile Island”

Rheems Fire Department was “Founded out of Necessity,” according to the slogan on its truck That was in 1920, in the village machine shop, with a piece of apparatus that set citizens back $500

If you tired of the train of machinery, there was a boy dressed up as a fire extinguisher

There was the fez-hatted Lancaster County Shriners Club Oriental Band seated on a truck trailer

Several beauty queens, endurance waving for block after block, and a giant stuffed Dalmatian, ears adrift in the stiff breeze

A surprise intermission developed when the Downingtown heavy- duty rescue truck squeaked to a stop and disgorged a crisply uniformed passenger

The man respectfully saluted the reviewing stand before turning on his heel and regaining his rig That earned a round of applause

Seitz, who said he used to be a firefighter on Long Island in the 1980s, approved of the pageantry

It’s a way of appreciating folks ever ready to race into a burning building on your behalf, he said “A floor could fall in A roof could fall in You never know”

It costs $2,000 to suit up one volunteer firefighter People should support them more And they should hold more parades, Seitz added as he folded up his chair

In fact, the last big Bareville blowout that Bob Eberly remembers happened 50 years ago, when he was 12 years old

Back then, Eberly said, he was a farm boy laden with chores and he only caught glimpses of the fun from afar

On Saturday, though, he joined friends Charles and Rebecca Benner for a burger-and-hot-dog cookout right on the parade route. (Ed Hardy Wholesale).

“People showed up because it’s different,” said Eberly, who is president of the Leola Ambulance Association

Mallory Lapp and Leslie Stoltzfus said they drove in from Lampeter because Stoltzfus’ husband, Curtis, is a firefighter

“Dada,” piped up the Stoltzfuses’ 2-year-old son, Alexander, who was riding in a stroller with his 6-month-old brother, Austin

Bareville Fire Company trustee Don Spangler pronounced the day a success

Even considering the captive audience factor created by the shutting down of Main Street, he said, “I thought it was a nice turnout”

Steven Roy has been chosen as LCFA president for 2010-11

Columbia Fire Company volunteers were awarded two unit citations during the memorial service and awards program Friday

Honored for their actions during a Nov 9, 2009, water rescue were Jared R Barninger, Mark A Fritz, Tyler R Seibert and Cody W. Wholesale Handbags Gray

Honored for their actions during a Sept 19, 2009, house fire were Tristan J Broome, Jay R Barninger, Doug J Kemmerly, Tyler R Seibert and Justin S Misal. (JIMMY CHOO ).

Seven LCFA members who died last year were remembered: Elwood C Miller, Truman H Erb, Paul L Eberly, Charles Welcomer, Robert Sauder, Alfred Eldredge Jr and Kenneth H Fort

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