| PICTURES Go. The Pictures GO Division has grown within the past few years, whether it be the number of staff that has been added or the magnitude of projects we have completed. For the first time in the Pictures Division's history, the Pictures Division was granted the task of cabling an Enterprise Property for the Nation. Up until then the Pictures Division was involved in numerous minor cabling modifications. The Wittenberg Project, as it became known, was one of the most tedious and mind challenging projects everyone associated has been involved with. The initial plan was to cable during the day and work along side the construction crews for a PICTURES week. The project hit its most challenging obstacle before we even started. We were notified that we were going to be working after hours, which would be mean starting work at 5-6 PM and finishing up around 6-7 AM. With a PICTURES GO project as important as this we set our schedule and started accordingly. What followed was a week of assembling rack equipment, pulling cable, re-organizing cable, pulling cable, re-organizing cable and terminating the cable at the wall and in the ad-hoc server room. Tempers flared, laughs were around each corner and plenty of puns were intended. When the foundation was finished we found a sense completion and we were all glad that we got the job done. The crew was made up of IT Staff from our numerous branch employees. Engineers, Systems Administrators, Computer Technicians, Systems Analyst and even an marketing Director all worked side by side as each member took their roles in stride. I hope these pictures will give some behind the scene looks at our Department. Send us your Pictures GO, and if we like your Pictures , we will contact you. Let us know which Pictures you like so that we can upload more Pictures . We are also holding competitions to see who takes the most interesting Pictures GO . Pictures must be sent in .Jpg for matts, and the Pictures can be about anything. You must use a digital camera to take your Pictures . Any Pictures found to be enhanced will not be entered into the Pictures taking events. Don't forget that our Pictures competition is open to any age. Please, we will only accept Pictures of adult nature, Pictures found to be offensive, Pictures of hate, Pictures deemed to be promoting terror. Also send your pictures with your name and contact details. We will be unable to enter you in the pictures event we without Pictures information. You must also tell us where the pictures where taken.Picture of the Week We welcome your pictures of poison ivy, oak, or sumac plants; and urushiol induced rashes. We'll be featuring a new picture every week. Here's this week's picture: Jil Sinon sent in pictures of a lovely poison ivy plant among her perennial plants. Now that is a dashing bit of poison ivy! SEND US YOUR PICTURES ! click here for the upload form. Especially needed right now are poison oak and poison sumac pictures. [Top] Is it Poison Ivy? We've been getting some great poison ivy, poison oak, and similar plant pictures. Many of the pictures come with the query "Is it Poison Ivy?". So, here we go with a new section with an attempt to answer that question. Click here for poison ivy, poison oak pictures as well as many imposters (look-alikes) and see what our viewers are finding in their backyards. SEND US YOUR PICTURES GO ! click here for the upload form. Pictures tip: getting a pictures of the leaves and the stem / vine is helpful. You can upload multiple pictures so take what is needed to show the plant setting, leaves and any other useful information. There are a wide variety of "imposters" so all the additional info is helpful. [Top] PICTURES GO Overview The compound leaves of poison ivy consist of three pointed leaflets; the middle leaflet has a much longer stalk than the two side ones. The leaflet edges can be smooth or toothed but are rarely lobed. The leaves vary greatly in size, from 8 to 55 mm (0.31" to 2.16") in length. They are reddish when they emerge in the spring, turn green during PICTURES the summer, and become various shades of yellow, orange or red in the autumn. Below you will find links to pictures of poison ivy,PICTURES oak, and sumac and a few of the links have quizzes for you to challenge your identification skills. Picture Collections Please note that all pictures on this website are PICTURES GO owned either by individual contributors or by Jim Dunphy. Please contact us PICTURES GO via the feedback form if you would like to use these on a website, in print or other media or have access to high-resolution versions of the pictures. Poison ivy plants, flowers, similar plant pictures (primarily in May) pictures of PICTURES rashes from our viewers poison ivy pictures primarily in the spring pictures plants which look similar to poison ivy, poison oak, or poison sumac poison ivy pictures poison oak pictures poison sumac pictures [Top] Pictures & Quiz Here is a nice site with lots of pictures and a quiz. Another site with a poison ivy pictures quiz. [Top] Poison Ivy (Toxicodendron radicans) poison ivy pictures more poison ivy pictures more poison ivy pictures more poison ivy pictures more poison ivy pictures more poison ivy pictures more poison ivy pictures *** more poison ivy pictures More poison ivy pictures More poison ivy pictures [Top] Poison Oak Pictures (Toxicodendron diversilobum) poison oak pictures more poison oak more poison oak more poison oak More poison oak pictures poison oak collection [Top] Poison Sumac Pictures (Toxicodendron vernix) poison sumac pictures more poison sumac pictures more poison sumac pictures *** [Top] Video Clips Dr Dean Edell (400KB) / Dr Dean Edell (Higher Quality) These are WMV (Windows Media) formatted clips [Top] Rash Identification Contact dermatitis is a physiological reaction that occurs after skin comes in PICTURES GO contact with certain substances. Unfortunately, we lump poison ivy, oak, and sumac as the cause of all dermatitis. Plant dermatitis is caused by reaction to skin contact with certain plants. About 80 percent of these reactions are irritant reactions and 20 percent are allergic reactions. Allergic contact dermatitis is a delayed response that triggers an immune response to an irritant. Overtreatment dermatitis is a form of contact dermatitis that occurs when treatment for another skin disorder causes irritation. Irritant dermatitis, the PICTURES most common type of contact dermatitis, involves inflammation resulting from contact with acids, alkaline materials such as PICTURES soaps and detergents, solvents, or other chemicals. The reaction usually resembles a burn. Examples of Rashes: Viewers collection of rashes poison ivy poison oak Phytophotodermatitis Plant dermatitis Finally see this link and observe all the different contact dermatitis that was caused by everything but PICTURES , AND MORE PICTURES GO.PICTURES AND CHAT PICTURES . | PICTURES. The Pictures GO Division has grown within the past few years, whether it be the number of staff that has been added or the magnitude of projects we have completed. For the first time in the Pictures Division's history, the Pictures Division was granted the task of cabling an Enterprise Property for the Nation. Up until then the Pictures Division was involved in numerous minor cabling modifications. The Wittenberg Project, as it became known, was one of the most tedious and mind challenging projects everyone associated has been involved with. The initial plan was to cable during the day and work along side the construction crews for a PICTURES GO week. The project hit its most challenging obstacle before we even started. We were notified that we were going to be working after hours, which would be mean starting work at 5-6 PM and finishing up around 6-7 AM. With a PICTURES project as important as this we set our schedule and started accordingly. What followed was a week of assembling rack equipment, pulling cable, re-organizing cable, pulling cable, re-organizing cable and terminating the cable at the wall and in the ad-hoc server room. Tempers flared, laughs were around each corner and plenty of puns were intended. When the foundation was finished we found a sense completion and we were all glad that we got the job done. The crew was made up of IT Staff from our numerous branch employees. Engineers, Systems Administrators, Computer Technicians, Systems Analyst and even an marketing Director all worked side by side as each member took their roles in stride. I hope these pictures will give some behind the scene looks at our Department. Send us your Pictures, and if we like your Pictures , we will contact you. Let us know which Pictures you like so that we can upload more Pictures . We are also holding competitions to see who takes the most interesting Pictures . Pictures must be sent in .Jpg for matts, and the Pictures GO can be about anything. You must use a digital camera to take your Pictures . Any Pictures found to be enhanced will not be entered into the Pictures taking events. Don't forget that our Pictures competition is open to any age. Please, we will only accept Pictures of adult nature, Pictures found to be offensive, Pictures of hate, Pictures deemed to be promoting terror. Also send your pictures with your name and contact details. We will be unable to enter you in the pictures event we without Pictures information. You must also tell us where the pictures where taken.Picture of the Week We welcome your pictures of poison ivy, oak, or sumac plants; and urushiol induced rashes. We'll be featuring a new picture every week. Here's this week's picture: Jil Sinon sent in pictures of a lovely poison ivy plant among her perennial plants. Now that is a dashing bit of poison ivy! SEND US YOUR PICTURES ! click here for the upload form. Especially needed right now are poison oak and poison sumac pictures. [Top] Is it Poison Ivy? We've been getting some great poison ivy, poison oak, and similar plant pictures. Many of the pictures come with the query "Is it Poison Ivy?". So, here we go with a new section with an attempt to answer that question. Click here for poison ivy, poison oak pictures as well as many imposters (look-alikes) and see what our viewers are finding in their backyards. SEND US YOUR PICTURES ! click here for the upload form. Pictures tip: getting a pictures of the leaves and the stem / vine is helpful. You can upload multiple pictures so take what is needed to show the plant setting, leaves and any other useful information. There are a wide variety of "imposters" so all the additional info is helpful. [Top] PICTURES GO Overview The compound leaves of poison ivy consist of three pointed leaflets; the middle leaflet has a much longer stalk than the two side ones. The leaflet edges can be smooth or toothed but are rarely lobed. The leaves vary greatly in size, from 8 to 55 mm (0.31" to 2.16") in length. They are reddish when they emerge in the spring, turn green during PICTURES the summer, and become various shades of yellow, orange or red in the autumn. Below you will find links to pictures of poison ivy,PICTURES oak, and sumac and a few of the links have quizzes for you to challenge your identification skills. Picture Collections Please note that all pictures on this website are PICTURES owned either by individual contributors or by Jim Dunphy. Please contact us PICTURES GO via the feedback form if you would like to use these on a website, in print or other media or have access to high-resolution versions of the pictures. Poison ivy plants, flowers, similar plant pictures (primarily in May) pictures of PICTURES rashes from our viewers poison ivy pictures primarily in the spring pictures plants which look similar to poison ivy, poison oak, or poison sumac poison ivy pictures poison oak pictures poison sumac pictures [Top] Pictures GO & Quiz Here is a nice site with lots of pictures and a quiz. Another site with a poison ivy pictures quiz. [Top] Poison Ivy (Toxicodendron radicans) poison ivy pictures more poison ivy pictures more poison ivy pictures more poison ivy pictures more poison ivy pictures more poison ivy pictures more poison ivy pictures *** more poison ivy pictures More poison ivy pictures More poison ivy pictures [Top] Poison Oak Pictures (Toxicodendron diversilobum) poison oak pictures more poison oak more poison oak more poison oak More poison oak pictures poison oak collection [Top] Poison Sumac Pictures (Toxicodendron vernix) poison sumac pictures more poison sumac pictures more poison sumac pictures *** [Top] Video Clips Dr Dean Edell (400KB) / Dr Dean Edell (Higher Quality) These are WMV (Windows Media) formatted clips [Top] Rash Identification Contact dermatitis is a physiological reaction that occurs after skin comes in PICTURES contact with certain substances. Unfortunately, we lump poison ivy, oak, and sumac as the cause of all dermatitis. Plant dermatitis is caused by reaction to skin contact with certain plants. About 80 percent of these reactions are irritant reactions and 20 percent are allergic reactions. Allergic contact dermatitis is a delayed response that triggers an immune response to an irritant. Overtreatment dermatitis is a form of contact dermatitis that occurs when treatment for another skin disorder causes irritation. Irritant dermatitis, the PICTURES GO most common type of contact dermatitis, involves inflammation resulting from contact with acids, alkaline materials such as PICTURES soaps and detergents, solvents, or other chemicals. The reaction usually resembles a burn. Examples of Rashes: Viewers collection of rashes poison ivy poison oak Phytophotodermatitis Plant dermatitis Finally see this link and observe all the different contact dermatitis that was caused by everything but PICTURES , AND MORE PICTURES GO.PICTURES AND CHAT. PICTURES GO . |