Apparently a squiggle pole and another squiggle pole together make a double squiggle ladder. It's got S-shaped squiggles on two planes. Snakes on (two) planes!
A slide consisting of parallel metal tubes set at an incline with additional metal tubes shaped into ovals above. Or a climbing element consisting of parallel metal tubes set at an incline with additional metal tubes shaped into ovals above.
It's a half circle ladder but the sides keep switching. Or - to put it another way - two vertical poles with half circle arcs as steps and the arcs alternate sides.
A large, standalone net climbing structure with triangular faces and several 'internal' elements including hanging steps and a cargo net. Attaches to a large curved slide via a rope net bridge.
It's a rope net traverse element with two parallel ropes at the bottom and two parallel ropes at the top. Between the bottom ropes are a few wood plank steps.
An overhead element consisting of a single beam with somewhat squarish loops that are angled toward the ground (i.e. not coplanar with the support beam and parallel to the ground) that sort of look like open books.
A single pole extends from the ground, dramatically flares into a circular metal base. Above the base, there is rope netting that forms a cylinder with a graceful quarter twist before meeting the circular metal ring that forms the top support. And the entire element rotates along the central pole. Amazing.