Skip to content


Rope Rescue Tech Part 1

No comments
CMC Rope Rescue Tech 1 & 2

CMC Rope Rescue Tech 1 & 2

I recently took a rope rescue technician class given by CMC. This is just one of many pictures I took during the class. The class was a week long and there was very little classroom time; almost all in the field.

This picture is an evolution for passing a knot during a rappel.  It was a challenging drill, but fun and important.

I will post more from this class in the coming days.  If you have pictures or information about technical rescues, post them or pass them on and we will get them posted.

Take care and stay safe.

Technical Rescue/Special Ops

2 comments
Okay, will it teeter or totter?

Okay, will it teeter or totter?

Here is one for all of you technical rescue folks.

This was emailed to me and I admit that I don’t know the origins or circumstances.

However, as you can see we have two problems with this scenario: the piece of equipment tilted and the boom in the house.

Let’s for the sake of a good drill say that the reason that the boom did this is because the operator had a medical emergency and is still in the cab.  In addition, there are folks in the house trapped.

I know its a lot to think about, but hey, have fun with it.  This is not my forte, but the picture was just too good not to use.

Let us know what you would do and how.

Thanks and stay safe.

Precarious Situations

No comments
Where do you start?

Where do you start?

This is a situation that I have never had to deal with. I friend of mine sent me this picture and I thought it would be interesting to hear how you would handle this.

If you are the first arriving engine company or squad, what are your first courses of action and why?

What are your main concerns  and priorities?

How will you stabilize this vehicle and what tactics and skills will you deploy to make the rescue and or extrication?

There is a lot here to go over, so take your time and list it all.  I think there are some of you out there that we could all learn a great deal from on this matter so share your experiences and knowledge.

Stay safe and think scene safety on all calls.

Ice Rescue: Technician Required?

No comments

It is the time of year when the weather gets especially cold and ice is forming on the lakes and ponds. It is also when many departments start actually getting out on and in the ice to train for ice related emergencies.

One of the departments that I am a part of and others around us do train on this topic. The question has been raised by many, some legitimately concerned and others just trying to stay out of the ice, if a person should be trained to technician level before he/she enters the water?

Ice rescue training being performed, is it required?

Ice rescue training being performed, is it required?

I personally am not a technician trained ice rescuer, although I have had a great deal of training for ice rescues. I do have technician level training in other areas and have to say that I learned a great deal in those courses, stuff that could keep you alive.

If I read the standard correct, any incident that requires special or technical training has different levels of certification and training. Most of these categories all abide by the awareness, operations and technician hierarchy.

With that in mind, the department and departments that I am familiar with will typically have a short in-service on the equipment and safety guidelines and then when the ice gets thick enough, we throw our own in the water to be victims and rescuers.

The practical answer to if we should be tech level certified before we enter the ice is that it is difficult and expensive at best to get our people all trained to that level. The ideal answer is “yes”, we should have our people properly trained before putting them in harms way. Where is the line crossed or should it be? Are these tech level certifications going to need to be mandatory for our firefighters, even if they are not interested in that subject matter? But, the subject matter is protecting our citizens and the job is dynamic and ever changing, right? What do all of you do and think?

Personally, I think there should be more than just an in-service and then throw people in the lake, tend to getting our personnel certified in the areas that we have risk for. But, we don’t make every member become HazMat Techs or Swiftwater Techs, so I don’t know that making them Ice Rescue Techs is appropriate either. It is a very interesting dilemma I do see the day where those certifications will be required for all academy graduates or at least at an operational level. Actually, the current graduates at the local academy does require hazmat ops for graduation. I think that this is going to be a hot topic in the years to come. Where do you all see this in our roles as emergency responders?