The Elgin Fire Department came together last night to do some search and rescue training. We focused on GSAR (ground search and rescue) and VRT (vertical rescue technician).
Scenario: A woman watched her husband walk out to their back property to investigate a noise. He never came back!
Our team interviewed the lady.
They looked at the map and created a plan.
Then they headed out to the last seen position to begin the search.
As the team cleared each square in the search grid they looked high and low to find the missing person. Eventually he was found….in A TREE!
(this has happened before)
We found the search subject a good 20 feet up in a tree. We had to call out our vertical rescue team to set up rigging, ascend the tree, set up more rigging, and lower the subject down from the tree.
Once the subject was on the ground we were able to transport him to a truck to get appropriate medical attention.
The mayor of Elgin Texas, members of our fire department, and various community members came together to distribute thousands of cases of bottled water to help the community get through the snow-pocalypse that recently hit Elgin.
We were glad to see so many community members lining up to take advantage of this opportunity but saddened to see that so many people were still in need of basic necessities like water.
The volunteers that we had that day worked for many hours to hand out the water we had on hand.
What a great group of volunteers we had! The event went smoothly and turned out to be a fun day.
By the end of the day we had out many pallets worth of water, thousands of packages of water, many more thousands of water bottles!
This last weekend we had firefighter Andrew Siemer go through the Vertical Rescue Technician 1 class and pass. This grows our vertical rescue team to two members, Andrew and Mark Rodriguez.
Vertical Rescue helps our team in cases where we need to get down into a ravine, get victims from a bridge, or if we need to go down into a cistern. It seems like Elgin is a pretty flat place, but any drop over 6′ is technically considered a vertical mission. Other non-obvious missions this is useful for are getting people out of trees, lowering people from two story buildings, etc.
In this class we started by building knot skills.
Then we hiked down to a location of a cliff in the green belt area of Austin. We started to learn how to pick appropriate anchors and what sorts of issues we might consider for rappeling. We learned how to configure different rappel systems.
Then we went down the cliff!
One of my favorite activities of the class was night time problem-solving. In the black of night, we configured a rappel system. Then we each had to rappel down the cliff with only a headlight looking for our target. In this case a rope with a cluster of knots.
Once we located the knot cluster we had to invert and hang upside down to reach the knots. Identify the knots. Then clear all the knots from the rope and re-tie them. All while upside down. This took at least several minutes. Then put the knots safely back on a narrow ledge.
Overall this was a great class that should provide quite a bit of benefit to the town of Elgin!
What happens when a firefighter gets stuck in a burning building and needs to get out fast? They need to extricate themselves. Or worse…what happens when a firefighter goes down and can’t extricate themselves? That is what we learned in our latest training day.
How to make a hole in a wall
How to operate a k12 saw
How to squeeze you, your gear, and your air tank between the studs of a wall
How to search for a down firefighter
How to extricate that firefighter
This was a great class with all hands on deck learning how to don and doff their full bunker gear and how to move around in that gear.
We were able to try a few different techniques for making holes in walls.
And we were able to practice how to move our bodies through the holes we create.
We were also able to practice moving and communicating through a dark loud building as well as practicing a few ways of moving a firefighter in full gear both individually and as a team.
In addition to being a great training exercise for us, we were also able to contribute a little bit towards strengthening our bond as a team!