Friday, July 24, 2009

Fire Camp Week 11 pictures

This week was liquid fuel week. We dealt with fuel spill fires and pressurized LPG tanks. Cheryl and Gabe came up for family day and had a great time.That's me on the left nozzle with the yellow helmet
An effective tool for liquid fuel fires is a special foam the smothers and cools the fuel to extinguish the fire. It's fun to apply.
Week 12, the final week, starts next Monday. Graduation is on the 31st of July!!!!
Tony

Goodbye Lee

Last night Lee Pearce Orr lost his battle with cancer. I had the privilege of being acquainted with Lee through mutual friends who just happen to live next door to Lee and his wife. I didn't meet Lee until a few years ago at a picnic where he kindly indulged me with a few historic Track and Field stories; Lee ran in the Berlin Olympics. I love Track and Field and any time I am blessed with meeting one of the sport's forefathers I am humbled. During the very few years I knew Lee he lived a quite rural-farm life just east of Monroe, Washington. He was highly esteemed and loved by many. His will be dearly missed. My heart aches not only for his family but for those who looked up to Lee, the Track and Field community and for the Skykomish Valley. It is hard, awkward and somewhat unfair to place a higher value on one individual but we still do. For me Lee was up there, high on the list, not only because of his accomplishments but because of the effect his life had on others; I saw it. Thank you Lee, goodbye. Tony Robinson Board Member CNW Assistant Track and Field Coach, Sultan High School

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Night Opps

Well week 9 and 10 of "Fire Camp" are in the books and it was quite a stretch. We completed all the testing for FFI and HazMat, aka "Death By PowerPoint". Here Recruit Sandman (His real last name.) awaits his turn at the first practical station. There were 15 FFI and 7 HazMat practicals (stations where we had to perform tasks to prove our abilities). The exams went well. FFI was easy as we were well prepared. the HazMat exam was a two level final written exam. The exam covered the Awareness and Operational certification levels. It was a couple of long days of "hurry up and wait".When it was our group's turn to take the test we were stuffed into a windowless room, hot and sweaty from having just completed the practicals, and seated to wait some more while the testing process commenced. As you can tell it was not the most exciting time.
With FFI and HazMat completed we were now set free, so to speak, to burn off some energy at the local pub. FFI test day was also my 42nd birthday and it was interesting. The CO in charge thought it might be nice to allow me to be the first recruit to complete my practicals so I was first. I passed all the stations without a hitch, unfortunately that freed me up to assist the rest of the class at their stations. So I ended up hauling and reloading hose for 4 hour in the sun while the others completed their tasks. A nice gesture on his part, how could he have known. The evening out was a needed and well received break.
For the last 20 or so years recruits at the academy have been living in single wide hooches. That ended today. The old hooches have been removed (rolled away) and from now on recruits and guests will sleep in comfort in the new building. An era has ended and a new one has begun.

As we have moved along our firefighting journey our CO's have loosed the reigns a bit. Here is an example: Morning PT (physical training) this week provided a break from the norm with a little dodge ball. We did end up breaking a water pipe and spraining Cpt. Dressel's thumb but other than that it was a good time with little else of note.

As we enter the final stages of our training we are finding that our abilities are becoming refined. Our CO's wanted to give us a chance to display our new talents without instructors around constantly correcting and coaching. NIGHT OPPS were in order. The event was originally planned for Monday night but we backed it off a day due to the mental and physical fatigue of the testing process. So Tuesday night it would be. After a few discussions I volunteered to be IC (Incident Commander), for two reasons: no-one else wanted the responsibility and I needed the practice. 17:30 We were toned to a multi story single family residence with smoke and flames showing from the A and B sides. Reports were informing us of multiple possible victims. Engine 1 arrived followed closely by Ladder 1. A short report was radioed to dispatch prior to Battalion 1 arriving (that would be me) on scene and assuming "Academy Command". I arrived on scene in the "Red Rocket", a red golf cart with emergency light mounted on top, and was assisted by a CO as I took over and ran the show. (After the initial deluge of reports and assignments I was on my own to command the operation.) It was actually quite easy once things got rolling.

The event was not without its challenges as every fire is. Chainsaws wouldn't start, ladders were poorly placed, rigs were too close, gear malfunctioned....just like the real world. Except for us it was practice. But it was still nice to not have instructors screaming at you and criticizing your every move. A few students from the Truck Academy, who were spending the night, came down and sat in chairs to watch the festivities. After 2 hours the night was done, all victims were rescued and the rigs were back in service. Originally we were told that if we did Night Opps on Monday night we would have Tuesday morning PT off, a welcomed morning of sleep. But since we bumped it to Tuesday nigh we were informed that Wednesday morning PT would go off just like normal. "Just like normal" was the actually quote........I awoke at 05:00, my normal time to brew some Joe and study or go for a early morning walk. I was heading to the classroom when I noticed the red light flashing at the facility pump house; indicating the hydrants were charged and water was being pumped somewhere on the fire grounds. "Hmmm" I thought that's odd. I turned to view the fire tower and saw smoke, A LOT of smoke. Last night's fire must have rekindled due to poor overhaul and one of the COs is down there hitting it with water. I got myself down to the tower to help haul hose. All three COS were in full gear LOADING the tower. "Huh!?" I was greeted with a loud, "Robinson, get the #&*$ outta here, what the *&$% are you doing down here!" Apparently their morning started at 04:00 when they came down to reset the tower for a morning PT burn. I laughed and made my way back to the new dorm building to be greeted by three engines, light and sirens blazing, announcing a fully involved single family residence very similar to the house we fought fire at just 6 hours earlier. I had the distinct pleasure of running thorough the dorm slamming into bedrooms and waking my peers with yells and screams of "Fire, we got a fire!" (Welcome to the fire service!) We fought the small blaze for an hour right up to breakfast time. It was a blast (again all victims were rescued) and those of us who have served for awhile understood the significance of back to back fires and how taxing they can be. The newbies were just pissed. The lesson: if you can't handle this how will will you do when there are 5 aid calls in between fires. Because that is how the real world is. (The Chief was impressed and shared with the class how hard our COs had worked for us, and that this kind of event is unheard of. We will probably never have another chance to fight two fires back to back in a learning environment without instructors, ever.) It was a good week. I was awarded the Bulldog for my command of the Night Ops. The Bulldog is a rotating honor to be worn, all 6lbs of it, by the selected recruit as recognition of a job well done.

Tony

Saturday, July 4, 2009

A Night Off

Last night, at 11:55pm, was the 24th running of the Club Northwest Firecracker 5000, a 5 kilometer running race that circumnavigates Seattle Center twice before terminating in Memorial Stadium. For me it was a chance to reappear from Fire Academy and be a board member again. My brother-in-law Mike and I arrived early to help Nick, the official "Banana Man", with the banana-apple-orange table. We also supported the pre-entry"find your number" table" prior to the run commencing. Apparently there was a Zombie Walk, a Greed Day concert and a local Micro brew festival in an around Seattle Center just prior to the run. This young zombie walker was a bit spooky but turned out to be a pretty good runner too. The shirts this year have a screened glow-in-the-dark moon that needed charging.
Bill Roe, the guy in the orange shirt with the microphone, was the announcer. His voice has been the voice of many a race in the Seattle area for many years. At 11:50 we all took the line and awaited the official okeedokee from the Seattle Police indicating the course was clear.
And they're off!!!
I tried to document the run but hey it was after midnight and my little camera was not illuminating as well as I would have hoped. Here are a couple shots of the runners and a few bystanders at a local pub.
The race was a good study break from the Fire Academy. the family is off in Vermont for the annual Hirst Family Vacation. I missed this year, but it seems to be a good year to miss as it has been raining in Vermont for the past week and the weather here has been SPECTACULAR!!
Meanwhile back at the Fire Academy we finish our last week of burning for our Firefighter I certification. We had another round of "cars on the curb" working on flaming liquid fuel fires.
That's me with the nozzle cooling off the engine block of the car behind the flaming van.
We proceeded to the leaking LPG tank for a wonderful example of how a full fog pattern can hold back a lot of flame. The heat still radiates through the water droplets but the stream forms a cone of low pressure and keep "most" of the flames inside.
After a hard days work it's good to rest. This is Jeff Persons one of the hardest working recruits at the academy.
Hope this posting finds you well. Enjoy your 4th of July 2009.
Tony