Wednesday, November 28, 2007
Saturday, November 10, 2007
I SURVIVED!!!!!!
| Yes i survived hell week!! whoo hoo!!! and now my hands/fingers are swollen and painful, and i have these massive bruises on my elbows/arms and my shins are sooooo sore! From Tuesday to Thursday, all we did, alllllllll day long, was rotate between 4 stations: SCBA Daily Checks, Donning and Doffing from a Pumper (Engine), EBSS (Emergency Breathing Support System), and the Maze. Daily Checks is just what it is - the routine you go through on a daily basis to check out if your SCBA (cylinder, gauges, alarms, harness, etc) are in good working order. Donnning and Doffing from the Pumper is putting your gear on, jumping on the engine, getting the SCBA on, buckling the seatbelt, unbuckling seatbelt, jumping out of the engine, and finishing by turning on your cylinder, putting your helmet and gloves on and going on air. All under 3 mins. EBSS was one of the more physical ones. Basically, you have your black out mask in your face peice, you go on air,an instructor takes you to a charged hose line, and you have to crawl/find the downed firefighter (a classmate) who has their emergency alarm going off, connect with their EBSS, then drag them to safety, without ever letting go of the hose line. It's not that bad, actualy kind of fun.... especially if you're playing the downed FF, cuz all you do is lay there... youdo get a little beat up though, cuz you really cant be gentle to drag someone like that. especially if you have to drag them over the hose line, then it gets kind of tricky. I feel good about my ability to do this b/c my last "rescue" was this guy who is easily 220lbs WITHOUT his gear and SCBA on.... sooo in full gear that would mean he was roughly 280lbs. The Maze was where a lot of ppl had issues b/c it's completely dark and you're in really tight, confined space. you have your blackout mask on and are air the whole time. Your time limit is how much air you have in your cylinder. Come test day, if you run out of air while still in the maze, you fail. I've been pretty good so far. I mentioned before we had diminished capacity, where we had to take off our packs in the dark and slide it through without letting go. Well they added Entanglement. Basically, they set up a bunch of rope lines, and when you crawl through it, you have to do the swim technique where you back up, lie on your side, holding onto the hoseline, take your right hand, go from your right hip down to the hose line, up the hose line to meet your left and then "swim" with your right hand/arm, pushing off the wall simultaneously, and then repeat. This method is how we are to get out of a tangle situation. If we're "swimming" and feel like we're caught, we have to back up, find what we're stuck on,free ourselves, then keep on swimming. This is what got ppl a lot. it's hard to try to feel what ur stuck on when you yourself have important hoses (that feel just like rope) connecting you to your air. It is a lot of fun though. Theonly part of the maze that I dont particularly enjoy is the Attic. Once in the attic, you have to stay on the rafters but turn around b/c stairs are in the corner and the only way to go down stairs is backwards and on your stomach. I think it just hurts my stomach a lil. Anyhoo, sorry about no pictures.... next time i will try |
Monday, November 5, 2007
"Hell Week"
| Today marked the beginning of SCBA "Hell Week"... where we do tasks/exercises to "familiarize" ourselfs with our cylinders. We take them home and practice donning/doffing... with blackout masks... This morning Squad B (the last half of the class, and the one i'm in) did work performance wearing the cylinders, but not on air. Then we took a quiz and rotated between stations... Donning and Doffing, Refilling Cylinders, Daily Checks, and How to Clean your Equipment. After lunch is when we were put to work. First my group got to go to the exterior tower. On air, we had to take a piece of equipment (chain saw, hose, extinguisher, etc) up 5 flights of stairs, bring it back, walk around the tower, then pick up another piece of equipment and go back up. we did that 3 times then walked around alot until we all had no air left. Then we went to the other station called "chop til you drop"... yeah, it's as fun as it sounds. Split into two groups, first group took an ax to log for i think 30 secs, then the second group, then first group went again but for 1 min, etc etc Overall it really wasnt that bad.... my only "dislikes" = the amount of sweat i produce collects in the chin cup of my face peice and it's just nasty and my shoulders are really achy. Otherwise, it wasnt that bad. i mean, yes DURING the actual exercises, it was hard... but they gave us decent breaks to get water etc, and thats where you "re-energize" or whatever. tomorrow we do the maze with diminished capacity on air... meaning we're gonna have to take off the SCBA, still on air, push it through a hole, maintaining constant contact with it, slide ourselves through the hole, then put it back on... all in the dark. :-) |
Sunday, November 4, 2007
The End of EMT and Heart Walk
So to catch everyone up really quickly, I passed the state exam and recieved my official EMT card in the mail... so I can provide basic life support should you require it :-p
We just got our SCBAs Friday, and we took them home to get used to it and to practice donning and doffing w/ it... cuz we're gonna be doing that in a maze, blind-folded. That's gonna be ridiculous.
But what's even more ridiculous is this next week is "hell week" where we're gonna be doing exercises like "chop til you drop" and running up, down and around the exterior tower w/ tools until the last person in the class runs out of air. we're gonna be crawling around on our knees throught the academy and grounds blind and on air. I'm not gonna lie, i'm kind of nervous about it.. but i'll get through it.
The pictures above are from the Heart Walk. They let us borrow our class flag for the day, which i was honored to carry. I didnt want to give it back b/c who knows when we'll have earned it, you know? i tried to sneak it off the bus but on of my instructors was like, nice try ms. wicker....
ah well, soon enough i guess
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