Introduction/Certification/Experience Thread

Hltoppr

El Gringo Spectacular!
I figured since we've got the sub-forum, we can introduce ourselves:

Andrew
Coconino County Sheriff's Search & Rescue
based in Flagstaff, Arizona

Member since 1998
General SAR (Ground Pounder/ATV/Tracking etc.)
Technical High Angle Rescue Certified
Mountain/Alpine Certified
Wilderness EMT (WEMT)

Um...experience...too many saves to count...too many bodies to remember. Did get a heckuva helicopter trip down the gut of the Grand Canyon at low altitude (had to go look for a murder victim.) which was awesome.... Close calls...3 so far...thought I was gone each time. Tons of friends I trust with my life. Getting tired of going out for knuckleheads who forgot flashlights and that the sun goes down...


-H-
 
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BriansFJ

Adventurer
Okay, about me... I've been with El Paso County SAR since 2004, with 2 years on another MRA team and a half-dozen years in Civil Air Patrol before that. I am anEMT-B/IV and am into high-angle rescue, avalanche recovery, and wilderness missing person search. I like to tell myself I'm experienced; our callout volume is 125-150 searches/rescues a year, not including false starts.

I think my most memorable rescues have been on Pikes Peak which, at 14115 feet, always throws a curveball into anything we do. As "the peak" is in our primary jurisdiction and is visited by hundreds of thousands of people each year, it keeps things interesting!
 

4Rescue

Expedition Leader
Dave King, Portland OR.

EMT-B (formerly AMT-I)
W-EMT (through WMI)
Swiftwater Rescue Certified (I'm and avid rafter)
High angle rescue Cert (a climber too ;) )
OR-DPSST Fire Fighter 1
Volunteer Firefighter
Decon-Hazmat/disaster team leader for our ER
Former Wildland Crew Boss/Field EMT

Currently an ER Tech at St. Vincents in Portland

Finishing my pre-req's for Nursing (emergency oriented of course) and testing with Fire Dept's.


Cheers

Dave King
 

kellymoe

Expedition Leader
Well I dont belong to any SAR group but I have been a FF/PM for 20 years and 10 of those as a member of the Los Angeles City Fire Departments Swift Water Rescue Team. LA may not be known for rivers but we have over a thousand miles of rivers, streams and channels that rage during the Winter.

In addition I have High and Low angle rescue certification and a handful of other certs.

I was also a 15 year Pro Patroler at Mt. Baldy in So Cal. Baldy has a reputation for active in bounds avalanche activity. Have witnessed, been caught in and recovered more bodies from slides than I care to remember. One of the best jobs I ever had besides being a river guide.
 

Mcfly

New member
Mike in Red Deer..
Been apart of SAR for close to 5 years.
Trained in:
High/Low angle rescue
Confined space rescue
Collapse structure rescue
Mountain rescue
Wilderness fisrt aid
A few more things I'm sure just can't think of any more.
Also on the board of Directors, and in the process of joining the Volunteer Firefighter in my town.
 

rionorte

Member
Howdy!
Waiting for the next CERT class in my area. This sub forum and the SAR folks will certainly help me be a competent first responder out in the field. Lots of new terms (high/low angle - etc Whew!) I've read from the previous posts above.

Currently in the Medical area as an RN experienced in ICU and ER at a large Metro LA Level 1 hospital. Yeah on our in (hospital) we get them after you you saved their asses!

Looking forward to the progress. :chowtime:
 

kellymoe

Expedition Leader
Bluto said:
Howdy!
Waiting for the next CERT class in my area. This sub forum and the SAR folks will certainly help me be a competent first responder out in the field. Lots of new terms (high/low angle - etc Whew!) I've read from the previous posts above.

Currently in the Medical area as an RN experienced in ICU and ER at a large Metro LA Level 1 hospital. Yeah on our in (hospital) we get them after you you saved their asses!

Looking forward to the progress. :chowtime:

Which hospital, County? If so I work just down the street in Lincoln Heights at FS 1.
 

Spikepretorius

Explorer
I'm new to this SAR thing.

I belong to ORRU (Off Road Rescue Unit) which in turn falls under the auspices of WSAR (Wilderness Search and Rescue) which manages all the various rescue organisations in my area. (Cape Town is surrounded by sea and mountains and we have a gazillion clubs and organisations with rescue units. WSAR keeps this situation manageable with a central emergency number and central control)

Essentially we (ORRU) are there for logistics and communications. In other words carting guys and equipment to inaccessible places, providing mobile repeater stations in the mountains, clearing and manning landing zones, etc. Basically anything that the Rescue Manager may require at the time.

My experience and training is really limited to 4x4ing (and I lean on old stuff I learnt in the military and from my mountaineering days)

While my primary function is not not medical or rope work we do voluntary training with the guys to get up to speed because we might not always have the right guys available.

So far since officially joining SAR I've only done a helicopter training course with them. My plan is to put my name down for each course as they come up. We also have a big three day mountain training exercise coming up in a couple of weeks where all the different guys will get training in all the different disciplines.

My last rescue was done in difficult conditions (a climber had a suspected stroke while climbing a ravine during pouring rain) and I had to go clambering over a section of mountain clutching a corner of a stretcher. I took a bit of strain because I'm unfit and wasn't prepared for it. (learning curve)

As time goes by I hope to qualify as a Field Rescuer in terms of training, but essentially the bulk of my responsibility will keep me close to my truck.
 
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rionorte

Member
kellymoe said:
Which hospital, County? If so I work just down the street in Lincoln Heights at FS 1.

Naw the crosstown rival who is currently #3 in the country! But I did work there as a Travel RN couple of years ago. Never got assigned to the C booth but the side areas in 1350.
County is the bomb for trauma :ar15: - first class in my book. Also the best rest stop for a liter of banana bag when you need to get over a Thunderbird :hehe: .
 

Antichrist

Expedition Leader
I can't believe I missed this section.
Former FF/EMT.
Current SAR Tech, but limited certifications.
I'm trying to get the Bank I work for to form some teams (they do a lot of community service related stuff, including related to disasters. But they are slow to move because of liability reasons.
Unfortunately there is pretty much zero official SAR activity in the Atlanta area.
 

Hltoppr

El Gringo Spectacular!
Tom,

Your bank might be interested in the CERT courses (Community Emergency Response Team). It's set up in more of an urban setting, to have community members respond to local disasters, such as fires, floods, tornados, etc. Basic search technique, triage, and building clearing/marking are all taught.

Well worth the time for the course, and would fit the bill exactly for where you are!

-H-
 

offroad_nomad

Adventurer
Field Team Leader
Assistant Group Training Officer
Development Coordinator (aka fundraiser and grant writer)
Shenandoah Mountain Rescue Group

SMRG is also a member group of the Appalachian Search and Rescue Conference.

We have agreements with federal, state and local agencies to provide emergency medical and search and rescue services free of charge. We also provide these services to adventure race organizations too.

For training and interoperability, we conduct Full Scale Exercises that are open to any SAR organization, law enforcement, fire and EMS, emergency management, National Park Service personnel and non-SAR trained personnel.

Some background info on our team:
Based in Vienna, VA with 130 members our response area includes: Virginia, West Virginia, D.C., Maryland, Delaware, Pennsylvania and Ohio. However we’ll respond anywhere if requested. Prior to the creation of the FEMA USAR teams, SMRG was flown to such incidents as the 1985 earthquake in Mexico and hurricane-related SAR in Puerto Rico.

Formed in 1974, SMRG is incorporated in the Commonwealth of Virginia and is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. SMRG is not affiliated with any law enforcement agency. Our members receive extensive training in SAR operations and ASRC protocols, rescue, steep angle and related technical skills, aircraft incident site procedures, wilderness safety and survival, land navigation, first aid, land/air evacuation methods, ground search and tracking techniques, radio communications, search incident management and other areas that are key to our operations.

We operate at the discretion, and under the direction, of a legally Responsible Agent (RA). The RA will usually be the local law enforcement agency (county sheriff or police department) or another organization responsible for SAR activities in their region, such as a local fire department or rescue squad. The RA may even be the State Police, or in the case of operating on federal land, the park or forest service personnel. Our members fulfill roles defined by the RA and within the scope of their training.

When responding to a search incident, SMRG is able to provide and maintain its own communications, field equipment, ground transportation, dispatch coordination and on-scene liaison. We also provide specialized services generally not offered by other emergency service agencies, such as search incident management and technical related services.
 

kellymoe

Expedition Leader
Bluto said:
Naw the crosstown rival who is currently #3 in the country! But I did work there as a Travel RN couple of years ago. Never got assigned to the C booth but the side areas in 1350.
County is the bomb for trauma :ar15: - first class in my book. Also the best rest stop for a liter of banana bag when you need to get over a Thunderbird :hehe: .

I worked on RA 46 and 15 in South Central all through the late 80's to mid 90's when the Bloods and Crips fighting was at it's peak. We transported GSW's to County several times in a 24 hour shift. I am glad to be off the rescue now and just be on a truck. Those were some fun years but I would not want to relive them.

Thunderbird, Night Train, Boons Farm..... the list goes on and on. Those were some of the more frustrating calls, Skid Row reeks of urine in the hot Summer sun. Urine and feces saturated clothing covered in maggots and lice, good times:) Some things never change. The Row remains the same.
 

Hltoppr

El Gringo Spectacular!
Geez...you guys have high class drunks...we get hairspray and bread loaves here....

If you don't know how that works....you don't want to know....:(

-H-
 

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