Old Firefighters Never Die: They Just Smell Smoky

in #firefighting5 years ago

Thirty-nine years ago today (July 14th, since I'm posting this early--or if you're reading it later), I walked into a former auto dealership, past a twenty-eight year old fire engine and a bread truck that had been converted into a rescue unit, and asked to become a volunteer firefighter.

To this day, I don't know where I found the courage. I was painfully shy and not exactly an action hero, but there were two things I wanted to do with my life: write and fight fires. Not at the same time, you understand.

Having those as my full-time jobs never worked out.

Still, I summoned the courage to walk into that meeting room, my first experience with entering a smoke-filled room as a firefighter. (Smoking was allowed inside at that time, you see--and some of the members had taken to pipes and cigars.)

The Fire Chief asked my age, and didn't seem all that pleased that I'd turned eighteen that very day. Only decades later did I learn that the Albion Fire Department had, just a few short years before, reduced the minimum age for a volunteer from 21 to 18. I probably seemed like a snot-nosed, green little punk, which I was.

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Two of the trucks we had when I joined in 1980. Yes, I lined up the sign for this photo.

For reasons I'm not interested in getting into, our department was in dire shape back then. We spent many years building it back up: replacing old trucks, updating equipment and training, improving protective gear and communications equipment. We got a lot better.

All-in fire trucks.jpg
The very old, the old, and the much newer.

The AFD protects 96 square miles, mostly rural. As members we sometimes disagree on the best way to do things, but we've always understood our job is to protect everyone and everything to the best of our abilities. We've had our losses; we've had our saves. My home is one in a line of three buildings that at one time or another caught fire, but are still standing today thanks to dedicated volunteers.

Our job is to take the battle to the fire, not to wait while the fire comes to us. It's to do our level best to keep the danger as far back as possible. To protect businesses and farm fields; homes and wildlife sanctuaries; factories and a state park.

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Big water, four wheel drive, and--if you look closely--medical assistance, all at the ready.

Emergency services are inefficient by nature. We can't just rent out equipment we need for a certain incident at a certain time, because emergencies don't call in to schedule themselves. Last year we didn't get such terrible snowstorms that we needed both our four wheel drives just to get out of the station. Next year, we might have half a dozen such storms. Tomorrow we might have a car fire that's out on arrival, or we might need our foam equipment for an overturned gasoline tanker, or we might send a brush truck to aid a neighboring department at a field fire, or we might have to extricate five people from a car crushed beneath a semi. Or none of those. Or all.

It's our job to continually improve our department; to leave it better than when we walked through the firehouse door. To keep it from falling behind again.

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Which takes people, as well as the right equipment.

I don't know how long I'll be there for that.

This is not a "woe is me" post; I've had a good run. But I've had some problems with energy-sucking pain in recent years, some of it chronic, some of it of the "ouch! I'm dying right now!" variety. Ironically, it started when I hurt my spine at a fire in the 80s, and was exacerbated (get your mind out of the gutter and look it up) when I pulled a back muscle at an accident scene. (Fun fact: Trying to hide your pain instead of immediately seeking treatment is stupid.)

Some days I can fight fire; most days I can do something; some days I lay whining on the couch, like a man-flu victim.

In recent years I've floated the idea of being just the safety officer, at least on bad pain days, since that job can be done without a great deal of manual labor. Turn off utilities, check air quality, monitor hazardous operations, things of that nature.

Mark's new gear 4-3-12 corrected.jpg
Blue helmet = Safety Officer. Well, on our department, anyway.

After all, a safety officer should be present at every major emergency scene, and a lot of smaller ones. The first time I took action as safety officer, it was just a wildland fire. (Okay, it was a really big one, but still.) Somebody needs to take care of that stuff, especially as firefighters tend to be the go get 'em type.

All I have to do is discipline myself not to haul a hose into the building on my bad days. Lately, as the bad days increase, I've been thinking I could do that ... um, not do that.

But like all volunteer departments, we're undermanned. The question is, can I be useful enough in that supporting role, even if it's just keeping a head count or helping with water supply, when we don't have enough people as it is? Can't my being there be at least of a little help, even when I can't throw an air pack on?

Mostly I'm just thinking out loud, here, motivated by the turn of another year. All that is a question for the Chief and the fire board, not something I can decide on my own. But I'm starting to think it's that or retirement, and I do like to be useful.

Of course, there's always fund-raising through the writing of books, in which my wife and I are both engaged as we speak. But, like an old fire horse, I'll always want to gallop to the scene. Mostly I'm writing this because--maybe also like that old fire horse, if it could talk--seeing that anniversary come up started me waxing nostalgic again. I guess old firefighters never die: They just start telling war stories.

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This one, and another one in progress.

http://www.markrhunter.com/

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Congratulations on your accomplishments. I think it must be satisfactory to have fulfilled two of your main goals.
I met a woman in grad school (I think from Peoria,IL) who was into creative writing (non-fiction) and she was working on a book about a fire department at the time I took this one and only creative writing class (I was doing something else).
I think that what firefighters do is admirable. I have not seen any other group in uniform care about others with such detachment and zeal.
I admire any society that understands the value of firefighters and makes sure they lack nothing to do their work. We are not one of those societies over here and our fightfighters do not even have vehicles to respond to emergencies.
I requested once assitance to have a neighbor's huge tree cut. They told me they did not have any equipment for that. I ended up doing it myself with a machete and even posted about it.
Anyway, congratulations on your book. Wish you the best doing whatever you end up doing after having completed this stage in your life. I just quit my teaching job. I know what it feels.

Thanks! That's sad to hear, about your fire department. We all have our issues with getting what we need, but some people have more trouble with that than others.
In general firefighters consider themselves brothers and sisters, no matter what area of the world they come from. Fires all burn the same, and to a large extent our jobs are very similar.

They are indeed. And that's what saddens me the most. Then, in times of need, when tragedy hits, politicians have their pictures taken and pledge full support while putting those men and women's lives at risk by forcing them ti work under high risks, underequipped and understaffed

Sadly, politicians are the same all over, too.

And all that while you don't even have a Jim Beam warehouse in Albion... :)
Man, this FD in Kentucky will have one hell of a christmas party this year. :)

That fire was a loser from the beginning. Giant wooden building full of booze--I'm glad we don't have something like that! Just a regular giant wooden building burning is bad enough.

Yeah, I guess there isn't much you could do as a fire fighter, other than try to prevent buildings near by from igniting.
But they didn't want to extinguish the fire anyway, from what I read, because that would have washed even more alcohol into a river.
The damage must be tremendous. Even though the booze is not as expensive to make as its sold in the shop. But 45,000 wooden barrels got destroyed, too. They easily cost $100 or more a piece. And there is no big wood barrel production nowadays, as there was in the 19th century. Each one gets hand made by specialist workmen. There are some interesting videos on YouTube about that. So it will take some time to replace them, and lots of money.

That's exactly right: With certain types of materials, you're much better letting it burn off than fight it, to prevent contamination. A lot of hazardous materials are destroyed by high temperatures, so the smoke is "just" smoke--not that the smoke is that much fun, but at least it's not going into the water supply.

My wife and I watch a show called How It's Made, and they covered making those barrels once. Much to my surprise, we're both fascinated by the process of manufacturing various kinds of things. My favorite was fire helmets; hers was saddles.

I guess there wasn't much they could have done, except for letting it burn in a half way controlled manner.
Those barrels hold about 150 ltrs each - so 45,000 barrels is roughly 6.8 mio (!) ltrs of booze. Usually Whiskey has 42% alcohol, so we are talking about close to 3 mio ltrs - or 3000 tons - of pure alcohol. If that has reached a certain temperature, nothing in the world puts that fire out.
And if they would try to wash it away with lots of water, it end up in some river . I don't think the fish will appreciate the free drinks.

Yes, I've seen that How its Made show as well, quiete interesting to see the production even of everyday things. Usually we don't really think about how some stuff is made, and in which incredible amounts its made.
Other trades have nearly died out. There is probably less than a dozen people in Germany who still make saddles. Or baskets out of willow twiggs. It used to be thousands of people in the old days, but today nobody can pay the labour cost anymore. A decent saddle made in Germany costs about 4000 Euro, they said.

Yep, that's exactly what we do in cases like that: controlled burns, protecting the exposures and limiting runoff. And alcohol is way worse than most flammable liquids, being not only more volatile but also, in some cases, burning with an invisible flame. Not only that, but normal foam, designed for putting out petroleum type fires, is broken down by alcohol--only expensive and less common "alcohol foam" works on it, and only on smaller alcohol fires ... nothing like this.

Just yesterday Emily and I watched them make a banjo--out of linen. And in the same episode, coincidentally, they were making whiskey barrels. I'll bet that guy is working overtime now.

Yes, I have seen that at NASCAR races, where they use Methanol as fuel. Or is it Indycar... anyway. When they spilled Methanol during the pitstop and it ignites, you first see nothing. Then everybody starts jumping around like mad, and then the advertising banners start to melt and burn, at which point there are visible flames and smoke. They used to extinguish the fire with water, which dilutes the alcohol. But at a very early stage of course, and its only a few litres, not millions.

Banjos... are they not build like a drum? With a metal ring that has a skin stretched over it? Other than that its pretty similar to a guitar, I guess. That linen is used for that I have not heard before.

Yes, the barrel makers are seeing a boom in business now, I'm sure. The booze company has to get their stock back up, to avoid a gap in availability after the given maturing period. Well there will be some gap already, but they will try to keep it as short as possible.
Well, may be the barrel makers can ramp up their production somewhat, but not indefinatly. For one, not everybody can simply start making barrels, its quiet a art as you have seen. And also, they wont invest too much money in expanding their workshops, since its only a temporary boom. But the price for wooden barrels might shoot up quiet a bit for a while... :)

Yep, that's the way it happens at Indy Car races ... I don't know about NASCAR. Honestly, I don't watch much racing one way or another, so I've mostly seen this in training. Water works on the small ones just fine ... but you'd better have enough water!

I guess banjos are a lot like a guitar, but even after watching them being built I'm not real clear on the differences. It was the linen part that really startled me.

Maybe I'd better go out and get my whisky barrels while I can!

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Your story is really inspiring, I once was a junior volunteer at the fire department near my home too but life and depression made me quit something that for sure I would love to do for the most part of my life, your post made me see that my life could be really different if I stayed in that path, thanks for sharing!


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Congratulations on your anniversary! It's a great job that you're doing and you do it as a volunteer so you have my respect :)

When I was younger I was also a volunteer but we didn't do real fires. The firefighting department in my hometown was very strong so they didn't really need help and we focused on competitions. We were traveling with all our equipment and doing different disciplines. We were always good and I'm very proud of that part of my life :)

Thank you for sharing your story and I wish you many more years as a firefighter. Hopefully with less pain :)

Thanks! I'm glad you got a chance to serve, even if it was in a different capacity. As for the pain, well--that's just the way things go when you don't take care of yourself while you're young.

Dreams can be realized if there is dedication and perseverance. I love knowing you did not leave the writing since you handle good writing! Regards :)

Thank you! I could never leave the writing. I suppose everyone has something they're addicted to--I couldn't go a week without working on my writing.

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