Leader

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

New Zealand F/Fs Headed to U.S. Wildfires

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ShuswapFireF
    replied
    I think some of them are working in Washington State up by the border with Canada along with some Parks Canada fire fighters.

    Leave a comment:


  • CALFFBOU
    replied
    So- Where did they go? North Nevada, Elko area?

    PS- Bump too. I changed a picture in my other posting.

    Leave a comment:


  • Dickey
    replied
    Originally posted by CALFFBOU
    2. If they go the fires in Nevada, they need to stop at the Moon Light Bunny Ranch off of highway 50 near Carson City in Lyon County near the automotive garage. (so I've heard )


    -Bou
    Now why in the world would anyone want grilled bunny rabbits???
    Guess you could go there while your car is being worked on in the garage...
    Service while you wait??

    Leave a comment:


  • CALFFBOU
    replied
    Yo-

    Where in the Western states are they heading? Because...

    #1. If they stop in California, they need to visit In-N-Out Burger.


    2. If they go the fires in Nevada, they need to stop at the Moon Light Bunny Ranch off of highway 50 near Carson City in Lyon County near the automotive garage. (so I've heard )



    -Bou
    Last edited by CALFFBOU; 08-30-2006, 04:26 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • FlyingKiwi
    replied
    Wombat

    Would that be Vanuatu?

    They p!ssed the locals off royaly with a bad miss about November last year.

    A rather famous water front restaurant caught fire, truck took 20 minutes to get there ("slight problem finding da keys Boss").

    Once there they remembered the truck had no water in the tanks (it was drained becuase of the weight on the suspension when sitting still)

    1/2 an hour to go fill da truck.

    Back again (with water), hoses were perished and kept splitting, had to send a local PD back to the station to get the shiny new hoses they didn't keep on the truck(well what did you expect, we don't want them to get dirty).

    End result was no more restaurant.

    I must confess to have been wetting my pants when told this story by a prominant business man in the community who had been watching the events unfold on the day.

    Nothing like a good yarn over beers at the waters edge.

    Credit where it is due, The Aussie Govt has since replaced the truck with an ex Brisbane rig (from memory) and upgraded a lot of the gear.

    Leave a comment:


  • wombat
    replied
    US and Australiasia

    More info on this entry I started some years ago

    which appears to be working OK.
    The best example of mutual aid is one Region 8 developed over 10 years ago with a small tropical Pacific Island. They help train their guys, a former staion officer this our end has the chiefs job over there, and if they lose any gear it must have been sent on a sea voyage. If disaster really strikes then transferring crew is easy as they have many of the old rigs and they are always welcome over in here.

    No and it wasn't Vanuato but somewhere not far away.
    Not my place to create an international incident.

    We all stuff up occasionally. The bigger the organisation the bigger the stuff up. Look at FEMA.
    Last edited by wombat; 08-29-2006, 06:12 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Dickey
    replied
    Now that is a mutual aid agreement!

    It's pretty cool we can all get along that well. Did not realize that sort of thing happened.

    Leave a comment:


  • FlyingKiwi
    replied
    1. ETA is when the plane landed many moons ago.

    2. NZ uses SIMS, which is our equivalent of your NIMS. The people sent will be team leaders and up to area management type people.

    We have sent many teams in the past to both Aussi and the US, so pre-flight information is available as well as briefing on the ground when they assimilate into their jobs.

    On their return a debreif and report will be prepared for management and any techniques, tricks, pearls of wisdom etc passed onto the rest of the FF's around the country.

    it is a good system as they get out of season experience to brush (excuse the pun) up on their skills.


    From NZ Herald on 11 August....

    American firefighters take a break and a well-earned drink before being joined in their battle against wildfires by 10 New Zealanders who left yesterday for the US.

    The Kiwis will meet up with 40 Australians, and they'll help to control the huge numbers of fires that break out during the dry season.

    Southland officer Mike Grant said the trip followed an agreement between Australia, New Zealand and the US to help each other where firefighting resources were stretched to the limit. August was traditionally a dry month in the US, he said. "Most of the fires start after lightning strikes in tinder-dry conditions. When firefighting resources are stretched, supervisory experience is needed most."

    About 50 major fires are raging in the northwest corner of the country including Idaho, Montana, Washington State, Oregon and Northern California.

    Leave a comment:


  • GFDLT1
    replied
    I wonder if the brothers from New Z. use the same terminalogy as the brothers from Cali and out west in regards to NIMS type stuff? Can any brothers from the Kiwi country provide further?

    Leave a comment:


  • MarcusKspn
    replied
    Command to New Zealand Strike Team: What is your ETA

    Leave a comment:


  • BFDNJFF
    replied
    Thats one heck of a mutual aid response time ! LOL

    Leave a comment:


  • superchef
    started a topic New Zealand F/Fs Headed to U.S. Wildfires

    New Zealand F/Fs Headed to U.S. Wildfires

    The Associated Press

    A team of 10 New Zealand rural firefighters was heading to the United States on Thursday to help fight wild fires in western states, a senior official said.

    Another group of 10 firefighters left earlier in the month to bolster firefighting numbers as dozens of fires burned in the dry west.

    Internal Affairs Minister Rick Barker said a further request for assistance was received from the United States Multi-Agency Coordination Group, and New Zealand was responding to that request.

    The staff being deployed have been drawn from the Department of Conservation and the New Zealand Fire Service.

    "We expect that the 10 going today, making 20 in total, will be away a further 20-30 days depending on the conditions there," he said in a statement.

    New Zealand, Australia and the U.S. share mutual assistance agreements to help each other with specialist wildfire fighting capability in times of need. The agreements stipulate that the host country pays for any deployment.

    Barker said while New Zealand provides extra capability at times of extreme fire conditions in the U.S. and Australia, its rural firefighters gain experience in working on large incidents.

    In time of need, New Zealand knows it will receive the same support, he added.


    Take care, stay safe all and THANKS!! Should you make a pit stop in San Francisco, dinner is on me.

300x600 Ad Unit (In-View)

Collapse

Upper 300x250

Collapse

Taboola

Collapse

Leader

Collapse
Working...
X