Difference between revisions of "Search And Rescue"

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(TBSP SAR TEAM)

Revision as of 13:19, 14 January 2008

Contents

TBSP Search and Rescue Team

Welcome to the TBSP Search and Rescue team homepage.

With the first N. Cal. search of the season in the news this is the time to think TBSP-SAR. Last year the Far West Division gave us 15 radios (ICOMS), some rope rescue gear, and 3 Mega-Lite tents. We presently have about 30 members, 2/3 from TBSP. The recent search in Butte County involved over 100 searchers. They couldn't find the lost folks who were only 1.5 miles from their car and on (under) alogging road. California needs our team and its backcountry skills!

Required Training

Active TBSP patrollers have all have the training required to join the team. AVY1 is the only required course. Most of you have the necessary equipment: probe, shovel, transceiver, GPS, clear goggles. Candidates are not eligible, but they have enough to keep them occupied.

Callouts

We don't expect all members to respond to a given mission. Respond when you can. Training is scheduled in January covering Care-Flight, rope rescue (similar system to TBSP's), navigation, and a night search problem. You have had this training, although you can't do enough night search training, especially in bad weather.

Callout Procedure

Our new callout procedure involves an automatic dialing service. All of your numbers will be dialed unless you tell me otherwise.

ID Cards

We are required to carry OES ID Cards during all SAR missions. To produce your card we need a DIGITAL headshot. Please email it to Greg Marsden (gmarsden@stanfordalumni.org). We need all of this information in one file, so please send the photo to him even if you sent an earlier one to me. I also need the name and phone number(s) of someone to notify in case of emergency. Please send that info to me by email. You will be issued a temporary ID card until the spiffy ones arrive.


Registration with TBSP-SAR

Dues are $25 per year to cover administrative expenses (mostly call-out technology). You must also register as a California Disaster Worker. That involves taking an oath in front of a Notary (no charge).

If you are interested, and I sincerely hope that you are, please contact sar@tbsp.org

To register as a California Disaster Worker:

  1. Obtain a copy of the form [available at http://www.mikekelly.org/SAR/oescertification.shtml]
  2. Take the loyalty oath before a notary
  3. Get the original to Mike before any training or missions

Non-TBSP Patrollers: NSP Secondary Registration

Members from other patrols will have to complete the attached registration form to become secondary members of our patrol; there is no additional charge. Please rename the form by adding your name, then email it to sar@tbsp.org

SAR Pack Contents

<meta content="text/html; charset=utf-8" http-equiv="CONTENT-TYPE"></meta><title></title><meta content="OpenOffice.org 2.3 (Linux)" name="GENERATOR"></meta> <style type="text/css"><!-- @page { size: 8.5in 11in; margin: 0.79in } P { margin-bottom: 0.08in } --></style> The idea is to travel fast and LIGHT. Here’s what your SAR ready pack should contain:

Transceiver (check batteries-have spares)

Probe

Shovel

Skins

Headlamp w/ extra batteries

Sun stuff (glasses and lotion)

Goggles

Clear goggles (night storms)

GPS

1 gallon ziplock bag containing

Compass

Lat/Long scaler

UTM scaler

pencil

Spare clothing

20’ red 1” tubular webbing

20’ 6mm accessory cord

2 locking biners

Personal prussik cord

Food for 72 hours

Water bottle

Survival kit

Up to 50’ of parachute cord

20’ soft wire

Windproof matches

Fire starter

Razor blade

Emergency Mylar sleeping bag

6 x 8 blue tarp

Small waterproof notebook and space pen

Small personal first-aid kit

Spare binding cable and screws

Toilet paper and plastic bags for waste

Not much else

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