Sunday was the dive teams monthly drill and we hit the jetty for some search training. We have the jetty drill later this month with the life guards and the first aid so a little tune up for the divers was a good thing, and got some hands on training in what they will be using down in the rocks.
Saturday, June 13, 2015
Thursday, April 23, 2015
Dive Team on the road...
Members of the Dive Team once again made the trip down to Harrisonburg Virginia for the 2015 bottle show of the Historical Bottle Diggers of VA where they once again took 1st place for "Best of Show" and "Most Educational".....
Chet, Sue, and Joe put together a very impressive display and manned the location the entire six hours of the show and was busy with people attending the show the entire time. This is the third year that the team has submitted a display and numerous people returned to visit and discuss the teams actions...
With the bottle show being the main reason for the trip, the Dive Team members were also able to get some "Recreation" in with one day visiting the tunnel at Afton that was 1835-60 era and was used by Stonewall Jackson to move troops during the Civil War....
After that there was some time spent on the river practicing swift water tactics along the way.....
Along the river we stopped at two different Caves and this was the smaller of the two....
Further down river we then visited the larger cave and this time ready with proper gear and lighting. This cave went back approximately 400 to 500 feet and never did make it to the end but Sue did make a great attempt...
Tuesday, April 14, 2015
Capt. Gavin
There
is nothing like a nice warm bed, 5:30 in the morning is no time to be laying
there only to hear a call go out for the dive team for a big fishing boat on
the beach with people on aboard. Hit the floor and get dress and out the door
in minutes.
We had divers on
scene in minutes along with the first aid and fire dept. Not much could be done
at that time as we waited for another fishing boat which was suppose to come
and try to tow the 77 foot Capt Gavin off the beach. With a strong east north east
wind blowing and seas running over six feet that was going to be a very hard
thing to do. The fishing boat never showed up and a call went out for a tug to
come down from New York. But they too had to turn around due to high seas and
high winds.
So after eight
hours on the beach we headed back to the building to get out of our dry suits.
We stayed ready to answer the call to go back if anything happened, as the crew
of three stayed on board and didn’t want to get off. The new plan was for a tug to come down the
next morning and try again on the next high tide. A bigger tug started down on
Thursday morning and hit the same high seas and strong wind like the day before
and it too turned around.
But all was not
lost as the salvage crews used the time to pump out all the fuel on board and
lighten the boat by 64000 pounds and used line from shore to hold the ship in
place. The team was on hand for a few hours just in case something happened. With the crew off the boat the team had no
more business on the beach. It was all in the hands of Don-Jon and Budget
towing.
The new plan was to wait for Saturday and a
change in the weather. Saturday came and you could have not gotten a better day.
The seas flatten out the sun was out and it was pretty warm. The tug was there
and ready to go. The plan was to turn the boat around so the bow was facing
out. With a tow line out to the tug and a line to a front end loader on the
beach the boat was turned and was ready to tow away. But by the time it was all
done and ready the tide had dropped and the tow had to be put on hold until
Sunday.
A job well done!
The boat is off the beach and no one was hurt and no oil in the water.
.
Wednesday, March 04, 2015
Ice Dive ~2015~
Sunday was the Point Pleasant First Aid Dive Teams monthly
drill and with all the stories around about kids and trucks going through the
ice it was a good time to get the divers ready to in the ice. We don’t always
get ice in this area so every time we get ice we get the teams out on it and
under it.
Sunday turned out
to be good day for it. We had 5 inches of ice and SNOW! That’s right we started
our drill just as it started snowing. Well it’s never a nice day when we get
called anyway. So the drill went on.
We did surface
rescues with victims falling in the ice and the rescuers going out to them and
getting them out of the water. Going over ice safety and ways to get to the
victims and ways to get the victims out of the water was just half the drill,
the other half was going under the ice in full dive gear and searching for a
lost victim.
Being under the ice
is not for everyone, it is easy to get lost and you just can’t just pop to the
surface. You have to be able to find the hole you went in. This is why no
divers go in without a line and a tender on that line. The tender can guide the
diver using line pulls and search an area looking for a missing victim.
Our two newest
members are half way to be ice diver certified just like the rest of the team.
We never know what is going to happen so we have to be ready and that is why we
are always out there training! It is better to train and not need it, then to
not train and come up short when called!
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