In Search of the Perfect Hose Bed 1

March 28, 2011
Get a Handle On It Last fall, I had the chance to pull the initial attack hose line on a fully involved combine fire. For you city folks, that's the big green or red machine driving around behind the barn that costs $300,000 and harvests beans and corn.

Get a Handle On It

Last fall, I had the chance to pull the initial attack hose line on a fully involved combine fire. For you city folks, that's the big green or red machine driving around behind the barn that costs $300,000 and harvests beans and corn.

Because when things go wrong, these things are usually out in the fields, our first-in rig was a 4-wheel drive brush truck. While we normally are pretty particular on how we finish off the hose loads on our pumpers' structural attack lines, the 1-1/2" line on this rig was just folded into the shallow hose bed on the brush rig accordion style. Well, the line came off, as it always does, but when we were packing it back up, I thought, boy, it sure needed some type of handle to help in getting it off.

Because of the shallow and wide design of the bed, it is best to pack the hose on edge. We thought the simplest solution in this case, was to finish the load by packing it in a backwards horseshoe style, which gives us two loops of about 60 to 70 feet each that are easy to pull and deploy by a single firefighter.

Thinking about it later, I realized that there are a few lessons to be learned from this event.

  1. You need to take a look at all your hose beds, whether they are the first line off the engine or a seldom used hose packed on the tanker or brush rig, and make sure that they can be pulled easily without having to pick at and throw off individual folds of hose.
  2. Make a handle. It can be a simple loop of hose or multiple loops. A handle makes it easier for firefighters to get enough hose off the rig as they head to the fire.
  3. Make it easy for the firefighter to take some working line with them. A single handle helps, but if it is placed properly or the handle is made up of multiple folds of hose, all the better.

Sometimes the simplest things, or lack thereof, can slow us down or even worse, get us into trouble when preparing to make an attack. Next time you are having a slow day, take a look under the flaps and see if maybe you can make a difference.

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