On this episode of South Metro Unscripted we ride along with Probationary Firefighter Stensvad during her first day working as a firefighter on Tower 32.
Best job in the world hands down. My official retirement date is Aug 19 of ‘22 and it is a very crazy bittersweet feeling. I am ready to retire but the realization of it all being over and never putting on the uniform and doing the job brings in floods of emotions.
hope you had a good first year of retirement. as a kid looking at these videos hoping to be a hero like all of you one day, i just wanted to remind you that uniform or no uniform, you are a hero and you always will be. thank you so much for your service and protection.
This might not matter my comment but I just wanna thank all the fire departments for all the hard work they do everyday to keep us all safe it’s not an easy job.
My late husband was a firefighter EMT. I walked miles back and forth in my living room while he was on call. There were a couple of times when he almost didn't come home. Those guys put their Ives on the line every day. There isn't enough thanks to give them for what they do. May God bless and protect them.
South Metro really puts out 1st grade videos. The new probie appears she is really fitting in really well at her assigned fire house and she seems to be a go get it!! She really works hard. Great stuff and God Bless her.
It sure can be. The learning process can be a bit stressful. But take advantage of the time you have to learn your crew, your equipment, and your apparatus. Because that certainly doesn’t stop after fire academy.
This episode was excellent. As a fellow female firefighter, this made me proud to see the achievement of another woman in the fire service being highlighted so professionally and simply. Proud to serve!
Great vid! Very real, no hype. Ms. Stensvad is a wonderful host through the episode.She really exemplifies that combination of intelligence, grit and big heart which is so often found in firefighters. I wish her all the best in her career. The "first to the phone" thing is too funny!
What an amazing video. I always wanted to be a railroad engineer and I achieved that in 1981. It was so thrilling for me so I can understand your sense of achievement in what all of you fire fighters have accomplished. Thank you so much for your service you guys have made the lives of the citizens so much safer.
yep, but she needs to be very careful - sometimes if there's a lot of smoke inside during a fire, her mentor could still be inside while awaiting orders if she doesn't know what to do next. Unfortunately, a week or two later: it will be registered as a LODD
6:45 *I HAVEN'T SEEN THAT BEFORE BUT IT LOOKS LIKE A GREAT IDEA....* having a rear seated person operating the air horns(via a strap from the horn wire on the roof, stretched to the rear of the cab) while responding hot to an incident, it leaves the officer to look up directions(map usage), radio ops & assisting the driver by watching the passenger side of the apparatus while responding(hot). I saw it hanging in the officers face earlier in the vid but wasn't positive why it was there.....at least I'm hoping I'm correct w/its general purpose?? Awesome vid!!!!! Stay safe all!!!
i really look up to u guys. im getting ready to be going to emt scool so i can be a firefighter paramedic eventually. thankyou for all your hard work and dedication
This was a great video about how things appear from a Probies perspective. She had such an excellent background a role models she was just destined to serve. I hope she was able to obtain her certification as a SWAT Medic too, she seems to be properly wired for that job too.
Greetings from The Netherlands.....nice docu, normaly we see and hear screaming horns.......to see the men and women in action is great.....thank you for sharing
Good luck to you and your partner. I can tell just by watching this video that you will have a fantastic future as a firefighter/medic. Take care and be safe.......... P.S. I can also tell that you love your job!!!!!!!!!!
My first call was a single vehicle rollover. It was about 9pm on a cold December night, day or two old snow on the ground. It was on a back road in the middle of nowhere. The [incredibly heavy] guy was already extricated when we got there. We were then tasked with staging a medevac landing zone in the roadway. I remember it so clearly, the ride there, the sensations, sights and sounds of a helicopter landing in the cold snowy night, even what the medevac paramedic said to us about the heli danger zones.
Nice to see new firefighter being enthusiastic. Even racing to answer the phone bodes well. 95% of the firefighters day is routine so enjoying and being motivated to just lift that phone first really does reflect well on that stations attitude. If you answer the phone so positively I can only imagine the motivation in checking the equipment which is much more enjoyable… have a great and safe career. The kit they wear compared to U.K. is amazing.
@@centralnewyorkresponses7887 Na its happens, in OWL in woodbridge VA, they do the same thing. Nice to the pretty women and nasty to the men. Its why i decided to leave that sh!thole department
they do it because not alot of women join the service but alot of men do their trying to make sure they can keep women in the industry the dont worry about men leaving
Great video! You’re going to do great! One tip that I like to share is when you start the saws don’t immediately go wide open throttle, instead start the saw let it idle a few seconds then slowly increase throttle until you’re wide open. Then don’t hold it there back off and see if the saw will continue to idle. Other than that good luck
Thank you for posting this video. I am 15 and very interested in fire fighting I am a JR fire Explorer in Texas and planning on making this my career and it's nice to see what it will be like on my first day of being a fire fighter. Thank you
Always good when every1 takes the time to show and talk about the rigs etc i know all work together and that but i bet at some stations you always get 1 that doesnt want to show? I dont know
Some advice from a 10 year veteran (Injured/retired) Make sure you know that sometimes those guys that have been there a while like to mess with the Booters. If they ask you go fill the engine with blinker fluid, or ask you to grease the muffler bearings, stop and find the biggest fire extinguisher and chase them around the engine with it. When you finally hit one, you wont be a Booter no more grasshopper. I got baptized my 1st week going interior so my Eng. Co didn't go after me. (EP 8, EP 121, LifeStar EMS FOM Payson/Globe/Miami AZ).
I start academy tomorrow. Super nervous. But also super excited. I can’t wait to be a fire fighter. Build a brotherhood and be a part of something great.
Wow, at 5:20 when she is cranking the saws you can see she has a lot of muscle on her arms, she clearly put in a lot of work to get where she is and she takes the strength requirement very quickly. She was also taller than some of her male colleagues, she has a natural build for the job!
Joel Willis ok I should have just copy pasted the comment on every firefighter video that has a woman “ I bet she can’t lift 200lbs... she’s a diversity hire... she had lowered standards” I’m sure these firefighters see these comments and I wanted to leave one that just showed I understand how much work they had to put in to meet the standard, excuse me.
Being a rookie firefighter/emt is cool and humbling. I am in that situation now. I am also a Army National Guard Medic balancing two career fields can be stressful lucky for me its the same job almost.
It’s interesting that you guys have the engines and trucks outfitted with reds and blues. In my area only cops have reds and blue as well as ambers and the fire teams only have reds and whites along with amber turn signals.
We just got the ability to have blues where I work. It's amazing the difference they make. Less blinding then white strobes at night/fog/snow, better success with people pulling over and research shows blues instead of whites decrease risk of PTSD over a career
In my city police department has red blue and white our fire department also has red blue white light bars but the engines and rescue squads are the FDNY engines since our firefighters went to New York on 9/11 so it's pretty cool to see these trucks in our streets
armycadets in my agency we run a blue light over each rear axle on our ambulances. There’s some places in NY that run red and blue to the front of fire trucks. Sheriff cars in my county have 1 blue light front facing and like 2 or 3 rear facing. It’s very weird here in NY.