Tag Archives: SRT-1

River Rescue: Access

If we were to look at the total time spent in a river rescue, then divide the amount of time spent of each part of the rescue: Locate, Access, Stabilize, Transport we would find that a majority of time spent in a rescue is in the access phase.LAST

Access is one of the most limiting factors that affect rescues.  If you cannot access the victim you will be incapable of giving any aid.  Having knowledge and practice of the various types of access is one of the fundamental pillars of an efficient rescue team.  What is most important is understanding what your team is capable of and what equipment needs those capabilites may dictate.  A group of rafters’ rescue equipment needs and and space available to store them likely will be larger than a small group of kayakers. On the flip side, a professional rescue team (EMS) will have much more equipment/hardware but a lot less practice and experience in the water.  Every group has its challenges and limitations to being able to access a victim, but each group also has its benefits and special skills that can help.  The key is practicing scenarios to  discover what your group’s deficiencies and special skills are,  then working out a plan to overcome them.

Locate, Access, Stabilize, Transport

Locate, Access, Stabilize, Transport

What can you specifically practice?

Boat access: can you get out of your kayak onto a rock from the eddy behind it if you cant touch the bottom of the river?  Could you catch that same eddy if you were in a raft, or could you swim to access that eddy if you didn’t have a boat at all?

Downstream safety/rescuer reset: do you have the tools in place to retrieve your swimmer/kayaker/rafter if they miss that rock and reset the rescue for a second attempt?

Preplan/plan B: can you implement or plan a secondary plan of action in case your initial access plan fails?

Taking the time as a paddling group or as a department to learn and discover skills, abilities, and limitations in the water can go a LONG way to causing a successful rescue.

Post by: Tren Long, Instructor

U.S.A.F Pararescue Squadron SRT/SRT-1

 

 

I look forward to these classes very much. The PJs are an adventurous group of young men faced with active duty deployment Search and Rescue missions for the United States Air Force all over the world as well as Search and Rescue Missions in the US. I have the utmost respect for these guys and the job they do. This group was no exception. With 6-days for river rescue training we had ample time to cover the course material as well as fill it in with everything thing I could come up with. Trust me when I say that I really have to work hard to keep challenging them. But we did it, and had a great SRT-1 /SRT-A combination course. From High-lines to canals, low-heads to Class-IV whitewater, we did it all… and then some. Talk about efficient. Thanks for a good week gentlemen. -ZB 6.2013