-40%

FOREST HELITACK FIRE FIGHTER HOTSHOT HELITACK FIREFIGHTER SERVICE vêlkrö PATCH

$ 13.19

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Condition: New
  • Country of Manufacture: United States
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Patriot in Texas: Life-Time Warranty * Support our Troops
  • Refund will be given as: Money back or replacement (buyer's choice)
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

    Description

    FOREST HELITACK FIRE FIGHTER HOTSHOT HELITACK FIREFIGHTER SERVICE vêlkrö PATCH;
    This is an Original (not cheap import copy) FOREST FIRE FIGHTER CERTIFIED WILDLAND FOREST SERVICES FIREFIGHTER FOREST HELITACK FIRE FIGHTER HOTSHOT HELITACK FIREFIGHTER SERVICE vêlkrö PATCH. You will receive the item as shown in the first photo. Other items in other pictures are for your reference only, available in my eBay Store. Please note that there are color variations due to different settings on different PCs and different Monitors. The color shown on your screen is most likely not the true color.
    Helitack crews are teams of firefighters who are transported by helicopter to wildfires. Helicopters provide rapid transport, enabling helitack crews to quickly respond and assess a wildfire situation. Helitack crews may land near a wildfire or, if equipped and trained, rappel from a hovering helicopter. Once on the ground, crews build firelines using hand tools, chainsaws, and other firefighting tools. They often remain overnight in remote locations. After they have completed their assignment, crew members may pack up to 120 pounds of equipment over difficult terrain to reach a pick-up point. Rappellers often prepare helispots (helicopter landing zones) that provide better access to a fire. Helicopter crew members may also perform other duties such as tree falling, firing operations, delivering people and equipment, and managing helibases.
    Four of the U.S. Forest Service helitack crews are also trained and equipped to perform Emergency Medical Short-haul. Emergency Medical Short-haul is used to remove a critically injured party by inserting (lowering) trained emergency response personnel attached to a fixed line beneath a helicopter into an area to attach the injured party to the line and then extracting (lifting) the emergency response personnel and injured party out of the area and transporting them to definitive medical care.
    In 2003, the U.S. Forest Service acquired 25 retired AH-1 Fs from the U.S. Army. These have been designated Bell 209s and are being converted into Firewatch Cobras with infrared and low light sensors and systems for real time fire monitoring. The Florida Department of Forestry has also acquired 3 AH-1Ps from the U.S. Army. These are called Bell 209"Firesnakes"and are equipped to carry a water/fire retardant system. Mission The Vietnam-era army attack helicopters have been striped of their weapons and lasers. Cameras and infrared sensors have been added to convert them to Cobra Firewatch Helicopters. In 1996, the U.S. Army retired 25 of its Cobra helicopters, which are able to reach speeds of 160 mph. The U.S. Forest Service eagerly accepted the hand- me-downs and refitted them with an arsenal of high-tech gadgets. The new Cobras don't extinguish fires by themselves. Their main purpose is to relay information to ground crews about the direction and strength of a blaze and to help larger planes make more accurate water or fire-retardant drops. The Firewatch's infrared thermal imager can detect the heat of a wildfire even through thick smoke. Its low-light and color cameras can pick up fine resolution images of the fire, and then its transmission equipment can send those images—in real time—to firefighting crews up to 30 miles away. Also, the Cobra can direct larger water haulers by providing precise GPS coordinates.
    Helitack refers to "helicopter-delivered fire resources", and is the system of managing and using helicopters and their crews to perform aerial firefighting and other firefighting duties, primarily initial attack on wildfires. Helitack crews are used to attack a wildfire and gain early control of it, especially when inaccessibility would make it difficult or impossible for ground crews to respond in the same amount of time.
    The term helitack first appeared in a 1956 Los Angeles Times article, which described the "first of a series of tests—tabbed the Helitack Program—on the use of helicopters in firefighting will start next week in the San Bernardino National Forest". The word itself is a portmanteau of "helicopter" and "attack".
    Wildfire suppression in the United States has had a long and varied history. For most of the 20th century, any form of wildland fire, whether it was naturally caused or otherwise, was quickly suppressed for fear of uncontrollable and destructive conflagrations such as the Peshtigo Fire in 1871 and the Great Fire of 1910. In the 1960s, policies governing wildfire suppression changed due to ecological studies that recognized fire as a natural process necessary for new growth. Today, policies advocating complete fire suppression have been exchanged for those who encourage wildland fire use, or the allowing of fire to act as a tool, such as the case with controlled burns. Before the middle of the 20th century, most forest managers believed that fires should be suppressed at all times.[4] By 1935, the U.S. Forest Service's fire management policy stipulated that all wildfires were to be suppressed by 10 am the morning after they were first spotted.[5] Fire fighting crews were established throughout public lands, and generally staffed by young men during fire seasons. By 1940, firefighters known as smokejumpers would parachute out of airplanes to extinguish flames in remote locations. By the beginning of World War II, over 8,000 fire lookout towers had been constructed in the United States. Though many have been torn down due to increased use of airplanes for fire spotting, three are still used each year in Yellowstone. Firefighting efforts were highly successful, with the area burned by wildfires reduced from an annual average of 30,000,000 acres (120,000 km2) during the 1930s, to between 2,000,000 acres (8,100 km2) and 5,000,000 acres (20,000 km2) by the 1960s.[4] The need for lumber during World War II was high and fires that destroyed timberland were deemed unacceptable. In 1944, the U.S. Forest Service developed an ad campaign to help educate the public that all fires were detrimental, using a cartoon black bear named Smokey Bear. This iconic firefighting bear can still be seen on posters with the catchphrase "Only you can prevent forest fires".[8][9] Early posters of Smokey Bear misled the public into believing that western wildfires were predominantly human-caused. In Yellowstone, human-caused fires average between 6 and 10 annually, while 35 wildfires are ignited by lightning.  The policy began to be questioned in the 1960s, when it was realized that no new giant sequoia had grown in the forests of California, because fire is an essential part of their life cycle.[14] In 1962, Secretary of the Interior Stewart Udall assembled a Special Advisory Board on Wildlife Management to look into wildlife management problems in the national parks. This Advisory Board wrote what is now referred to as the Leopold Report, named after its chair, zoologist and conservationist A. Starker Leopold, which did not confine its report to wildlife, but took the broader ecological view that parks should be managed as ecosystems. The passage of the 1964 Wilderness Act encouraged the allowance of natural processes to occur, including fire.[13] Afterwards, the National Park Service changed its policy in 1968 to recognize fire as an ecological process. Fires were to be allowed to run their courses as long as they could be contained within fire management units and accomplished approved management objectives. Several parks established fire use programs, and policies were gradually changed from fire control to fire management. The Forest Service enacted similar measures in 1974 by changing its policy from fire control to fire management, allowing lightning fires to burn in wilderness areas. This included both naturally caused fire and intentional prescribed fire.[1] In 1978, the Forest Service abandoned the 10:00 am policy in favor of a new policy that encouraged the use of wildland fire by prescription.
    They will make a great addition to your SSI Shoulder Sleeve Insignia collection. You find only US Made items here,
    all original SSI shades of color may vary from different US-Made batch/location and/or PC settings. All US-Made Insignia patches are NIR compliant with LIFETIME warranty.
    **
    eBay REQUIRES ORDER BE SENT WITH
    TRACKING
    , PLEASE SELECT
    USPS 1ST CLASS SERVICE w/TRACKING
    **
    **
    eBay REQUIRES ORDER BE SENT WITH
    TRACKING
    , PLEASE SELECT
    USPS 1ST CLASS SERVICE w/TRACKING
    **
    We'll cover your purchase price plus shipping.
    FREE 30-day No-Question return
    ALL US-MADE PATCHES HAVE LIFETIME WARRANTY
    We do not compete price with cheap import copies.
    Watch out for cheap import copies with cut-throat price;
    We beat cheap copies with Original design, US-Made Quality and customer services.
    Once a customer, a LIFETIME of services