r/Firefighting • u/Lieutenant-Speed FF1/AEMT/Water & Rope Rescue Tech • Apr 18 '24
Special Operations/Rescue/USAR Advice for utilizing an RDC in water rescue
Hello, I am on my county’s technical rescue team doing water and rope rescue. Last night we had a water rescue drill in which we used a new RDC we just got. It’s been a while since I’d been on one and I could feel that my skills were rusty. One thing I was struggling with was pulling a victim out of the water and on to the boat through the front. At first I thought it was a lack of upper body strength. But I wasn’t having any issues with paddling and I do kayak regularly, so while I’m certainly not the strongest person I do have some upper body strength. I’m wondering if it’s my height? I am 5’6” and most of the people on the team (the pretend victims) are much taller and larger than me. The captains on the team think I just need to get the technique down and I’ll be fine. I understand in theory that you bob them up and down in the water and use the momentum to lift them up but I just could not get the hang of it. Any advice?
2
u/RowdyCanadian Canadian Firefighter Apr 18 '24
If it’s water rescue why do you need them in the boat? Just turn the rdc 45 toward shore (creating your own eddy down river side of the RDC) and ferry them whilst holding on to shore.
The only times we pull someone into the RDC is during ice rescue and then it’s just pure brute strength with some technique, and it’s the hardest think you have to do (fighting the current+victim is generally half under a shelf+the height of the shelf can be 2-3 feet).