Great Drill ideas

Looking for New fun drills
  • Ryan Henderson

    Send Message to Grouphey everyone i'm from Coxsackie ny we have two co. in our dept. hose 3 and D.M. Hamilton Steamer Co. 2 i'm from D.M. and i was just hopeing i could get some ideas . thanx feel free to put down and ideas of all aspects of firefighting
  • FF WFD 14

    i took a class in s.c.b.a confidence and our instuctor took our packs and twisted them all up opened our bypass valves and tied our starps and stuff in knots and we had to go in pitch black and also turn our nomex around and have our fire gloves on and put it back together...the training for that is to know you s.c.b.a it was a good class
  • Chris Sterling

    We drill every Tuesday night, and we do run out of ideas at times. We do alot of speed drills. We do everything from cummunication drills, to smoke machine drills. We did a fun high angle rescue drill, where we had an injured contractor on the roof of our firehall, that touched a power line while repairing the roof. This required EMS, and fire to go to the roof. We packaged the patient on the roof, and lowered via two laddered firefighters, and back ups, and a stokes basket. The nice part of this drill was, we covered everything from ropes, and ladders, to patient care. Quite successful! Oh yea, we didn't even drop the patient!
  • Steven C. Hamilton

    New to the site. Looking forward to exchanging information and ideas.
  • Chris Sterling

    We tryed a drill that was posted here at FFN. We'ed done very similar drills, but this was a new feel for the guys, with lot's of low profile areas, as well as stairs and ladders. Just take your crew to your local school play ground, and feed a rescue rope all through it, and to throw in a twist, cross the rope to see if they'll follow the right one. You can throw in some objects for them to identify with they're gloves on just for practice. Anything from tools, to house hold items. Keeps them thinking, and helps them stay sharp. Give it a shot. Make sure they're masks are covered, natrually, and try not to let them see what they'll be doing. We had them mask up in the back of the rescue, and led them to the play ground behind the school building. The results were, they want to do it alot more! Have fun, be safe brothers, and sisters!
  • Don Horn

    Always looking for new ideas and methods of training
  • Glen

    Hey. Like Chris, I used the rope in the playground drill that I found on another training forum here at FF Nation on my last FF1 class. The result...THEY LOVED IT AND WANTED MORE! Give it a try. I think you'll be impressed with the results.
  • Floyd Aldridge Jr

    One of my favorite drills was to turn our bunkroom and bathroom into a maze!! I even used our hall for one to. I used 11/2 hose to have the members follow and it would find its way into knots and obstructions! Also used pillows and mattresses to simulate walls and ceilings falling. And the hall was good to use a lifeline to search a very large area. It works great using the RIT pack rope. These drills also search & rescue skills that might just save our brothers and ourselfs too.
  • rick hamlin

    HI EVERONE A FRIEND AND I ARE TRYING TO GET OUR DEPARTMENT INTO DOING MORE DRILLS AND SINCE WE DONT HAVE ALOT OF CALLS WE TEND TO GET RELAXED AND THAT COULD HURT US REAL BAD SO WE ARE TRYING TO THINK OF NEW AND BETTER WAYS TO TRAIN WE ARE OPEN FOR ANYTHING....THANKS
  • Paul Stoops

    Hey everyone. Not really looking for any ideas at this time. At my station, we train, train, and train. We have extrication drills every month. We lay out the 5" supply hose, all 1600' and repack it. Keeps our minds to how to load the suuply hose. PPV and NPV drills; which one should be used in the given situations. Ladder drills; properly laddering a building and how to properly carry a ladder. There is a roof simulator at our training center. We do ventilation drills there. Recently, our Rescue Sgt went through the SOP's and wrote 25 questions. This was to keep our minds to the riding assignments on the apparatus, what our duties are in the riding seats, and different things. Just a few things we do. Our drills depend on the weather. If option A was not going to happen, there is always option B. Train on what ever comes to mind. If it comes to mind, its something that you think the company should train on or even refresh your memory.
  • John Gardner

    Hey all, Our crew did a drill last week that everyone enjoyed and it covered quite a bit of proficiencies. We started with a tourney style bracket with head to head firefighter matchups. The area is prepped with a charged 2 1/2" with a gated wye lying in the area and two targets 100' away (we used cones on two barrels) each firefighter starts with a 50' section of handline (rolled however the firefighter prepares it as long as it's an approved hose roll) and a nozzle. each firefighter starts in station attire. Start the race both firefighters will don their full turnouts (including gloves) attach the hose to the supply and attach the nozzle, advance the line and knock over the cone with their hose stream. First cone over wins and advances. This drill covers getting dressed, hose rolls, hose connecting, hose advancing, and hose streams without anyone really noticing. It should also help build morale and promote tactic planning. We run two stations so pitting house vs. house also added to the fun and smack talking. try it and enjoy.
  • Tom Wheland

    Does anyone do any type of search and rescue as in wilderness, woods and etc.?