No flying in this one, but given the current situation in California I felt it was worthwhile making a video on the topic of wildfires. Back to flying in the next video!
@user-de4cq6uk6l4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for doing this, news coverage has really dropped off but the California fires are still going strong
@americaunited5044 жыл бұрын
Smart piece of machinery to keep handy. Now you need a fire seeking drone to go out and do surveillance when needed. Can you make a heat-seeking drone? Stay safe Trent.
@homertalk4 жыл бұрын
Blancolirio is affected by the same fire I think. Nice update!
@conspicuousauce4 жыл бұрын
Use that Skid loader to build yourself a pond.
@f.dt.f39654 жыл бұрын
i"d say it was a timely well done vid 2 thumbs up tx Trent!!!!!!!
@TheRegenerativeForest4 жыл бұрын
Hey Trent, I am a firefighter in the Bay Area. Fly out to KCCR some time and you can come do a ride along for a shift or two! We will get you all trained up!
@markland45754 жыл бұрын
This would be awesome to see. Huge respect for you guys, thanks for all you do.
@rconger244 жыл бұрын
Good idea for a vid!
@robertwren22894 жыл бұрын
Trent, you need to take him up on his offer!
@Robin-xe4yz4 жыл бұрын
This would be an amazing video! Trent please do this!! It could be a totally new beginning for you, too. :)
@fynnjackson84164 жыл бұрын
That is an offer of a life time
@edcew82364 жыл бұрын
When I lived in Arizona, a key concept was defensible space -- make sure there's nothing close to your house to catch fire. That's not the whole story, of course, but it's a big part...
@sunshinecatcher87794 жыл бұрын
It for sure would help,
@jytheiowaguy18974 жыл бұрын
That seems like it should be an all too obvious of a thing if you live in an area prone to wildfires
@edcew82364 жыл бұрын
@@jytheiowaguy1897 Yes, it should be -- but there's lots of folks with common attitudes like, it won't happen here, etc. And folks get busy with other things. etc. etc.
@dinostudios65794 жыл бұрын
Yeah. My city is placing ordinances. We have to provide defensible space now.
@ppgwhereeverett44124 жыл бұрын
@@jytheiowaguy1897 No Way !! Some of these clowns have Weeds right up to the house ! Or built deep in the woods. No defensible anything !
@MrWATCHthisWAY4 жыл бұрын
Trent please make sure you make Hail Storm is checked out on this unit. Given the amount of time you spend away from your home she maybe the one that knocks down a small fire and save your home! Now that would be the video of the year! Go Hail Storm!!!
@seancollins89264 жыл бұрын
When Nick finishes his airplane, I hope to see a water salute with this...
@aaronmaclean44644 жыл бұрын
Hero Status!
@FinnHYT4 жыл бұрын
Sean Collins I agree this must happen
@PoochAndBoo4 жыл бұрын
@@SpaceReportNews Yeah, I worked for the airlines. That wold be done when pilots were retiring.
@powderriver24244 жыл бұрын
My volunteer fire company has had one of the utv skids for several years now from these guys we get brush fires from trains in the summers running through our district we’ve developed a very good brush response these units are fantastic.
@shanestack4 жыл бұрын
I love when he tells the critics to pound sand.
@diverbob84 жыл бұрын
I loved that as well...I'm 73 and from experience, I can say without a doubt....you are never going to look back on your life and relish all the times you played "safe"!
@RolandGustafsson4 жыл бұрын
Let's hear it for self-sufficiency! A relative of mine was able to sneak back behind the fire lines and save his own house successfully and I always looked up to him for the audacity he showed. Jess - love your attitude. The USA needs more people like that.
@1vester14 жыл бұрын
I was in Navy fire fighting was what it all about... Who is going to save you at sea???? You are doing the right thing. I got a old army 2.5 ton loaded with 500 gallons of water and pump etc. . When it is dry down here in south Texas. Cover your SIX !!!
@michaeldougfir98074 жыл бұрын
Hi Trent -- A couple of things to consider to keep your rig in top shape: •Put some gas protectant in your rig's gas to keep it fresh year round. And to fight the fuel line deterioration from ethanol gasoline. •Find out if your pump has a bypass tube for use in extended idling. If the pump just sits there churning water with no outlet, the water will actually boil. Not good for your equipment. •To enhance the effectiveness of your water, put a couple ounces of Dawn dish soap in a full water tank. It helps the water to penetrate a deeply hot spot, rather than just boiling it off. (It breaks the surface tension.) •Like he said, always aim your water stream at the base of the flame. •Always keep your equipment in top repair. So it will help you reliably. •Is there a water drain on the pump? Freezing water can burst your pump and crack your tank. •If you change clothes to fight a fire you want leather boots, leather gloves and ALL clothing to be of natural material. Anything not wool or cotton can catch fire and can melt to your skin. Right down to your skivvies. It's ok to practice with the new unit. Get to know it. But keep it full except in freezing weather. Talk with local fire fighters, even volunteers.
@xheralt4 жыл бұрын
Boiling the water is the best possible result...the worst is the incompressibility of water stopping the impeller dead in place, breaking either the impeller or the drive shaft...electric motors can fry themselves.
@chrisfs1503 жыл бұрын
I don't what its called in the us but here in the uk you can get an alkylate gas called aspen 4t that has a shelf life of something like 4/5 yrs before going off its also cleaner and better starting than regular gas would be good for something like this that gets left standing for months on end
@hshs57564 жыл бұрын
The sky here in SW Oregon continued to get darker with smoke as I watched this, and I received an extreme fire conditions alert from my sheriff dept a few minutes ago. After 21 years of improving my firefighting capability here, I would say to everyone: 1) Develop as much water storage as you can. Each 3,000 gal tank you can afford and find room for is one hour of firefighting @50 gals per minute. You can fill them by either collecting rain off your roof or trickle well water in. 2) Put a permanent sprinkler system on your roof with a dry standpipe you can hook a pump to. It only took 4 Rain Bird heads with 40' radius to cover my house and shop + enough overspray to wet down a large area around the buildings. Loved the guy's attitude that it's your life and your property, assess the risk and stay to fight if you choose to.
@realulli4 жыл бұрын
I think a pool would make a great water storage as well. Add a defensive perimeter (someone else in the comments said 100+ ft). Part of that could be lawn, now add a sprinkler system to keep that lawn wet if there's a fire...
@devilmecare4 жыл бұрын
@@realulli I wondered why people don't think of that. Saw a house burned down and a great water source. Yep, a pool.
@gerald40274 жыл бұрын
There is no fire there.It is all of the smog rolling over the hills from California.
@hshs57564 жыл бұрын
@@devilmecare Pools may be a good water source, but I've never known a pool owner who didn't hate how maintenance-intensive they are. The good thing about poly tanks is they just sit there until you need them. But because they fill from my roofs, I do have to keep my gutters extra clean. In a way that's a plus, because leaf-filled gutters are a good way to light a house on fire.
@kevinstone96383 жыл бұрын
Love the skids we have used them for years in the rural fire departments here in WV. Was a volunteer for 30 years. The guy is right put it out, keep wind at your back or to the side, cut your fire line and let the fire burn to you and keep the fuel away from your home. Also practice using your equipment and know it well.
@johnbaskett23094 жыл бұрын
Build fire breaks. I live in bush Alaska. We're on our own when fires breakout. We deal with it all the time. All the trees and brush may give you the "I live in the wild" vibe until you get bit on the ass and all your cool trees and brush become charcoal along with your house.
@AkPacerPilot4 жыл бұрын
Yup, and especially with our epidemic of beetle kill spruce...
@RevUnstableBoy4 жыл бұрын
this ^^^ just remove a few lines of brush around your property. remove the fuel.
@marshallcarter61064 жыл бұрын
Until the BLM and AFS come to save the day...last time I checked they have a base in Galena during fire season...
@johnbaskett23094 жыл бұрын
@@marshallcarter6106 They show up after everything is burned.
@southjerseysound73404 жыл бұрын
@Jake Heke I tried to explain controlled burns to a libtard that just moved in near me. Our cabin is in a place called the pine barrens and if they stopped the controlled burns the place is toast. My airfield is surrounded by a 3 row fire break. One is a fire road and then I have 2 of my own protecting our hanger and fuel/chemical storage.
@larrybauman74303 жыл бұрын
We have one that slides into a 2500 pickup. Its 360 gallons. Most ranchers in our area have one or 2. Plus a semi with 3000 gallons water tank.
@holidaymail4 жыл бұрын
After what we had here in Australia at the end of last year/start of this year - best of luck and hope you guys don’t get the same.
@jimiemick4 жыл бұрын
Had one of the smaller fires hit the hills behind my house, Still took 4 days before they could stop having the Heli's working 12hrs a day!
@joenichols7194 Жыл бұрын
WE have their EMS skid on my departments UTV we have a lot of hiking trails in our area and it helps QTAC make a good unit.
@Farmnflyin4 жыл бұрын
I can't say enough about how good this video is!!! One piece of advice, always keep it loaded and full of water! I keep 20,000L of water on surface spring and fall for fire season around my place. 10,000L in a tank trailer I can hook to my tractor. To all naysayers, when you live in the country there is only one person you can rely on to protect you, and that is yourself!!! Thanks for making this video. Love when he says all the critics can pound sand!!
@gerald40274 жыл бұрын
I pound sand alot and fires are good for the environment and helps resprout new life.
@Lostparadise17764 жыл бұрын
Hey Trent, I was a firefighter for about 10 years, and the home owners that took any effort ahead of time were the houses still standing in the end. Thanks for the video!
@Jaxav8or4 жыл бұрын
Jess... that dude was so on point. Loved it.
@car20694 жыл бұрын
hes a legend! great video
@damienmccormack27894 жыл бұрын
He was other than his "nah outs cool about not getting yourself safe". 30 seconds is the difference between it being a small shrub fire to a fast moving grass fire. I'd rather be safe myself fighting any fire than going out in flip flops t shirt and shorts. Many people have died from radiated head from fires here in Australia from not being covered up. It gives you minutes of protection rather than fractions of seconds. Have your gear ready, boots and cover all's are all you need.
@johnhancock18554 жыл бұрын
Yep
@AnonymousOtters4 жыл бұрын
Firestorm crews are a joke, most are a bunch of yahoos without a fucking clue. This guy seemed alright, but I wouldn't give the same advice
@robertborchert9324 жыл бұрын
@@AnonymousOtters Firestorm? Spent years leading my crew, both helitack and ground. Been there. Every fire is different, hardly a joke..
@Knackerz4 жыл бұрын
Great video and really like your flying videos. I've been a wildfire behaviour analyst for 15 years in Victoria, Australia and have been deployed to wildfires in Canada. Jess is right about focusing on prevention in the spring and fall. You don't want any of that dry grass and scrub up close to the house. Can see at the end of your video it's getting quite close. A large fire will burnt fast across even the smallest amount of dry grass, right up to a structure. If you can't clear it mechanically, there may be an option to burn it out in small patches with assistance from someone like Jess and depending on local government bylaws. Jess's wetline tip is great. If you're trying to put out a new start or spot fire and can't get close to the flames, then spray in wetlines ahead of the fire to buy a bit of time. Another tip I know from an old timer Australian firefighter, if you run out of water and are desperate, throwing dirt can also be very effective, knocking the air out of the fire.
@mrpenn46134 жыл бұрын
10:03 reminds me of the words of a friend of mine who is a volunteer FF in MN "Put the wet stuff on the red stuff!"
@robbiestewart19843 жыл бұрын
125 gallons is roughly just under 500 litres in Australia measurement Trent here we have the exact design slip-on units that are either trailer pulled or tray mounted of same water capacity they are very effective for first attack and active fire fighting and worth weight in gold
@stevet81214 жыл бұрын
Sometimes it makes sense to run to the fire and not run away from the fire. That's a great tool Trent, good for you!
@danamiller90803 жыл бұрын
Put a water tank in ur tractor for extra water and hook up draft hose to it... Mix liquid dish soap in water...more effective to suppress fire... Setup remote water collection and storage tanks around ur property to draft from or reload... If u can run water pipes under ground to different spots around ur property... About 30 to 60 degrees of spray is most effective , plus or minus for different situations u will have to experiment to find the best spray for each. If u can keep ur grass mowed low. If you have a lot of lightning strikes in one area u might want to consider a lighting rod in the ground and a circle of non combustible material around it. Do some research and check a company that handles that to get more information on that so you can do it properly and safely.
@ryanwalsh82764 жыл бұрын
Makes a nice tool to wet down the strip when it gets really dusty too!
@flyerjack15484 жыл бұрын
Ryan Walsh this was my first thought 😎 🌧
@qtacfire4 жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed the video Trent! Thanks for coming down.
@AllanFolm4 жыл бұрын
Your property looks like it would benefit from a firebreak - a ploughed strip all the way around, kept to bare earth. Have you considered that?
@realulli4 жыл бұрын
I was about to suggest that. But not just a fire break, a real defense in depth setup, e.g. 60 feet of gravel, then 60-90 feet of lawn (short grass). Also, a pool on the property (talk to the local fire dept about filling it, they might fill it for you for free if they're allowed to dip into it, e.g. with a helicopter refilling its drop bladder).
@befer4 жыл бұрын
It would look pretty bad, but might work better
@steilkurbler49734 жыл бұрын
@@befer In my books it's 'form follows function' on this subject
@befer4 жыл бұрын
@@steilkurbler4973 I mean yeah, but remember that the guy is a cinematographer so it'd be kinda wack for your whole property to look ass in the shots, still a ditch line around the property would definitely be cool
@jonathanhuman73334 жыл бұрын
It could be done well and look good, he could run a strip of stone in a parameter around his house. It wouldn’t save all of his property but it would save the house. Also a fire suppression system at his well could prevent him being left dry.
@ep89344 жыл бұрын
I live near Chico and actually go to school there. We have fires so often. In 2018 we had the Camp Fire that burnt down lots of Paradise, including my friend's home. I used to live in the foothills and have fires come to my doorstep every year. For the past months it has looked like there is a constant rainstorm overhead. I can tell which day this was just because the sun was out. Thanks for promoting safety about one of the hardest and most destructive forces of nature.
@mikejones-dt8vj4 жыл бұрын
its always the small things that prevent large ones in the future, do your due diligence and you will be fine.
@tuneinkate4 жыл бұрын
Hey Trent, one suggestion with that Firefighting sled, just in case "Jeff" and QPAC didn't make it already: Have a first aid kit and some N95 masks with that rig at all times. Handy for both fire related injuries and snakebites etc..
@jeddwyer26814 жыл бұрын
this brings back memories from New Years last year in the Australian summer, we had some of the worst bushfires in history in Australia, we had a massive out of control bushfire about 1km away from us but we were blocked in because roads were closed due to the fires.
@watchthe13692 жыл бұрын
Waterax and Qtac are a good combo the polymer tank makes it a civilian rig but waterax has been the standard for years. Keep the brush away from the house, stomp embers like a junkyard dog, maybe have a solid irrigation sprinkler system (you know the ones with the clacker) and you should be okay. Embers kill 90% of the houses because they smolder in nooks and cranies. If you shelter in a fairly safe house and emerge after the fire front rolls over to stomp on hot spots made by embers it might be a good choice. Like flying, it can be terminally dangerous if you don't know what you are doing so just get edumacated and good luck.
@flycory4 жыл бұрын
Great video. I think these might seem 'off topic' but I think it'll grow your viewer base beyond aviation - which is what I hope you continue to do. Thanks for sharing your awesome with the world. Edit: honestly, one of my favorite videos you've ever done. LOVED IT. I have a water truck on my property, but no high pressure pump for it, I'll go talk to QTAC and see what they have for me. 👍
@FatherTech4 жыл бұрын
I live and work in Denver. When I went into work 2 days ago there was ash falling from the sky. From what I have been told this was from a fire nearly 100 miles away. Never experienced anything like that. The smell of smoke was so thick it was extremely unpleasant to stand outside. God bless all those affected by these wildfires. And a BIG thank you to all the firefighters out there working so damn hard to help!
@conytastellano4 жыл бұрын
Dude, I heard you're about to get snow starting tomorrow. Crazy times.
@erikmnelson774 жыл бұрын
The smoke lately has been from the Cameron Peak fire- just up by Loveland, which grew by 4x in just three days, up to over 100k acres. Hopefully this recent snow/rain will help contain it enough to put it out soon, but it's still burning.
@yepme64844 жыл бұрын
Just remember start that motor every so often because you wait too long at starting it; it might not start when you need it
@2strokeme644 жыл бұрын
Run non ethanol fuel too, or some sea foam to keep the carb clear
@ppgwhereeverett44124 жыл бұрын
@@2strokeme64 How about avgas ? 100 Octane with Low Lead.
@flyerjack15484 жыл бұрын
Does anyone who really knows...know if 100LL would have a much longer “shelf life” than regular 89-93octane Gasoline?
@vendter4 жыл бұрын
@@ppgwhereeverett4412 Definitely no Avgas. The lead will foul the plugs and cause all kinds of other problems.
@ppgwhereeverett44124 жыл бұрын
@@flyerjack1548 No 93 in Calif 91 is as good as it gets
@michaelbryan47804 жыл бұрын
good topic Trent, this one hit close to home and i mean close. I am in Fort McMurray Alberta a little oil town with big toys. In 2016 we had a wild fire hit the town and 80 000 people had to be evacuated. as a back woods lover I know how is feels not having the tools to keep you and your family safe, so good on you for taking the steps. just remember love one first and the property it can be replace
@ppgwhereeverett44124 жыл бұрын
YOU put it out. ! That pretty much covers it. A 1980's Rock Creek Fire Volunteer. Auburn, Cal
@nonebiz21324 жыл бұрын
We saved our house during the Glass Fire. A generator that could run the well pump and a few garden hoses kept an amazing amount of fire from spreading... But we were lucky there wasn't that much wind, and we had a few escape routes just in case...
@TrentonPalmer4 жыл бұрын
Wow, that’s amazing, glad you were prepared and were able to save your house!
@nwscrew634 жыл бұрын
Maybe add a 1k gallon above ground tank, for refilling your fire fighting rig, and drain it during the winter months, could become your last line of defense.
@chrisaerts64894 жыл бұрын
He has a that with his well. Saw it on the video for his well drilling.
@AkPacerPilot4 жыл бұрын
Chris Aerts yup, and all he would need to do is put a connection to be able to draft off it and fill his tank. That little sled tank would probably fill up in less then a minute if it were set up right
@realulli4 жыл бұрын
Just add a swimming pool. That's not just 1k, that's upwards of 10k gallons.
@edwincoates12134 жыл бұрын
I’m a Wildland firefighter, key thing it to have clear defendable space, - closable vents and a way of plugging your gutter- fill it with water... if possible sprinkles are great on the fire front side.
@danerskine98624 жыл бұрын
FYI. Keep a giant economy size bottle of dawn dish washing liquid with your pump. Pour a couple of cups in the tank. Helps the water soak into the grasses and light fuels better.
@damienmccormack27894 жыл бұрын
Please don't because when your tanks low it will lose prime. You inject the detergent into the water line if you want to but it's not just normal dish washing soap, it's wetting agent with fire retardant on the fire trucks. It does make your water go much further and not dry out as fast, and when it is dry it leaves a retardant behind. Main problem is that it's expensive to plumb in and expensive to buy. Most firies won't use it normally because it's not looked at very favorably environmentally, not that this would be my first thought, but is extremely goods for projecting structures.
@danerskine98624 жыл бұрын
Disagree Damien. Former firefighter, we ran it in all of our brush trucks. We are not making foam, (2 different things) so you will not lose prime. And yes we used Dawn dish washing liquid as a wetting agent.
@GrumpyForester4 жыл бұрын
@@danerskine9862 Concur...it's not a foaming agent injected into the water line that runs the risk of losing prime but a wetting agent added to the water in the tank. Folks in my agency having been using it for more than the 40+ years that I've been around and we've used cheaper products than Dawn over the years....
@davidsommerfeld29554 жыл бұрын
Trent, love your flying videos and thanks for doing this one. This is a timely done video with how dry conditions are across our country. Lots of great tips and ideas posted in the comments on how to further protect your property too. I’m from central Kansas and have been a rural volunteer firefighter for 34 years. We have several wild land fires we put out each year. Some of the things we recommend are posted here. Break the ground with a plow or disk, bare dirt or sand will stop or slow down fire. If you can’t do that, mow a fire break with a Bush Hog type mower will help slow things down. We live in the country and keep the grass short around the house. The last tip is for your skid unit you pull behind your UTV. On our wild land trucks we use class A foam concentrate on grass and brush fires. Just dump it in the tank. 2 cups would be plenty for your unit. You can get it from a fire supply store or on line. Or, plain dish soap will do the same thing. Just add it when the fire starts. What happens is the foam or soap breaks the surface tension on the grass and plants and makes the water penetrate better and more efficiently and cools things down faster. It also helps keeping the fire from starting back up. We can get twice the fire fighting ability with our water doing this. Thanks again for the video and keep up the great work.
@bjfoster15644 жыл бұрын
Trent, Great Video as always! Timing is everything and right now with the heat and wild fires this is a great public service awareness video! I didn't comment at the time of your lightning fire because I knew lots of people would pile on negative comments and I agree with Jeff/Jess that hey you got the fire out, you and the wife didn't get hurt, ITS A WIN! I responded to a kitchen fire in Walker Lake Nevada a few years ago where the home owner put the fire out using the kitchen dish sprayer! Hey, it was unorthodox, but it worked as did your response. I would like to encourage you invest in a couple of sets of wild-land pants and shirt (nomex) with hardhats and leather gloves you can leave on your skid unit and some better shoes (LOL). You can put that stuff on right over your shorts and tee shirt. This does a couple of things, protects you and when you are wearing wild-land gear, the fire department is not going to tell you to leave, they just assume you know what your doing and probably will try to get you to join the volunteer fire department, if they haven't already! By the way, you could start your own volunteer group in your area, you already have a start on fire fighting equipment! If you would like more information, help, training, or additional building safety measures you can take, please feel free to email me at chiefbjfoster@gmail.com. All the Best! Byron
@slam8544 жыл бұрын
Great Topic! A number of times I have feared for Your and Hailey's safety. Here in SLC we have been smoked out numerous times from the CA fires. Lived in Santa Barbara for 30 yrs and my realtor was burned out 3 times. On the 4th rebuild they put in a large pool with a series of pumps to defend their property. It worked. Some times fire crews just can't get there.
@makingtechsense1264 жыл бұрын
Before it ever gets to fire season, clear the area around your home of flammable vegetation. Have a safe perimeter so that fire can't get to your home easily.
@just1ofgod4 жыл бұрын
My dad is a type 1 strike team leader and is out fighting the fires all over the place I have had wildland firefighting drilled into me my whole life you did fine putting the fire out and that setup looks great man also Jess seems like a super chill dude you gotta take him flying after the fires are out.
@Bill_N_ATX4 жыл бұрын
Nine years ago last week me and 1600 of my neighbors lost our homes in the largest wildfire in Texas history. In my case, I was only about a half mile from the starting point and my first warning was a neighbors propane tank exploding. I saw a wall of fire coming through the forest. It took 15 minutes to cover that half mile and in three hours it was 8 miles wide and 16 miles long. The wind was blowing 35 mph before the fire and reached over 75 mph in drafts once it got going. God’s own fire hose wasn’t going to put that out. There wasn’t much to be done when a dense pine forest catches but in the scrub brush something small might work. Ours turned into a firestorm and one of my neighbors who had a concrete block house with concrete roof tiles lost his place because the heat coming through his windows set the drapes and furnishings on fire. It was that damn hot outside. Thus every fire is different, every environment is different. We did lose a couple of people that got trapped trying to save one more thing. Things aren’t worth it. Take it from someone who lost every damn thing he owned. I got my family and pets out. Those are what mattered. Don’t risk dying.
@flyerjack15484 жыл бұрын
William Wheeler - glad to hear your family made it out, how is Bastrop ... still see the scars of that fire from the Highway when you drive through.
@O9532O3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for being the voice of reason.
@jbd2024 жыл бұрын
Been watching your flying videos for a couple of years, but as a firefighter, I want to thank you for this one. In the WUI, one of the most important things you can do is create and maintain that defensible space around your home. Glad to see you taking it seriously. Hitting on his point that he made, do everything you can to protect your community, but when the crews do arrive, please make sure to follow what they instruct you to do is for everyone's safety. Good luck with the fires man.
@ronboe63254 жыл бұрын
Getting out there and practicing with it is the thing to do. Get used to it, see if there is a way to mess up. Better to do it when you don't have the stress of a fire on your mind.
@damienmccormack27894 жыл бұрын
Spot on
@TooSmooth4 жыл бұрын
The guy spitting facts is my spirit animal!
@checkeredflagfilms4 жыл бұрын
your ad segues are top notch. when the cash starts flowing in...I put in a pool! superb water source you can hook up your new pump.
@cbshomebizplane4 жыл бұрын
Great job Trent and having the people on there talking about what to do is perfect, I live where we are surrounded by dry sagebrush if or when lightning hits it's going up fast specially with the wind we have around here. Be prepared, God bless you Trent
@bonzogamer69664 жыл бұрын
Jeff/Jess knew it all and must be heard in 'Fire Country' - all states NV, CA. Do controlled burns - Palmetto other sagebrush!
@wowogaming1014 жыл бұрын
Oregon doesn't do control burns and that's one reason it's on fire right now
@dancouillard30014 жыл бұрын
Trent, I'm late to your game but have since rectified this by watching virtually all of your videos in the last couple weeks. I've never bothered to comment on YT before but I figure you are worth the exception. Your (and your wife's) positivity and hard work are inspiring and infectious, thank you for sharing!!
@TrentonPalmer4 жыл бұрын
Thanks Dan, I really appreciate that, I will share your comment with Hailey also. And thanks for commenting!
@bruiserbrown92584 жыл бұрын
The most important tool in fighting fire Trent, is Defensible space! keep lots of space around your home clean with no combustibles!
@CowboyCree634 жыл бұрын
Love Jess, very down to earth and very blunt but accurate. We have the right to do what we feel is right for us.
@shoop40404 жыл бұрын
Heck, I don't care how much the skids are to save my house and protect my family and livelihood I would have two or three. Great video thank you for the info.
@U20E274 жыл бұрын
Very cool and informative Trent. I had family evacuated in CA three weeks ago all the neighbors lost their houses 5acre lots rolling grass hills. Family house survived!!!! The fire burned right by the house. The big deal. Zero landscaping near the house, bare dirt. The 5 acres were mowed down to 2inch stubble and had bladed/dirt only areas near the house. Neighbors all had landscaping next to the house and trees etc that caught and resulted in the house being lost. The comment about prep is very real. Especially if your out on a job and a wind driven fire comes through, your place can be safe even with you out of state. 👍
@curtkopp194 жыл бұрын
Throw in a shovel and other digging tools(polaski, hazelhoe), most wildland fires are controlled by hand digging a line around them. I spent a few summers fighting fires in Oregon, it’s amazing what you can accomplish with a shovel scraping vegetation off the topsoil🤷🏻♂️.
@orvjudd13834 жыл бұрын
Great job Trent, very informative video. My wife and I are talking about how to be more prepared to protect our property from wildfires. We recently got evacuated from our home near the riverside fire in Oregon. Fortunately, our house was not harmed. This Q Fire unit would really help.
@joecarpino4 жыл бұрын
Glad you posted something like this!
@cbwilson23984 жыл бұрын
What a timely and thoughtful video, Trent. My dad was a forest ranger and I spent two summers on fire crews in California in the 60s, I appreciate how much more good preventive information is now available for the general public, especially for the millions living in the urban interface. And you are part of that positive movement.
@easymac794 жыл бұрын
You might think about installing an above-ground tank you feed with a well or rainwater even. It could at least give you something to create a perimeter and soak your roof if you have to ditch. There is a chance that a fire could burn past before your home burns, the water has to all evaporate first - especially as sparse as the veg. is there. You could also automate it with roof-mounted misters and lay soaker hose in a perimeter. -Running off a well, it would protect your house for a good while.
@TrentonPalmer4 жыл бұрын
I’ve got a 3000gal holding tank that our well feeds, I set it up with an extra discharge hookup that I can connect to the QTAC to fill it from or I can base it there if I want to spray a large amount of water
@easymac794 жыл бұрын
@@TrentonPalmer Right on! You'll be ready, hopefully you don't have any big incidents of course though.
@Xpyburnt_ndz4 жыл бұрын
So cool someone is building these these days! Growing up just 40 miles due west of you, I learned how to battle strikes n fires in the timber, running dozers to build lines, etc...good vid Trent!
@ozziepilot28994 жыл бұрын
Definite market for these here in Australia!
@damienmccormack27894 жыл бұрын
There's plenty of the same thing made over here.
@anthony9thompson3 жыл бұрын
I think low cost is very important . 3 cheap reliable units are much better than 1 unit with all the bells and whistles.
@davidrobins40254 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video of how you can build another line of fire protection into your living environment. You've added another excellent tool in the QTAC. Stay safe. One of my nephews is a firefighter with a crew of firefighters under his direction in Central Oregon. I pray daily for his safety as I do yours.
@KF5AIB4 жыл бұрын
Defensible space is a big keyword there. Every homeowner should be maintaining their defensible space every year. Glad to see that you taking the opportunity with your experience to help educate. The fire department may not always be able to get to the fire in time. I’m an emergency manager in Oklahoma and it is our job to try and preach preparedness tactics. This is a good one! Great work Trent! Keep up the amazing work!
@akaroamale4753 жыл бұрын
Hey Trent, Spent a large part of my work fighting or prepping for fighting fires. All you need is a wide area of mowed grass around the house, I have seen big fires stopped by mowed grass. Get big water tanks so you have something to draw on and follow Geoff's advice on cleaning your gutters and remove any way the fire or sparks can get into your home.
@timmummert98114 жыл бұрын
“All the critics can shove it” - quote of the day!
@marknisbet19904 жыл бұрын
Trent gday mate I see a comment of a fire brake with a wind row and everything Jess said is spot on. Have old cloths ready at start of your season and practice use your pump ,service your pump . Halley has other jobs weather is getting sacks water helping you get ready, if you think about what your doing your probably to late think about your flying. Some fires can’t be fought LEAVE EARLY don’t wait, good luck mate.
@PhilBender6124 жыл бұрын
Trent, you need to get a Air Tractor at-802 Fire Boss!
@m.j.l.abulle91074 жыл бұрын
$$$$$$$$$$ !
@Rustykfd4 жыл бұрын
Defensible Space is very important. Great advice you got. Consider adding class “A” firefighting foam to your system. Foam (it’s not foamy when used right for those fuels) will make your water last longer and work better by breaking surface tension and allowing the water to soak in instead of beading up and running off. Keep the good stuff coming.
@Crouse_Property_Maintenance4 жыл бұрын
Rent a CAT D4k for 2 days and clear all the brush. Call a guy that installs lightning rods to protect the house.
@Viragoman114 жыл бұрын
Hi Trent. I live in South Africa and have been involved in fighting wildfires on Game Farms and also burning of fire breaks around the property. I also worked in Forestry, so had my fair share of fighting fires. Basically, what I want to say, as Jess said what was the outcome of your experience... you prevented the fire from spreading, GOOD JOB. Stuff the "experts"
@americaunited5044 жыл бұрын
Also, what about digging a protective fire wall ditch? I noticed the fire fighters using them lately. Stay safe.
@danamaral65874 жыл бұрын
They cut line, don't dig ditches. That'll take waay too long. Cut line to mineral soil 3x the height of the majority of fuel.... Anchor the line (start from a safe area, roadway, rock, water feature, etc).
@nickbono84 жыл бұрын
I live in NorCal on a 50 acre property with 3 homes that was affected by the LNU Complex in mid-August. The fire came through at midnight and burned right up to the homes but we were prepared. My dad, brother and I stayed and kept the flames back with garden hoses, sprinklers, and our 320 gallon fire truck we bought last year. I didn’t see one firefighter until 4 days later when a team from Oregon drove in to clean up any hotspots. Sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do to protect what you worked hard to create. But we saved all our buildings, barns and all, because we were prepared. By maintaining that defensible space all year long, and having a plan when the inevitable does happen, you’ll be better off than those who don’t. 90% of my nearby neighbors lost their homes in this fire, which is very saddening.
@SterlingWheel4 жыл бұрын
For where you guys live it would be smart to get a water truck from Ritchie Bros auctions.
@Tacos8884 жыл бұрын
Right
@flightsaitek40874 жыл бұрын
Smart move for sure. There are also the old airport fire trucks which have a very high discount rate. Also checks those water storage, large tire boxes
@yadrenmolotok4 жыл бұрын
You are right, but you can't operate old firetruck that fast and easy by one man. So yes, smart move, Trent. Take care.
@thedestroyer32624 жыл бұрын
Something like what Cleetus Mcfarland (automotvive youtuber if you don't dknow who he is) has, an old firetruck that carries thousands of gallons and only cost him $6k.
@estruble4 жыл бұрын
There is a equipment dealer in Mt Shasta, Darrah Equipment Inc, that has about 40 water trucks on contract with the USFS and every year he sells off a portion of his trucks. You should check it out. If you ever driven north on I-5, its the place at Black Butte Summit with all the fancy painted water trucks.
@cheif10thumbs4 жыл бұрын
Wildfires were the main reason I sold my property up there in Redrock Canyon. In 1982 the closest fire protection was in Stead. By the time they got to my place it would have been gone. This is good info. Thanks!
@njtProductions4 жыл бұрын
The smoke is exactly like that at my house
@theshaddowaust4 жыл бұрын
Trent, I have work for a few fire groups in my area and will say the only thing bad about the fire fighting video is you drove over the jack and did damage. But for what you did and how quick was great, it's also great your neighbours rushed over to help that's what friends are for. And as was said in this video quick response is the best and for where you live it's great to have the gear to try the best to save your property. Keep the videos coming what you can.
@doubleshitake4 жыл бұрын
People have the right to protect their property, no one has the responsibility to die trying to save them, not even our firefighters. I will never tell someone they can't stay to defend their home, but I will also not force our first responders to enter a situation that is so dangerous just because a homeowner chose to take that risk.
@REDMAN2984 жыл бұрын
I saw plenty of smoke in 2014 when I drove to San Francisco from Milwaukee,Wi. You get sick from it and hope you can get through. Good luck and stay safe.
@TruettD4 жыл бұрын
I was driving through Washington yesterday and the smoke was crazy
@davihar4 жыл бұрын
we've got smoke up in Vancouver as well
@sherman8wi4 жыл бұрын
Trent, add some dish soap to the water tank. It's an old trick we used in the fire cats, fire backpack pump sprayers, and small truck water tanks. You don't need much dish soap to make sticky water. We also put Seafoam in the gasoline for those pumps. Mix it to fuel stabilizer levels. You want the pump to start when you need it. That pump may be sitting for a while before you need to use it, and you have already demonstrated that you will need to use it. It's a good investment, Trent. Nice thinking ahead. That skid loader that you have is a great fire fighting tool as well.
@ryanawilson85494 жыл бұрын
I still can't help but think that all these fires would be less if people used prescribed fires a bit more
@olderbutyoung79594 жыл бұрын
Tell California's Governor that.
@rickh43104 жыл бұрын
olderbutyoung Also tell the US Government that since most of California’s forest lands are under USFS jurisdiction.
@tomsmith30454 жыл бұрын
Great video! The firefighter has it right - it's risk management, and it's taking care of yourself. Nice job, and the most respectful product promotion of the fire pump company I've seen.
@jaytrock32174 жыл бұрын
I am ex CalFire and moved to Texas. California Governor has screwed the state over once again. He will not give money to allow CalFire and Department of Forestry do preventative maintenance in Spring and Summer. It is embarrassing. Puts civilians, and personal at risk. Plus let alone Property.
@Pertinear4 жыл бұрын
Trent, you're a ******* boss. Such a well made video; informative, relevant, and just shows how centered you are. KZbin needs more content creators like you because these types of videos you make are more than just content. Also, Jess (Jeff) is the man! lol
@Jack-ot9ek4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for not accusing this 60 something year old guy of living under a rock during your squarespace commercial. Stay safe.
@TrentonPalmer4 жыл бұрын
Haha, I actually thought of your comment when I was doing this integration! I thought to myself "well better not make the 'living under a rock' comment again" ;)
@gagansingh20084 жыл бұрын
Hi Trent, been watching your channel for a while. Am a volunteer wildfire firefighter in Australia and have fought them. To keep it short it takes lot of resources to stop a wildfire, the unit is quite good as per the manufacturer for small fires by embers etc, but if under amber attack you will be struggling with one unit. A designated fire tank (size dependant on area trying to protect), fire pump with sprinklers around set property area and on top of house can save it for x number of minutes. Wildfires here tend to pass quickly the issue normally is not just the heat of the fire but the lack of Oxygen when it comes through. The safest bet isif in doubt always leave early , if you are seeing flames its too late. In America i believe you can buy fire bunkers etc but not sure if they are rated by any official authority. In short just came through a fire season and have seen loss of life, stock, houses and lesson learnt is leave with your life, you can always rebuild the rest . Stay Safe and look forward to the next video
@dannykirk43894 жыл бұрын
Ayyy claim your ticket here pre 100 view ganggg
@WATERAX4 жыл бұрын
Love the video! We're glad to see you get prepared and raising awareness and we're happy that we can help. We're very proud to be partners with QTAC Fire. Stay Safe!
@desertdronepilot4 жыл бұрын
I got some cinematic fpv flying through smoke yesterday, but got a terrible headache from it.
@johanfoley4 жыл бұрын
I hope you are safe trent
@rjthomasindyusa4 жыл бұрын
Have you been watching Wranglerstar? He got the same setup...
@sumilvan4 жыл бұрын
Wranglerstar is a poser.
@rjthomasindyusa4 жыл бұрын
@@sumilvan Just curious... What exactly is he posing as?
@paulmeyers38324 жыл бұрын
I had to evacuate my home a month ago from The Grizzly Creek Fire in Colorado. It was scary and unnerving and my heartfelt wishes to all the folks in harms way. That said I know if they say evacuate I’m gone. Like you said no house is worth to die for, stay safe and it frees up resources that can help others. What a time.
@fgllc4 жыл бұрын
Saw the first video and 100% agree with Jess... got his name right... You got the fire out. Love the Qtech skids; awesome products. However, you also have an awesome trailer. Your IBC tote holds 275-300 gallons, twice as much as the Qtech. 2 suggestions for you... 1) Use 3/4" garden hose. You will increase volume and reduce friction loss through the hose. 2) Consider adding a surfactant i.e. soap to your water like Dawn or other non phosphorous environmentally friendly liquid soap. You don't need much! This will help the water penetrate the fuels and extend what water you have. Other than that, great job. You got the wet stuff on the red stuff in time!
@phatboizbackyardkustomz90064 жыл бұрын
Good stuff be prepared, as a 40 year fireman as the other guy said you did a great job putting out the lightning strike gotta get on it fast. Remember you have that skid steer setting off in the background to you can flat fight a fire with it to. Clear the brush around the house and make sure you have a good water supply for your attack unit.
@TrentonPalmer4 жыл бұрын
I keep the skid steer fueled and ready for fire season also, I figure this way I have a couple tools should I ever need them!
@planedriverjoshsimmons95874 жыл бұрын
Excellent video with good information for current events. I too drove 70 through Quincy and Portola during the fire. Crazy stuff. My family is still in Blairsden, but I had to return home to the North Coast. Someday when the weather is better, it’s be cool to meet up at Nervino.
@gregwelch66584 жыл бұрын
Trent you are a busy guy. Be sure you run that pump monthly to be sure it will start when you need it. Keep the fuel fresh and battery up if it has one. Hope you never need that puppy but super smart to get it in that area.