June 09, 2020, 10:32 PM
dry-fly1st Night time Life Flight I get to see.
Yep, I called out “Launch CareFlight” on the radio more than once during the years I worked as a paramedic in Fort Worth.
June 10, 2020, 02:36 PM
armedmdAn amazing service which has saved many lives but also seen a fair number of lives lost each year. We once landed 11 helicopters in 77 minutes at my old hospital following a 2 vehicle crash involving a 15 passenger van and 3 folks in the other vehicle. Ironically the van was transporting several members of a local aeromedical corporation. Thankfully no major injuries but still a scary time. Helicopters from all over the region responded to that accident. Sadly about two months later one the crews that responded to that accident from a neighboring region went down with the crew that came to our facility two months prior. Unfortunately there were no survivors of that crash.
June 10, 2020, 09:14 PM
ryan81986Since we're on the topic, here is a MedFlight crew picking up a critical patient about a week or so ago. I just happened to be in the area so I got some good shots of them during the process.
June 10, 2020, 09:44 PM
AZSigsIn the ER we always handled transport from helo to the ER. Lots of night takeoffs and landings. Great pilots and crew
June 10, 2020, 10:19 PM
David LeeNice photos Ryan. I took a couple of the Air Care chopper but without flash on my phone so did not come out good.
June 12, 2020, 04:38 PM
P-220We train with UC Air Care once a year. They fly to our primary landing zone (we have two alternate LZ's, just in case) Last year we made a change, we trained at night.
As a small volunteer department, we do not have to call them often, once every two years or so.
We have never needed to call them after dark.
Evening training added a new dimension for all of us and we are better prepared, should we need them in the evening.
June 15, 2020, 05:48 PM
Sock Eating Goldenquote:
Originally posted by sns3guppy:
I've flown air ambulance and medevac for four different operators over the years.
THANK YOU very much for your service. I was fortunate enough to fly ride along with two operators and participate in one dust off rescue while I was in law enforcement.
While working at a local airport I fueled many medevac helos. I worked night shift and was the nearest airport to downtown Akron. Every single crew was friendly and the upmost professional. Formed a great friendship with several pilots.
Unfortunately my son David was also a dust off patient. The sound of the helo approaching let me know he was in the best hands available.
June 15, 2020, 06:59 PM
sns3guppyI *almost* rode in one as a patient once. A helicopter was dispatched for me, following a parachute failure into a high-angle area on a mountain side. A second request came for the helicopter, and when they enquired about my condition, I was reported as a fatality. The helicopter went to the next scene. I woke up in intensive care, after a ground ride and a long extraction on foot.