Catastrophe Avoided!

Cornersteady replied on 30/05/2019 12:38

Posted on 30/05/2019 12:38

Do you get charged for this type of rescue? And what happens if there is a major incident somewhere else at the same time?

I often think the same when mountain recuse teams have to rescue pet animals, though I hope people make a donation after the recuse of their pet?

Takethedogalong replied on 30/05/2019 13:32

Posted on 30/05/2019 13:32

Never trust a cat! We left my sister looking after ours as a kitten. He climbed up into our big apple tree, and course, she thought he was stuck. So out came the ladder, she fell off breaking her nose. Kitten calmly came down to see what the fuss is about.

Corners, it’s good PR for Fire Service. Plus they have pumps roving nowadays rather than on station waiting for calls. So it was no doubt a rather interesting job for firefighters. If the brigade hasn’t got cover elsewhere in area ( bearing in mind this is Plymouth, likely to have a few pumps) then heaven help the locals. Most folks after rescues of this sort are very generous, I know after fires etc.... up here, fire crews often got free meals, drinks all sorts of things donated. And some give to Fire Service Benevolent Funds, which cares for bereaved families and injured Firefighters.

By the way, there’s nothing shifts a cat out of a tree quicker than a hosepipe......... πŸ˜‚

Glad the puss in Plymouth was fine.

Tinwheeler replied on 30/05/2019 13:56

Posted on 30/05/2019 13:56

Seems it was the Cornwall Fire & Rescue Service as it happened on the Saltash side but that’s splitting hairs. It’s good to hear people are generous towards the brave men and women who do these dangerous jobs.

It looks as if Saltash is manned by retained firefighters. You might find this of Interest, TDA.

https://www.cornwall.gov.uk/community-and-living/cornwall-fire-and-rescue-service-homepage/about-us/your-local-fire-station/saltash-community-fire-station/

 

Takethedogalong replied on 30/05/2019 15:07

Posted on 30/05/2019 15:07

Thanks for that Tinny. They cover a large area. Notice they cover Cotehele as well, special building. Many stations operate on retained nowadays. When we used to camp at Bodinnick, the milkman who came round each morning had two or three pagers on his belt. We got to know him quite well down the years. He was not only a retained firefighter, but also an RNLI volunteer, he often shot off at high speed from camp 😁

Tinwheeler replied on 30/05/2019 15:31

Posted on 30/05/2019 15:31

It often seems to be the way that the same person will volunteer in several roles. Special people, I reckon.

Does your OH remember the days of Firemen's Call Bells? It wouldn’t have involved him and may have  been before his time. They were installed by BT in the firemen's (and they were only men in those days) houses before pagers came along. πŸ˜€

allanandjean replied on 30/05/2019 16:43

Posted on 30/05/2019 16:43

When we used to camp at Bodinnick, the milkman who came round each morning had two or three pagers on his belt.

That will be Des who is an ‘on call’ Firefighter, Community Responder,  Auxilliary Coastguard and a blooming nice guy-oh, and he is also our milkman.

Takethedogalong replied on 30/05/2019 18:08

Posted on 30/05/2019 15:31 by Tinwheeler

It often seems to be the way that the same person will volunteer in several roles. Special people, I reckon.

Does your OH remember the days of Firemen's Call Bells? It wouldn’t have involved him and may have  been before his time. They were installed by BT in the firemen's (and they were only men in those days) houses before pagers came along. πŸ˜€

Posted on 30/05/2019 18:08

Yes he does. He started at an old station, big one, very busy and some of the older hands still lived in houses close to station with the links in. Not in use though by his time. He says they had signs up up on houses as well, so people could run to them to report fires, before days of everyone having a land line, let alone a mobile!😲

Takethedogalong replied on 30/05/2019 18:12

Posted on 30/05/2019 16:43 by allanandjean

When we used to camp at Bodinnick, the milkman who came round each morning had two or three pagers on his belt.

That will be Des who is an β€˜on call’ Firefighter, Community Responder,  Auxilliary Coastguard and a blooming nice guy-oh, and he is also our milkman.

Posted on 30/05/2019 18:12

Wow, I wonder if it is the same fellow, I am going back 20-25 years here. He was very nice I do recall, but I can’t remember his name. The site we used was Yeate Farm, which later became, and still is, Penmarlam Caravan Site. It was a smashing place when we used it, we loved the Oliver’s who owned it. Only stayed a couple of times when it was sold on, still very nice. We have some fantastic memories of this place, made lots of friends, had some lovely times.....πŸ˜€

brue replied on 30/05/2019 18:26

Posted on 30/05/2019 18:26

I was relieved to hear the cat had got itself home this morning, I bet half of those watching SW news felt the same, I don't know, but better than some news! wink 

 

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