SAR Fundamentals/Ready Pack
From PCSAR
Contents |
Subject
What is this lesson plan about?
What equipment a search and rescue worker should have ready to take to a search
Authors
List who wrote this lesson plan.
Brett Wuth
Scope
What is included in this lesson, what's not and why.
- SAR Fundamentals Manual: Ch.10 "Emergency Preparedness Kits - The SAR Ready Pack"
- Basic SAR Skills Manual: Ch.5 "Outdoor/SAR Equipment"
- Ready pack demo
Objectives
At the conclusion of this lesson the participants:
- will be able to ...
Time Plan
Total Time: 60 minutes
- 2003-10-19 09:33-10:20: 0.8h
- 2011-02: 09:25-10:22: 1.0h
Time | Material
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00:00 3 min |
Introduce topic title Introduce Instructor Present Objectives |
00:03
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A ready pack is the equipment you take with you into the field.
Some teams in an urban setting have less stringent expectations Pack is always ready
vs. use your ready pack regularly (recommended)
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Distribute form for students to design their own ready pack. The pack itself: volume: 20 to 35L packs without frames (bags)
external frames
internal frames
frames distribute the weight
adjustments
most important when buying a frame pack
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How to pack Heaviest stuff low down
Heaviest stuff close to your back
Protect against drenching when falling/dropping in water
Advantage to using lots of bags:
Organize into sacks
Mix of loose and tight sacks
A few items clipped on the outside of the pack, in side pockets. What you don't want to put down pack to access.
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have a student completely pull apart every item from an extensive ready pack (e.g. Brett's) Discuss what item is for. group discussion: What is the most unreasonable item in the pack? What is missing?
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72-hour box
Kit to bring to search base in case you're asked to stay longer.
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Aids
What materials are needed or useful in presenting this lesson.
- a complete ready pack (Brett's is an extreme example)
- a 72-hr box
- Pincher SAR's Ready Pack recommendations: page 2 of PCSAR DOC-113 New Member Package
- list of equipment in Brett's Ready Pack
- form for preparing your own ready pack
- list of equipment in Jake's vest
- Marin County Search and Rescue 24 hour pack (cached copy)
Frequently Asked Questions
What are some of the questions that students typically ask. Include the answers.
Feedback
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License
What can others do with this lesson?
Copyright © 2012, Brett Wuth.
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.5 Canada License.
To view a copy of this license, visit
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/ca/
or send a letter to Creative Commons, 559 Nathan Abbott Way, Stanford, California 94305, USA.
Reference Material
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[1]
Notes
Any additional notes, etc.
Question bank
Q: How many first aid kits do you need on a team?
A: There has to be at least one person with a first aid kit.
Q: How many hours should your ready pack be able to support you?
A: 24 hours
Q: What is the weight distribution for a proper pack?
A: 70% hips, 30% shoulders
Q: How many people should you pack your ready pack for?
A: 1 - yourself
Q: How much water should you have?
A: At least 1 L
Q: List three types of fire starter you could have in a ready pack.
A:
- flint & steel
- fire paste
- matches
Q: What type of packs shoul you bring to a search?
A:
- 24-hr ready pack
- 3-day pack
Q: How much should your ready pack weigh?
A: 20-35 lbs
Q: How many option of fire starting should you have?
A: At least 2.