Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Scene Size-Up

This is a piece I wrote for Fire Photographer Magazine: You can see it here.

You hear the scanner crackle to life with the words you've been waiting to here, arriving fire crews have just confirmed a working fire. You heart starts to pound as you grab your camera bag and rush out the door.

By the time you arrive on-scene you can hear the mutual aide fire crews en route, sirens blaring and the adrenaline is pumping through your veins. Like the arriving fire crews, you too must size up the scene quickly. You identify if there has been a perimeter set up, where the first due engines are set up and where new arriving crews are going to set up shop and where the fire is and is it accessible.

You work from the outside in, snapping crews walking down the D side, B side. You snap teams staging at the front door before making entry. After snapping photos you perform a secondary size-up. What is above me, what can possibly fall on me, what looks unstable, is it safe and accessible to get to the rear of the structure? You see ladder crews raising the tower to gain access to the roof. You stop, drop to a knee, grab a photo, and move on. You spend your time shooting the structure and the firemen coming in and out, those images are perishable. They won't be walking out of the fire for the first time ever again on this working fire, they just did that and if you weren't ready, there isn't a re-do.

The fire is out, you stop to check the status of the battery because you might have drained it during the fight; then you start to shoot the apparatus on the street. The wide shot showing the scope of the response, the close ups of the various trucks, lights still on, the fire fighter unstrapping his gear and sitting on the front bumper of the rig to catch his breath. You get close-ups of dirty faces, dirty gear, and spent tanks. In the 35-40 minutes you've been on scene your memory card is bursting, you're almost out of room for more, but you press on.

Fire scenes aren't just hectic for the firemen on scene, it is also a target rich environment for fire photographers trying to capture the moment as it is happening. In my opinion it is the closest thing you can get to combat photography outside of actual combat. Like firemen responding to a fire, photographers also need to have tactics and rules to keep themselves safe. We have to get the shot without putting ourselves in immediate danger.

This is our rush. This is our job.

Monday, May 28, 2012

Memorial Day


Memorial Day started as a day to remember the Civil War casualties of the Union. In modern times this as evolved into remembering all of the Fallen American Soldiers. In 1911 the Indianapolis 500 was run on the Sunday during Memorial Day weekend, and it marks the start of summer vacation season; the "barbecue-ification" of the holiday began shortly thereafter. Let us not forget why. 

Today is a day of pause and remembrance. We cannot forget as a country why our soldiers died. Wars are made by politicians and fought by soldiers who have no say in the matter. 

When you see a soldier in uniform, what do you do? Buy them a drink? Buy their dinner? Shake their hand for giving their lives and free time to be at the ready to defend your rights? Or do you walk in the other direction because you disagree with what their boss tells them to do? You blame them for what ever war they fought in? You can't blame a soldier for the war. 

Take the time every single day to thank an active duty member of the military, a retired veteran, or a widow or widower of a fallen veteran. Their families have made sacrifices in order to defend our freedom. We must thank them everyday. 

Thank you. 

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Get Prepared -- #ReadyCLE

Erica over at CLESafety posted recently that she was at a conference and she was learning how to encourage people to being prepared. She shared a personal story; go read it. We can all relate.

 In keeping with this theme, having worked very close with a few local fire departments, I want to share my story, hopefully adding another voice to a very important conversation.

Quick trivia question: During a Hurricane warning in South Florida, what is the most purchased item at Wal-Mart? The answer at the end of the blog.

Be prepared. We all hear it; we all think about it; but rarely are we prepared. What does being prepared mean? It more than likely means many different things, but in reality, if an emergency happens right now, are you prepared to react? Something as simple as knowing CPR or the Heimlich Maneuver can mean you are prepared. I know both by the way. I keep my certification up with the Red Cross. If your kid is choking in a restaurant or not breathing, I am a good guy to keep around. I saved my oldest daughter's life twice just by knowing how to dislodge food from her throat. The summer is here, and thunderstorms are on their way. I too have a story about a tornado, and why when the tornado watches fly, I grab my shoes.

I was a small kid, can't really remember how old I was, I know I was playing little league baseball. I was spending the normal 2 weeks in July with my Dad out in Vermilion Township. He had two acres of property. It was great to get lost in the seemingly endless cornfields and pastures; also very very far away from pretty much anything. One day an early evening thunderstorm was booting up. The power went out rather quickly but not before hearing the tornado warning. My Dad and step mom ushered us to the basement rather quickly, but I didn't have shoes, a jacket, a flashlight, nothing. Just a t-shirt, shorts, and barefeet in a very very old dingy basement. I am talking the kind of basement that is just basically a glorified crawl space. It was a house built in 1890, it didn't have the nicest basement.

We emerged after what we thought was the worst of it. We ran outside to see the tornado heading away from the house and hitting the tree line on the corn field across the street. Debris was flying all over the place. It was about 500 yards away and moving quickly.

What would have happened had the tornado hit the house? I would have had to climb out of there without shoes to protect my feet.

Since that day when a tornado watch goes off, I grab my shoes. Last year when an early thunderstorm hit in North Ridgeville, I made my family put on their tennis shoes, and I grabbed the diaper bag, dog and leash, and we gathered near the safe room in the house; just in case. After the storm passed I knew there was major damage nearby, the scanner was going nuts. The house was secure, family was safe, I grabbed my camera and left to get photos of the damage.

Mostly out of curiosity I snapped pictures of a lot of damage. There was an RV that was blown over.  I stopped took photos of the whole thing. From all 4 corners, inside, and outside. Having a camera in an emergency can be an invaluable tool. How many times do houses blow over and stuff is strewn about? The City's job is to get roads open for crews to get into neighborhoods. If you can get photos of all your stuff all over the place, that would make filing an insurance claim easier. You have proof of what you might have lost before it ends up in a heap with all the other debris. With the shoes on your feet you should be able to get to relative safety without tearing up your feet.

Be prepared. FEMA has a great tool to help you. Use it.

Trivia answer: In Florida, the Hurricane preparedness plan has Strawberry Pop-Tarts in their survival kit.  Why? Because Pop-Tarts' packaging is water tight and has enough air to keep it buoyant in a flood. They can keep without refrigeration for an extended period of time and keep you nourished until a new food source can be secured. So when a Hurricane starts to head to Florida, Wal-Mart ships extra Pop-Tarts to their stores. (source: Business Acumen Training 2008)

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Beaches in Ohio


Cleveland may not be the first place you think of as a beach destination, but it can be. This photo was taken when I went to a beach in Lorain, Ohio to take photos of the kids for a Mother's Day present for my wife. Picturesque light houses, small waves, and a nice blue lake are all you need besides two great kids to walk around and be themselves. We had the beach to ourselves and we had such a great time. 45 minutes and 180 photos later, we had some great ones to print and frame for Mother's Day.

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Super Moon


The Super Moon over Cleveland last Saturday was amazing. Large, in charge, and lighting up the night sky. We made it a family affair and my daughter and I along with my best friend gathered all our gear, and headed out to find this Super Moon. On a weekend where the Avengers were opening, it seemed like a good time to see the Super Moon.

We found the Super Moon hiding behind these clouds in Avon Lake, Ohio.

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Sunset


Living on the shores of Lake Erie most of my life, you often take sunsets for granted, but every once in a while you take pause. There is no other place I would rather live that right here.