Sunday, January 25, 2009

Fire Station Visit a Great Success!

Yesterday, two home school families accepted the invitation extended by Lt. Byrne, community educator from Beaufort Fire station #1 to visit and receive a presentation about fire prevention, survival during a fire, and a number of other things. Our visit began in the Beaufort Fire and Rescue Family Safety Education House which is a converted RV complete with a carpeted stair step seating area in what would have been the dining area, for participants to sit receive instruction.


Lt. Byrne began the presentation with a video presentation to show us just how quickly a fire can start and spread to the point that it engulfs an average family room. The fire on the training video started by a single match dropped into a waste paper basket without any fire inducing agents. Within 2 minutes and 35 seconds the entire room was in flames. We were told to pay close attention to the recliner because it would ignite before any flames reached it and it did. The chemicals in the fabric along with the synthetic wood reached their ignition temperature and the chair burst into flames due to the heat in the room.


We received instruction about cooking fires, one of the top five cause of house fires. Warnings were given about the misuse of extension cords, over loading multiple outlets, and long term use utility cords.
























We learned a new danger with candles. Lt. Byrne showed us a candle in a jar that caused a fire in a bathroom. The decorative piece of string around the jar reached its ignition point and ignited into flame. The fire then spread to a box of facial tissue near the jar. The flame from the wick of the candle itself never touched the string so we were quite amazed to know that again, to be aware of the ignition point of objects, not to actually know the temperature but to take it into consideration when we have fires around us.



A substitute for a wax candle is a new electric candle that looks like a wax candle. comes with fragrances but is battery operated.



Children were warned not to play with matches, a classic and still very important. Parents were encouraged to place matches, lighters and any other type of fire started in out of the way, hidden places.


Smoke detectors are still the number one method to warn us of fire in our homes. Instruction about the placement of the smoke detectors in a room or hallway, the care of smoke detectors and new smoke detectors on the market were shared during the presentation. Lt. Byrne informed us of a detector that a parent can record his or her voice with instruction along with the alarm noise.







After leaving the kitchen instruction area, we moved into the bedroom for further instruction. It was there we learned how to stay low to the floor when we smell smoke, touch the door with the back of our hand to detect if it's hot, if so don't open the door move to the window to get out. If the door isn't hot slowly open it to see if there is smoke or fire nearby, if the coast is clear proceed to the nearest exit and then to the meeting point. We practiced this before leaving the room.

Feel the door with the back of your hand.




Atmosphere smoke enters the room










Exit the room from the window.


After we exited the portable education vehicle we went to the garage where Firefighter Rob assisted Lt. Byrne with a demonstration of firefighter gear. Many children are afraid of firefighters and won't approach them when they are in danger. This activity teaches children to trust the firefighter, allows them to touch gear and watch the firefighter put each piece on. They see the transformation of the firefighter without gear and then completely suited. The lessens the chance that these children will run from the firefighter in the case of a real emergency.






Pictures of Firefighter Rob putting on gear.















Following this time, the children were given a ride around the block in the fire truck by firefighter Andy. As the truck re-entered the station lot, all the bangs and whistles were sounded and the children were thrilled.








The final instruction for the day was a hands on demonstration of how to properly use a fire extinguisher and we each were allowed to practice this new skill.









Overall, we had a fantastic visit at the fire station. We all learned loads of new information and were reminded of many important things we often let slip. We are thankful for the community education program offered by the Beaufort fire department. The program depends on funding that is very low and may very soon be deleted due to lack of funds. Presently the department has a grant that allows them to purchase and give away smoke detectors to families that don't have one. The presentation we participated in is still available to the public as funding allows.

If you have fire extinguishers that are out dated they can be donated to the fire department for training and demonstrations such as we participated in. The department also accepts monetary donations as well as donations of new smoke detectors. Lt.. Byrne would like to get the word out about fire prevention to the general public. Please don't think you know everything there is to know about fire prevention, you'd be surprised about how much there is to know.

Yes, the date on the pictures is wrong.

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Fire Safety Fieldtrips

We are thankful that Lt Byrne of the Beaufort Fire Department sought to include homeschool students in their fire prevention and safety programs. With his assistance we have orchestrated two field trips for homeschoolers in the Beaufort area.

The first field trip is Saturday, January 24th 10 am for kids (elementary school) this program is focused on fire safety and surviving a fire.

The second fieldtrip is Saturday, January 31st 9:00 am for the adults (middle school and above) the focus is on preventing fires and how to keep our family safe and survival.

Lt. Byrne needs to know numbers so please RSVP to our email address chsb@embarqmail.com by Wednesday, January 21st. When you RSVP please indicate the number of adults, grade and age of your children and which date or dates you will attend. Again Lt. Byrne encourages as many families as possible to attend the programs; he and the staff have a great program with lots of great information. Please pass this information on to other homeschool families you know.

The location for each visit is the station right across from the county building 135 Ribaut Road. You can park in the back of the station. Go down Green St from Ribaut Rd, make the first right, coming from the opposite end of Green St. make the last left, Mt. Sinai Baptist Church is on the corner, turn there. After passing the church property, go through the gate and enter the station parking area. All families are invited to fellowship together at Pigeon Point Park after the January 24th field trip. Pack a lunch to bring along and we can meet, greet, eat and play for an hour or so. A get together for the middle and high school attendees on January 31st is in the works.