knitnweed wrote:
This was a Pierce county incident and the report to the dispatcher was that the engine was ROR and AOR. Having heard the terms occasionally before separately, I was puzzled by the use of both together.
Not to start the inevitable flame war, but keep in mind you were listening to firefighters. I've heard them make use of the radio in new and interesting ways:
-There was a call in Kent several years ago for a motorcyclist who had not quite negotiated a sharp curve and dropped his bike. Ladder 74 arrived and a breathless rookie FF told Valleycomm they were onscene and "doing triage on a single victim".
-An un-named FF, who sometimes lurks on here, once told his dispatcher their engine was "clear the trash fire at the Taco Bell, and will be AAT"....Available After Tacos.
-Another FF here in Pierce County related to me his story of arriving at a house fire call years ago to find the house fully engulfed. As I recall, the radio traffic was something like:
FF-Firecomm, Engine xxx onscene of the fire!
Firecomm-Engine xxx, do you need a second alarm?
FF-Uh, yeah, Firecomm...Um...It's a house, it's about 20 by...Um, it's fully on fire! But it's not a big house, and I think it's a wood frame....But it's on fire all over!
And I'll be the first to admit cops are just as bad...Ask the cop who provided a subject's name, noting the middle initial was "F, as in Philadelphia"...Or the one in the un-named local city who told his Valleycomm dispatcher a few weeks ago:
"In foot pursuit! A black male! Running! East on James near the Lincoln park and ride! Black male, one shoe and a white wifebeater! I have his shoe!"
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President-in-Exile, Seattle Area Radio Communications And Scanner Traffic Intercept Crew (SARCASTIC)
Don't feel bad if you can't use your STD100/200; there are still people using Digital Frequency Search!Bunnery definition for the under-fives