@@cjritchie9701 But, brother, they took a long ass time. Exterior should have hit it from the yard immediately while interior was getting set up and not up there yet.
@@camdenyards1456 fire fighting isn’t all cupcakes and rainbows. Shit doesn’t happen on a dime. Sometimes it takes a few for the push, I know that second story was hot, and who knows how much fire they had to fight before they got to that room and that you can see. I can tell you there was more fire behind that room, not to mention the attic. Fire went out. Exterior attack would have took just as long. There is still a lot of work to do with exterior opps. If you can’t take the heat get out the kitchen bub, this is our job.
@ no problem, if you listen to the radio, you can here command say” you have guys on the second story don’t hit the windows” you let the interior crew worry about the fire, exterior guy was there for the exposure and in case shit hit the fan and they went defensive.
Maybe someone can answer this for me, why don’t they use there tank water they have on hand? They put the grass out but didn’t use it on the fire… just curious how come they would not use it?
When you find the answer to that then you can go search for the meaning of life. It's been asked many times by the rest of the worlds firefighters who strive to keep small fires becoming big fires.
Easy answer. Crews are inside making an attack, which they did and knocked the shit out that fire. You don’t hit it from the yard when boys are inside pushing to the fire
Finally a good stop with an aggressive interior attack, as it should be. This channel shows a lot of structures lost due to a lack of aggressive interior attacks.
@@virgilhilts3924I had a friend who was a high ranking officer in a major north jersey department who joined here and he said they were horribly trained and behind the times on techniques. He had to leave the department because they were just too dangerous. They need a paid department at this point. Supplemented with volunteers but the ranking officers need to be removed for professionals.
Fire gets in the walls, it get everywhere, it’s called overhaul, and to answer your other question. Do the job and tell me how many guys you want there at the scene. Guys are there for relief, and so many other reasons
Indirect through the b side upper window, cool thst shit down so your interior teams can get to work. This was a text book combo attack that was squandered. They couid have saved more of that 2nd level
They knocked the shit out of that fire. Aggressive interior attack. Sounds like you’re a jellous lil girl that doesn’t see fire like this lol. Nothing to complain about with this vid, go flip my burgers
Nice Stop Jersey Shore! You might like to try adding some Class A wetting agent to your water next time. Plain water has high surface tension which prevents it from penetrating beneath the charred surface of burning materials. This results in water runoff and delays suppression. This is why we see lingering smoke and steam long after the flames have been extinguished. Class A foam (PFAS free) allows fire departments to use much less water because it makes water 3 to 5 times wetter which speeds extinguishment and stops smoke production. Chief Hughes Battalion 1 (retired) Chicago FD
Geez. I wish command would stop swallowing the mike. I'm not sure the insurance would agree the house was saved, but it was an aggressive attack. Glad there were no injuries.
I moved from Jersey in 91 and now live in Florida. Most houses here are either poured concrete like my house or cement blocks. It’s very rare that we see fires that destroyed the whole house, fires are usually limited to one room. I’d never purchase or build a stick home again.
@@Naplesfrank154 That's the wonderful thing about living in the U.S. you can live in any type of home you want. Our place in the city is an ~100 year old adobe. Our home up on our ranch is all stone built back during the Spanish colonization.
My “Hats off” to that initial crew working the 1” 3/4 up into the 2nd floor and aggressively putting water on the fire. That type of sacrifice and due diligence takes a lion’s heart, steel spine, and adroit hands. It must have been hot as hades up there!
Not sure why there is a ring of fire on lawn from house to fence? Nice aggressive attack. Place bucket closer to the work so the lads aren't reaching so far.
No, its gone. Besides the structural damage from the fire, all the water and the smoke, and the mixture of both, running down through the whole house, ruins it and everything in it. What hasn't been burned, is soggy wet and smells horrible. It's a total loss.
Firefighters are operating on the interior....go join a department where you will have a clue what's going on before committing 😡😡😡 AP, Retired Firefighter (Captain)
I cannot believe how strong and heavy that fire is out the side that’s insane
Is there a reason why they didn't start putting water on the fire after they put out the little fire on the ground?
Because guys are inside making an attack, witch the did and knocked that fire. You don’t do exterior and interior operations at the same time
I had the same question…thank you for responding
@@cjritchie9701
But, brother, they took a long ass time. Exterior should have hit it from the yard immediately while interior was getting set up and not up there yet.
@@camdenyards1456 fire fighting isn’t all cupcakes and rainbows. Shit doesn’t happen on a dime. Sometimes it takes a few for the push, I know that second story was hot, and who knows how much fire they had to fight before they got to that room and that you can see. I can tell you there was more fire behind that room, not to mention the attic. Fire went out. Exterior attack would have took just as long. There is still a lot of work to do with exterior opps. If you can’t take the heat get out the kitchen bub, this is our job.
@ no problem, if you listen to the radio, you can here command say” you have guys on the second story don’t hit the windows” you let the interior crew worry about the fire, exterior guy was there for the exposure and in case shit hit the fan and they went defensive.
I'm very sorry that this fire came to the residents of this home so close to the holidays,
Praying for a speedy rebuild!
@@jerseyshorefireresponse🙏
Aggressive interior attack 👌
Stay safe yaw. God Bless this family,🙏🙏🙏
Love your channel. Good catch as always!
Thank you very much!
Thanks for sharing looks like they had thier hands full there for a while
It was a pretty intense fire at first!
Great video!!!
Great Job
dang whoever put that siding on did a hell of a job! never seen crews have that much issue with siding coming off!
It's that newfangled vinyl siding that melts in the fire's heat!
@@Thomas-15212-R actually looked and sounded like aluminum siding which will melt as well
Question we’re is the water DAH tell me when did they stay away of waterareyoukidding me
Maybe someone can answer this for me, why don’t they use there tank water they have on hand? They put the grass out but didn’t use it on the fire… just curious how come they would not use it?
When you find the answer to that then you can go search for the meaning of life. It's been asked many times by the rest of the worlds firefighters who strive to keep small fires becoming big fires.
Because there are firefighters inside the house putting the fire out. You fight fire from the inside whenever possible
Easy answer. Crews are inside making an attack, which they did and knocked the shit out that fire. You don’t hit it from the yard when boys are inside pushing to the fire
Finally a good stop with an aggressive interior attack, as it should be. This channel shows a lot of structures lost due to a lack of aggressive interior attacks.
Why don't you become a firefighter and show them how to be more aggressive?
Captain keyboard rides again he knows how it should be done because he ever done it.?
Which video are you commenting on?
@@virgilhilts3924nah, he’s afraid of fire! Lol
@@virgilhilts3924I had a friend who was a high ranking officer in a major north jersey department who joined here and he said they were horribly trained and behind the times on techniques. He had to leave the department because they were just too dangerous. They need a paid department at this point. Supplemented with volunteers but the ranking officers need to be removed for professionals.
Sounded like the teacher from the Peanuts movies
Great video
@@nayanpanchal39 thanks!
Nice stop.
cant understand one word from command
Reminds me of Charlie Brown...
The IA outstanding,o erhaul proving to be a little more of a challenge .
Brick has been burning this year huh?
Decent amount of jobs yeah.
Why were they knocking the walls of the house out?
Also why so many fire fighters?
Fire gets in the walls, it get everywhere, it’s called overhaul, and to answer your other question. Do the job and tell me how many guys you want there at the scene. Guys are there for relief, and so many other reasons
At 14:34 is that fireman literally standing in the window not masked up or am I tripping?? But other than that great knock down amazing job
I saw that too!! But there's no way!! He'd be dead due to smoke inhalation. It was just an illusion....yea, that's it, an illusion!!😂
@ 😂😂😂 yeah I think I was tripping
Indirect through the b side upper window, cool thst shit down so your interior teams can get to work. This was a text book combo attack that was squandered. They couid have saved more of that 2nd level
its always nice to watch the jersey vollies . they give a good try.
They knocked the shit out of that fire. Aggressive interior attack. Sounds like you’re a jellous lil girl that doesn’t see fire like this lol. Nothing to complain about with this vid, go flip my burgers
Nice Stop Jersey Shore! You might like to try adding some Class A wetting agent to your water next time. Plain water has high surface tension which prevents it from penetrating beneath the charred surface of burning materials. This results in water runoff and delays suppression. This is why we see lingering smoke and steam long after the flames have been extinguished. Class A foam (PFAS free) allows fire departments to use much less water because it makes water 3 to 5 times wetter which speeds extinguishment and stops smoke production.
Chief Hughes
Battalion 1 (retired)
Chicago FD
Geez. I wish command would stop swallowing the mike.
I'm not sure the insurance would agree the house was saved, but it was an aggressive attack. Glad there were no injuries.
At least 50k in damage. Maybe more..😢😮
STATIONS 21,22,23,24, & 75
Has the local news reported the fire started from a laser strike from a drone?
Yeah, most likely was the cause of the fire.
@@jerseyshorefireresponsethat is terrifying, it’s getting crazy and makes no sense
@@jerseyshorefireresponseWhat? Are we being sarcastic or serious?
@@hopeindarktimes clearly sarcastic haha
You guys are awesome❤
There was some background voice that I was having difficulty understanding. I must be going deaf in my old age.
Was that house made of paper mache ???
Wood frame structure
I moved from Jersey in 91 and now live in Florida. Most houses here are either poured concrete like my house or cement blocks. It’s very rare that we see fires that destroyed the whole house, fires are usually limited to one room. I’d never purchase or build a stick home again.
I think its a total. Second flore gone by fire ans smoke, first and basement gone by water.
@@Naplesfrank154
That's the wonderful thing about living in the U.S. you can live in any type of home you want.
Our place in the city is an ~100 year old adobe. Our home up on our ranch is all stone built back during the Spanish colonization.
My “Hats off” to that initial crew working the 1” 3/4 up into the 2nd floor and aggressively putting water on the fire. That type of sacrifice and due diligence takes a lion’s heart, steel spine, and adroit hands. It must have been hot as hades up there!
They said it was getting toasty!
Release the fire ground experts!!!!
Haha don’t worry they will comment soon enough!
Always
@@peterarvanitis6497
Well JB the 🤡 has made his first appearance, the deck gun comments should soon follow 🤣
Shout out to the pipeman. Thats a dream.
How Many Personal Are In Your Department? "GREAT" Job On This Incident!! Peace-Out And Happy Holidays!!
@@rhacker3058 there probably around 30-40 active members for station 23. But not everyone shows up every fire due to it being volunteer.
All of these fire trucks coming in and not one dropped a line come on guys you can do better than that really
Doggone balloon frame match stick building 😢
Good stop, guys.
Not sure why there is a ring of fire on lawn from house to fence? Nice aggressive attack. Place bucket closer to the work so the lads aren't reaching so far.
There was debris falling from the fire and some stuff was catching on fire down there. The ring was due to the grass burning.
They should have their own controls up there.
@@jerseyshorefireresponseI hate when derby falls off the building.
I thought it was Christmas decorations
They did save the home greatjob
No, its gone. Besides the structural damage from the fire, all the water and the smoke, and the mixture of both, running down through the whole house, ruins it and everything in it. What hasn't been burned, is soggy wet and smells horrible. It's a total loss.
I'm in Milwaukee and a home with easily as much damage as this is being rebuilt.
They're standing there with a charged hose!!!!!
What?
Ah yes, you don’t know what you’re talking about. Listen to the radio. “Guys on the second floor, don’t flow water through the window”
Firefighters are operating on the interior....go join a department where you will have a clue what's going on before committing 😡😡😡 AP, Retired Firefighter (Captain)
‘Terrible response on the scenes attach,,,what’s with the walking around,,,no water? Terrible crew performance!!!