FIREWIRE Magazine Summer 2018 | Page 43

AMBULANCE OPERATOR/ PARAMEDIC NICK ROBERTS Limited Term Firefighter in 2015 Nick recalls while returning from a call at 2am, to Captain Tony Villarino—with a shirt covering his head— waiting in the wings near the condemned station and then jumping out to chase him and Limited Term Fire- fighter Kyle Norton. Nick especially recalls the screams of Kyle as he was being chased...Later, Chief Norton visited the station where his son Kyle was precepting a paramedic intern. Chief began testing the student on the dosages of various medications. Somehow the quiz changed gears, and then turned into an hour-long USA geography test...Chief Norton would take the crew out and do zombie hikes, where you’d wear a safety vest and one person would start as a zombie and tag another, turning them into a zombie. ENGINEER MIKE BELL (RETIRED) ENGINEER SKY RODRIGUEZ Hesperia fire explorer from 15-18 years old, reserve from 18-19, stationed as a career firefighter for several years in his 20s. Sky remembers (then firefighter) Kenny White falling through the roof while dry-walling the old building...He also recalls ride-outs as an explorer on the ambulance with the legendary team of (then firefighter/paramedics) John McGarvey and Ron Shackleford. Other than that, 301 was not his favorite ride-out station, due to having to sleep in the day room with one of the firefighters, who usually snored. Sky had some money after being hired full-time (after not having much growing up) and bought his first ever new vehicle, a pickup truck. So he drove it over to 301 to show off the new car and goes inside to bring his friends out for a look. Meanwhile, firefighter/Paramedic Zack Taylor was bathing a dog he had adopted following a medical call. When Sky and crew came back out, they found Zack’s dog—soaking wet—and sitting in the driver’s seat. ENGINEER RYAN VACCARO Fire explorer from 1992-95, stationed as a career firefighter/ paramedic in early 2000s. Ryan has a lot of varied memories of old 301. During one of his first days as an explorer he responded to a lightning strike at Hesperia Lakes where seven people were struck at once and had to be airlifted out...He also remembers being on the water tender with Engineer Ted Sisk while responding to Fifth and Willow Streets on a vegetation response when they hit a dip and actually got airborne—forever cementing the nickname “Air Ted” on Engineer Sisk...He recalls that the crews would have Old Spice battles, where they’d run around the station grounds trying to spray one another with the potent cologne. Hired in 1978 with five other younger guys who knew each other through high school when they opened Station 302. Mike recalls that the station was originally a residential structure; when the district made it into a firehouse, the guys called it the “fifty year-old house.” Mike says his first days at 301 were during a time that dispatch was housed out of the building as well. He would get experience working on the engine during the day and then move over to dispatch and work until the next morning. He also remembers that 301 housed one of the first ambulances in the high desert—and having to staff the ambulance with one person on the engine. While going to a strike team to Los Angeles County, they rode on the tailboard down the hill from Crest Forest, and froze driving through the night..Mike also loved all the Christmas parties that they’d have with everyone’s family, using the fire-pit BBQ...When the department got a Telesquirt truck they’d park it in the back; the power lines were lower than the vertical clearance, so someone would get up top and use a broom to lift the wires up as it passed underneath.. During the summer months, before there was a front porch, the crew would sit on the front lawn and interact with the community. CAPTAIN MIKE LEONARD Started in 1975 as a volunteer and hired full-time in 1978, became a captain in 1981. Served for many years as a Hesperia city council member. Mike’s favorite strike team memory out of 301 was a trip the Manor Fire in the Kennedy Meadows on the backside of the Sequoia National Forrest—his crew was Engineer Monte Floyd and Firefighter/ Paramedic Rob Cisneros, who was affectionately call the Fire Cub... Was at the station when Chief Hartwig did his paramedic internship...Mike also states that now-Division 5 Assistant Chief Ron Walls was his probationary Firefighter/Paramedic. The second Monday of each month, a group of retired Hesperia guys get together for a breakfast, including former Chief Robert Dick. Firefighter/Paramedic Richard Huntling is FIREWIRE’s go-to guy for fire station profiles. Also check out his article in this issue highlighting Station 49 in Fawnskin—is the place haunted or not? Summer 2018 • FIREWIRE 43