Firefighter Nation

Firefighting & Rescue Social / Professional Network

New! Visit FireEMSblogs.com for Hot Content - 40,000+ Members - Invite Firehouse Friends - Not a Member? Join Now
Hello all me and some of the guys at the station, where cleaning the station up when we found some old hip boots from like the 80's. and I was just wondering if any fire dept's out in this great country of our's is still old school. With the 3/4 boots and trench coats ?

Tags: boots, hip, old, school

Share/Send to Friends & Co-Workers

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Last I heard, Chicago firefighers still had the option between those and bunker gear. I'm not sure if that's still true or not though.

Reply to This

Yeah I have seen that. and I saw a volly house in MD that Has some members still had them.

Reply to This

what dept. in maryland was that?

Reply to This

We still have a few pair around the hall, but they're becomming a rarity anymore. I was never issued a pair but I'll snatch a pair out of the supply area for a flooded basement if I can find a pair that'll fit. My turn out boots are rarely high enough to keep the water out in those situations.

As for the choice to wear those and a long coat into a structure fire. No Thanks. I'd have a hard time crawling on a floor getting caught up in the coat dragging on the floor and all the heat sneaking up from the bottom.

Thank you Chicago for red over black trucks, hot dogs "dragged through the garden" and Da Bears. But I'll keep my bunker pants so that my future progeny may live.

Reply to This

I'm not sure but I think san fransico still does have that option.

Reply to This

We still have ours, in a glass trophy case, along with other antiques ;-)

Reply to This

No kiddin so do we. The pair we have in our case are actually red in color, had them given to us by another dept. This was all we had in the early years, when we went bunkers; we just cut the top off and continue to ware them till we could afford new.

Reply to This

I started out my time in the fire service with the ¾ boots and in the summer they were great, well except for actually fighting fires. (I burned my back side once.) I am glad to have the “night hitch” for daily use now. I think until just recently Boston used the ¾ and were forced to get rid of them. I think the last time I had a pair was in the early 90’s. I found a pair in supply and used the loop whole in the NFPA standards of if it was accepted when purchased or something like that. Eventually the Chief made me give them up but it was nice while it lasted for smells and bells. I did however use my night hitch for real fires.

Reply to This

they are great for water emergencies. Everyone around my area has bunker pants. (Phased out the hip boots ages ago)

Reply to This

We've got a fire department 2 hours south of me that use them just because they dont have the budget to bys bunkers and they dont do any interior fire fighting because of this.

Reply to This

Tell me your joking..

Reply to This

I'm sorry but it's true. We're trying to help them out.

Reply to This

RSS

Sign in

E-mail

Password
 or Sign Up
By signing in, you agree to the amended Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.
Forgotten your password?

Latest Nation Member Activity

DUST Truck checks and The Ramones...
7 minutes ago
Stupid...just plain stupin...I know let's have another friggin table-top
8 minutes ago
My department has a few different tankers throughout the districts but we have a county wide semi that is a 10.00 gallon fuel type trailer with six 2 1/2 discharges
22 minutes ago
Got a pink ribbon on my job shirt, class a, and helmet front
29 minutes ago

FFN eMail Alerts

Get hot content from FFN and FireRescue
FireRescue eNewsletter
Breaking & Daily News
Special Promotions
Webcast/Content Alerts
*Your eMail Address:

© 2009   Created by Firefighter Nation WebChief, an Elsevier Public Safety & Go Forward Media, LLC Product -   Partners: JEMS Connect - FireRescue - JEMS
Contact Us: Report an Issue, Inquire About Advertising & Partnerships
This site is intended for use by current and former fire, rescue & EMS professionals. Non emergency service personnel may be subject to review and removal. Using this site inappropriately to spam/advertise or solicit members in any way will result in account termination. Commercial companies may have profiles, but blogs, forums, videos and photos may not be used for self-promotion.

Badges  |  Contact Firefighter Nation  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service