Yes it was sad to hear of Bob's passing so soon after retiring from his dedicated career. I remember the Toronto Sun wrote a wonderful tribute to Bob and his distinguished years of service as a caring medical professional. RIP Bob
@@Saucy-ws6jc yes I was the Producer and pitched the idea to do the ride alongs. At the time it was unheard of and took a lot of work to get the approvals and buy in from our station and the different services.
This was in the late 1980s, but I remember the two-tone siren on ambulances all through much of Ontario from about 1973/4 and into about the early 1980s. Those ambulance units with the blue stripe down the side middle of the van. You could always tell apart an ambulance from other emergency vehicles because of that sound. If I could express it in words it kind of went "doo dult, doo dult" over and over. They were kind of cool looking and sounding. Soon after it went back to the usual wail/yelp siren sound that has been around for so many decades. Most likely these guys were in those types some years earlier.
Hello, I don't know the model type, but I can give you a couple youtube videos that would somewhat demonstrate what I mean. The first one is a look at this type of ambulance and the siren sounds right at the beginning of the video, but its inside the station, so it doesn't have a great sound, or the device recording it was bad. th-cam.com/video/xOPevDAPaRg/w-d-xo.html The other video is from a first aid film in the mid-70s. It's part 4 of 4, but you don't have to watch the whole thing, skip over to about time 7:40 and you will hear the ambulance siren in the background coming to the scene - th-cam.com/video/zWjUdtE51iE/w-d-xo.html It's very hard to find this type of siren on videos, even though it was around for a number of years. Please let me know if you have any info on this model type.
@@ronstrulic4388 Those Ambulances don't 🚑have the safety as the newer ones today. Those Dodge Ram Ambulances are not safe to drive because if you get an accident you probably will be seriously injured or dead because they don't have the features they have today.
@@Barista125 it's not that they were unsafe and of course anything newer is going to have better safety features. They we just a very cramped space to work in and the cab was weird with the tiny step and a huge wheel well you had to get over to get in.
This was also the “heyday” of the AIDS and crack epidemic. Bob sure took his job seriously, yet while still maintained some bit of sense of humor for his patients…. @4:21 when he said, “you still have a good sense of humor eh? Rest happily Bob and the good ol’ 80s era.
You wonder why the don't use the roll -in-and-out ambulance gurneys/stretchers who were widely available also back then in the 80-ies... would have saved some backs..
We can't disclose names. Paramedic- you ok Mary? Anything else I can do for you Mary? Does it hurt here Mary? Kills me he talks about St.John Ambulance,I'm a Advanced Medical First Responder with them. I wish I was around in the days when they ran city wide ems calls and trained paramedics. I would have loved to have been adult age during those times lol born alittle to late lmao also them fuerno 30 stretchers are a bitch,we use them at st.johns to this day. And I respect anyone who used these on everyday ems calls,we use area quite abit but nothing close to full time ems. Props to anyone who busted their backs using these everyday lol my hat is off to you.
Anyone who can deadlift a stretcher with a full-blown adult in it, even with a partner deserves a coffee and a well-earned day off. I used a self-loader in my stent at a funeral home and that was a bitch with an average person in it. Imagine someone over 300 lbs (136 kilos).
Hold up, St John Canada still has lift-in stretchers in use?! That's a manual handling nightmare. Here in St John Australia I thought our busted-ass Ferno 26T self-loading stretchers were antiquated lol
Besides the Emergency Medical Technicians, there are also Paramedics that drive Flight Cars because Paramedics are allowed to administer the drugs used to keep patients alive long enough to get to the hospital.
I wonder if CNAs and "nurses" back then at nursing homes also told them the lines, "not my patient, I just got here" or "Idk, they were fine 20 minutes ago".
apologfize if I missed the meaning for this, but inside the ambulance what dis he actually use those CD's For and if correct that Ambulance they were using, wasnt that the same kind of ambulance that they used in the move The Cannonball run, the one were they installed if correct SIX gas filler holes in it and they actually raced it first clear across the country with speeds well over 120 miles per hour, then after that they used the same ambulance in the movie......
The disc was recording vehicle speed and whether their lights and siren were activated while they were in motion. The paper disc turned slowly with a needle/pen recording the activity on a time line. A new one was put in at the start of shift and filed afterwards.
@@greggrimes4252 Very interesting! I'm guessing it was used to make sure they weren't speeding or even running hot too fast? And thanks for answering btw. I always love these old school 70's/80's/90's fire and EMS videos.
Why don't they have pull out foldable ramps at the back of the ambulance to easily push a stretcher into it rather than having to lift the stretcher each time?
Very primitive care for being paramedics, here in the United States in the same era 1980s our paramedics were way more advanced than the Canadian paramedics. The US paramedics had heart monitors, defibrillators, intubation equipment, allowed to start IVs and give medications amongst many other tasks
@@marioiacolucci Bob retired shortly after the show was edited and died of cancer not long after. I am not sure of Tim and whether he finished his career with Metro Toronto.
@aldouglas975 well he does. It doesnt mean he's not "a hell of a human being". I've worked with medics who were absolutely awesome people, but they were burnt. To this day even. Actually for some reason, a lot of the new kids coming out college burn out A LOT quicker, like four or five years into it they're already looking for something else to do.
HEY IN L0S ANGELES CITY & C0UNTY AMBIANCE UNIT'S R 1 EMT & 1 PARAMEDIC 0r 2 EMT's & FIRE DEPARTMENT AMBULANCE IS 2 FIREFIGHTER, EMT's 0r 2 FIREFIGHTER, PARAMEDICS
I’ve been a paramedic since 2010, and I’m fascinated by the “old days” of the profession.
My back hurts just watching these guys, imagine 20 years.
Did this for 36 years in Toronto and used that Number 30 stretcher for 20 of them. My back still hurts.
Thank you for your service
I see some videos taken in the last 5 years of FDNY and LAFD Paramedics using old-school ones like those still... If it aint broke dont fix it?
I love my modern power gurney at work... watching them using them old "cots" is giving me nightmares lol
OH HOW I LONG TO CARRY MY DAD'S O2 KIT WHEN HE WAS ALIVE I WANT TO CARRY THE O2 KIT ONE LAST TIME AND SAY DAD I CARRY THIS FOR YOU
@@JPOC226 Major Back Injury reporting for duty...sah!
Bob Haggarty, senior paramedic with glasses, tragically passed away two years after the filming I read. RIP sir.
Yes it was sad to hear of Bob's passing so soon after retiring from his dedicated career. I remember the Toronto Sun wrote a wonderful tribute to Bob and his distinguished years of service as a caring medical professional. RIP Bob
@@Saucy-ws6jc Yes coincidentally Bob and Tim were the ambulance crew in the police episode.
@@Saucy-ws6jc yes I was the Producer and pitched the idea to do the ride alongs. At the time it was unheard of and took a lot of work to get the approvals and buy in from our station and the different services.
@@greggrimes4252 this was done well before COPS! Great job Greg! The quality is awesome!
@@greggrimes4252 he was a good guy
I can't get over that old scarboro fire truck! Looks so different from the trucks they have today
The old Lady in her 90‘s was born in the 19th century.
This was in the late 1980s, but I remember the two-tone siren on ambulances all through much of Ontario from about 1973/4 and into about the early 1980s. Those ambulance units with the blue stripe down the side middle of the van. You could always tell apart an ambulance from other emergency vehicles because of that sound. If I could express it in words it kind of went "doo dult, doo dult" over and over. They were kind of cool looking and sounding. Soon after it went back to the usual wail/yelp siren sound that has been around for so many decades. Most likely these guys were in those types some years earlier.
Hello, I don't know the model type, but I can give you a couple youtube videos that would somewhat demonstrate what I mean. The first one is a look at this type of ambulance and the siren sounds right at the beginning of the video, but its inside the station, so it doesn't have a great sound, or the device recording it was bad. th-cam.com/video/xOPevDAPaRg/w-d-xo.html
The other video is from a first aid film in the mid-70s. It's part 4 of 4, but you don't have to watch the whole thing, skip over to about time 7:40 and you will hear the ambulance siren in the background coming to the scene - th-cam.com/video/zWjUdtE51iE/w-d-xo.html
It's very hard to find this type of siren on videos, even though it was around for a number of years. Please let me know if you have any info on this model type.
Thankyou emergency squad for all the great work you do for us everyday most appreciated.Take care.
Crazy that not much has changed. Everything is literally the same for us in EMS. Shitty equipment, run code 3’s then an IFT.
I know it’s like weird how much we rely on technology
Love the massive woodgrain center console... i miss that stuff
Love the old Dodge Ram van ambulances.
The company I worked for eons ago, we called our Dodge Ambulance the Whale. They were awful to work in.
Those type 2s were brutal, especially the low roof ones.
They were fun to drive but with the federal siren on the roof they were really loud and I have the hearing aids now to prove it.
@@ronstrulic4388 Those Ambulances don't 🚑have the safety as the newer ones today. Those Dodge Ram Ambulances are not safe to drive because if you get an accident you probably will be seriously injured or dead because they don't have the features they have today.
@@Barista125 it's not that they were unsafe and of course anything newer is going to have better safety features. They we just a very cramped space to work in and the cab was weird with the tiny step and a huge wheel well you had to get over to get in.
Amazing professionalism !
Like how the the van was washed
Mario Iacolucci shit up
Gotta love that 80's music
What happened to ray and the paramedics help
The classic FDNY siren! 🚨🚑🚒
THE CANADIAN PARAMEDIC GUARDS ARE NEAT TO WATCH THEY PRACTICE GOOD GUARD DUTY
From what I've seen so far, that hit NBC medical/action series of the 70s, Emergency!, is very close to what I'm seeing here from Toronto in 1987.
This is awesome
Colton Johnson th
This was also the “heyday” of the AIDS and crack epidemic. Bob sure took his job seriously, yet while still maintained some bit of sense of humor for his patients…. @4:21 when he said, “you still have a good sense of humor eh? Rest happily Bob and the good ol’ 80s era.
You wonder why the don't use the roll -in-and-out ambulance gurneys/stretchers who were widely available also back then in the 80-ies... would have saved some backs..
We can't disclose names.
Paramedic- you ok Mary? Anything else I can do for you Mary? Does it hurt here Mary?
Kills me he talks about St.John Ambulance,I'm a Advanced Medical First Responder with them. I wish I was around in the days when they ran city wide ems calls and trained paramedics. I would have loved to have been adult age during those times lol born alittle to late lmao also them fuerno 30 stretchers are a bitch,we use them at st.johns to this day. And I respect anyone who used these on everyday ems calls,we use area quite abit but nothing close to full time ems. Props to anyone who busted their backs using these everyday lol my hat is off to you.
You can't disclose full names, first names are not enough of a giveaway to disclose someone's identity.
Anyone who can deadlift a stretcher with a full-blown adult in it, even with a partner deserves a coffee and a well-earned day off. I used a self-loader in my stent at a funeral home and that was a bitch with an average person in it. Imagine someone over 300 lbs (136 kilos).
Hold up, St John Canada still has lift-in stretchers in use?! That's a manual handling nightmare.
Here in St John Australia I thought our busted-ass Ferno 26T self-loading stretchers were antiquated lol
What's Mary's last name?
I'll wait.
So little equipment. No monitor. Lol the good old days when you could get 3 months training an work on the ambulance.
Very nice program.
I used to like the Dodge Ram ambulances
I remember when Scarborough Cablevision brought this out
Besides the Emergency Medical Technicians, there are also Paramedics that drive Flight Cars because Paramedics are allowed to administer the drugs used to keep patients alive long enough to get to the hospital.
Real heroes
Rumour has it, they're still using the VERY same orange sheets and blankets today.
I wonder if CNAs and "nurses" back then at nursing homes also told them the lines, "not my patient, I just got here" or "Idk, they were fine 20 minutes ago".
"His nurse is on break"
Love the old dodge ram ambulance from back then red and white
apologfize if I missed the meaning for this, but inside the ambulance what dis he actually use those CD's For and if correct that Ambulance they were using, wasnt that the same kind of ambulance that they used in the move The Cannonball run, the one were they installed if correct SIX gas filler holes in it and they actually raced it first clear across the country with speeds well over 120 miles per hour, then after that they used the same ambulance in the movie......
See, they are just ambulance drivers! 😂
The good old days
Can someone please tell me what is going on with the disc looking thing at 1:51?
The disc was recording vehicle speed and whether their lights and siren were activated while they were in motion. The paper disc turned slowly with a needle/pen recording the activity on a time line. A new one was put in at the start of shift and filed afterwards.
@@greggrimes4252 Very interesting! I'm guessing it was used to make sure they weren't speeding or even running hot too fast? And thanks for answering btw. I always love these old school 70's/80's/90's fire and EMS videos.
Paper tachographs. Always went "missing" if you drove too fast.
@@ebfarfell yep. Those pesky tach cards also had a way of “spinning” a lot didn’t they ! Lol. Oh the good old days....
Why don't they have pull out foldable ramps at the back of the ambulance to easily push a stretcher into it rather than having to lift the stretcher each time?
If that guy is not a Newfie somethings wrong.
Why ?
Very primitive care for being paramedics, here in the United States in the same era 1980s our paramedics were way more advanced than the Canadian paramedics. The US paramedics had heart monitors, defibrillators, intubation equipment, allowed to start IVs and give medications amongst many other tasks
They had ALS in Toronto, it just want everyone.
That was just prior to paramedicine and these guys were primary care only.
Just to add, medics worked downtown and never came out to the suburbs. Working at 12 stn. we never saw them.
That's a BLS Unit!? Just asking because they have no ALS equipment and don't seem run emergency calls... 🤷
I have been permedic sense 2011
I never seen this be for I like it
Yes
What happened to these guys
@@marioiacolucci Bob retired shortly after the show was edited and died of cancer not long after. I am not sure of Tim and whether he finished his career with Metro Toronto.
@@greggrimes4252 okay thanks
I worked with Tim a few times in the 90s, he retired
Poor ol' wheezy dodge lol
Their backs... not missing the old stretchers.
LOOK AT THESE PARTICULAR GUARDS THEY ARE GOING INTO ANOTHER AREA TO HELP ANOTHER PAIR OF PARAMEDIC GUARDS FOR GUARD DUTY
Who’s the guy driving all day? Coyle?
In Toronto it was up to how partners did the driving/pt care some did day for day other call for call.
I preferred 6 and 6
If you’re downtown, HBD for HBD
My partner and I worked day for day. Some people did six and six or call for call.
My god..😮 stretcher’s used to be jokes..😂
The driver guy looks burned out lol
Dont judge unless you no someone He is a hell of a human being
Tim was a very nice guy.
@@ebfarfell are they both still alive ? They seem like nice guys. I work in Lambton County and am in my 27th year. I miss those days.
@@ebfarfell where is tim now
@aldouglas975 well he does. It doesnt mean he's not "a hell of a human being". I've worked with medics who were absolutely awesome people, but they were burnt. To this day even. Actually for some reason, a lot of the new kids coming out college burn out A LOT quicker, like four or five years into it they're already looking for something else to do.
Why do they run the siren momentarily rather than constantly?
@MOPARGuy It doesn't take but an unseen vehicle or pedestrian to have an accident,In AR,sirens constantly on
We used to blip it on and off, some guys got really creative with the old sirens
Preserved your hearing
@@MarcInCanada haha ye
@MoparGuy1625 plus the people needing help need to hear it
What happened to these guys
The guy with glasses passed away two years after this video.
@@davidstruble9108 I'm sorry to hear that what about the other guy
SIR IFT CALL'S R N0T C0DE 3 🚨🔊
HEY IN L0S ANGELES CITY & C0UNTY AMBIANCE UNIT'S R 1 EMT & 1 PARAMEDIC 0r 2 EMT's & FIRE DEPARTMENT AMBULANCE IS 2 FIREFIGHTER, EMT's 0r 2 FIREFIGHTER, PARAMEDICS
HEY IN
Mejor que me avisava gusta mucho
Great job but I prefer the bigger ambulance and that orange gurney needs to go
🚑🚑🇨🇦🇨🇦