She is a 20 year USCG Veteran and should understand the importance of marine pumping to refill fire department water supplies.
This topic is a MAJOR pet peeve of mine.
Let’s explore how California and Hawaii have utterly failed to use the natural resource we have: salt water. 🧵
@FDNY @EsperDoD @CalPoly @threadreaderapp @gCaptain And if you love fireboats consider visiting or donating to the preservation of the greatest fireboat ever built.
Many are sending me this article about the problems using salt water in fire mains
It’s true, there are negative impacts but
1) the primary problem noted in the article is danger to the environment
- fish being pulled up in intakes: well there are mitigations to this, pumps don’t like fish which is why we have intake strainers. It’s not a big problem
-salt residue on the forest floor. While I’m not a biologist, animals love and need and have the ability to process salt
2) it is bad for equipment
It’s true firefighting equipment doesn’t like salt water.
Ok but
-equipment can and should be fresh water flushed afterwards.
-it’s an emergency. Equipment is damaged in emergencies
3) it’s not practical to store
As I said in my thread this is true BUT you can put partially desalinated brackish water in aquifers that can naturally filter/absorb the salt
4) There are other solutions I didn’t mention like having a large oil tanker on standby but filled with fresh water instead of oil
This solution would be incredibly expensive BUT the Navy already has a few empty tankers on standby in case of war. Why not keep them filled with fresh water?
5) As mentioned we have already used massive amounts of salt water for operations like 9/11 in the past. Read the after-action reports… there are ways to mitigate the consequences
BOTTOM LINE
The bottom line is Amuse is correct, salt water comes with problems BUT this is a massive emergency.
It’s impossible to solve time critical emergencies without trade offs.
@FDNY @EsperDoD @CalPoly @threadreaderapp @gCaptain @stevenujifusa I keep hearing that salt residue will “destroy” the coastal habitat.
Really? Then how have coastal habitats recovered after tsunamis and 100-year floods?
And if saltwater is so damaging, why is it fine for planes to dump it on wildfires but not fireboats? Make it make sense. x.com/txaggie93/stat…
@Micky_Finn @Sigdrifr @FDNY Chat GPT thinks it could pump 1-3 miles up hill and much more with booster pimps
UPDATE 2: Fireboats and hills – can they push water uphill to put out the Pacific Palisades fire? Let’s settle this.
First, a common misconception: marine pumps struggle to pull water uphill, which is why they’re placed below the waterline. But pushing water? That’s a whole different ball game.
Let’s talk about the FDNY’s Three Forty Three, designed to pump water to the top of NYC skyscrapers.
•The 343’s pumps deliver 200 psi, equating to roughly 500 feet of vertical lift—enough for some lower elevations in the Pacific Palisades. But with many areas climbing beyond 1,000 feet, you’d need relay pumps to go higher.
•The Navy has diesel-powered salvage pumps ready to deploy in emergencies, and the SEABEES in Port Hueneme, CA, likely have equipment on hand to help stage those uphill pushes.
Then there’s friction loss:
•With 5-inch large-diameter hose, you lose 15-20 psi per 1,000 feet of hose at high flow rates. Over a mile, pressure drops significantly unless you stage relay pumps along the way.
•Larger hoses reduce friction, but they’re heavier, and gravity pulls on the water weight inside the hose, further complicating uphill pumping.
So, under optimal conditions—large hoses, relay pumps, and minimal elevation gain—the 343 could push water 1-3 miles inland, with elevations staying under 500 feet. Beyond that, logistics and physics become limiting factors.
Still, if you can get water tanks a few miles inland and 500 feet up, that’s often enough for local pumper trucks to do the rest.
Caveat: It’s easy to pick apart my math because there are too many variables to account for in a single X post—terrain, hose setup, flow rates, etc. But this is the general idea.
For a deeper dive, plenty of books and manuals out there can help crunch the exact numbers. And let’s not forget—some of the brightest fluid dynamics scientists at CALTECH are just down the road. I’m sure they’d love the challenge.
(Or just ask AI to come up with a few options based on LAFD and Navy equipment )
@FDNY @EsperDoD @CalPoly @threadreaderapp @gCaptain @stevenujifusa Some more context from maritime historian and firefighter Sal Mercogliano 👇
@FDNY @EsperDoD @CalPoly @threadreaderapp @gCaptain @stevenujifusa We found video of FDNY’s massive fireboat 343 pumping saltwater into city fire mains
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Charlie Kirk is on fire supporting @ElbridgeColby, and for good reason. There’s no shortage of editorials on why he matters for DoD policy and planning.
But they’re missing seven CRITICAL points🧵
This is a HUGE appointment.
Most people don’t realize just how big this is. Colby’s appointment is happening before ANY military service secretaries—right after heavyweights like Tulsi & RFK.
That tells you everything about how important this job- DoD Policy & Planning- is
2) Colby’s depth and breadth of knowledge is unmatched.
Most DC defense experts are siloed—stuck in one niche. Not Colby.
•He understands the full spectrum of warfare—from strategy to execution.
•He knows how to integrate land, sea, air, cyber, and economic power.
•He gets naval logistics, shipbuilding, and the U.S. Merchant Marine—critical but often overlooked.
Unlike others, he’s actually engaged with experts in these fields—including appearing on @cdrsalamander’s Midrats podcast and reaching out to discuss the real-world impact of shipbuilding and merchant shipping.
This depth and breadth will unlock new strategies and the full might of American strength
The first thing that must be questioned is the conventional wisdom: seablindness & apathy
Seablindness is the widespread ignorance of maritime power’s role in global trade, national security, and economic stability. It leads to poor policy, underfunded fleets, and a dangerous reliance on foreign shipping—leaving nations vulnerable in crises.
The U.S. Navy is laying up 17 ships, and @IMOHQ is a big reason why.
Worse, the UN has crippled our ability to deliver aviation fuel—jeopardizing carrier ops and forward USAF refueling bases.
Our Achilles’ heel? Logistics. And the Navy let the UN tighten the noose.
The Navy’s Forgotten Fleet
The Military Sealift Command (MSC) @MSCSealift runs is the largest fleet command in the Navy—fuel tankers, logistics ships, repair vessels. Bigger than the warship fleet.
The War is Won - Now Secure the Victory.
As we watch men battle for yards, we must remember that for decades, the Uniparty ruled unchecked, masquerading as patriots while surrendering American sovereignty piece by piece.
Here’s how 🧵
They gave us the Bushes, the Cheneys, the Clintons—families who waved the flag in public but bent the knee in private. They told you to accept managed decline. They stole from you, sent your money overseas, and lined the pockets of their friends and relatives.
Then came Donald J. Trump. And suddenly, the machine that thought itself invincible shook with fear.
Now that we’re finally allowed to talk about conspiracies and USAID—can we talk about the CIA moving gold on ships?
Can we talk about how, before WWII, nearly every village in China had a gold Buddha filled with gems, serving as the local bank?
Can we talk about how the Japanese looted them all and launched a massive sealift operation to stash them in the Philippines?
Or how a farmer found ONE of these Buddhas—only for Ferdinand Marcos to steal it?
Or how a U.S. court valued that SINGLE Buddha at $22 BILLION in 1998?
Or how, if that one Buddha had been invested in the S&P 500, the farmer would be richer than @elonmusk today?
Can we talk about how Google raided libraries and archives, scanning every book to track it down?
Can we talk about how certain tech firms used this knowledge to leverage the US Government and CIA to work for them?
Or how most of that gold is STILL buried in the Philippines—
And how Taiwan is a distraction while China builds a massive Navy to take it back?
Or how at least one of the CIA’s secret ship registries was accidentally exposed in the USAID data dump?
Or how the CIA funded a History Channel program about all this—to paint anyone searching for the truth as a nutcase?
Or how the co-founder of Jeff Bezos’ starship company wrote a bestselling “fiction” book about this gold becoming the world’s Bitcoin reserve—nine years before Satoshi Nakamoto launched Bitcoin?
Or how I know American ship captains who have moved some of this gold?
Or how there are connections I can’t talk about?
Are we allowed to talk about that yet?
🤪
And definitely don’t read these this nonfiction book
I’ve seen wild things as a ship captain & maritime reporter—USAID & CIA stories that’d turn your hair white. I don’t have a death wish, so I stay quiet…
Unless it’s about USAID & Democrat graft. So, F it.
It all started with a call from a man—let’s call him Derick 🧵
Full disclosure: I’m adding fictional details. Why? Because it’s the CIA—you gotta give them an out, a way to deny involvement.
Consider this their out.
Also, this was over a decade ago, and I didn’t take notes for obvious reasons… so this is all from my faulty memory.
You have to give the CIA an out—but you also have to include just enough details so they (and hopefully one of you) can verify I’m not making this up.