Feb 25, 2015

Cheboygan County Sheriff’s most effective rescue vehicle: A Hovertechnics hovercraft

The Cheboygan County Sheriff’s Department in Michigan purchased a Hovertechnics Hoverguard 800 to improve its search and rescue capabilities. Sheriff Dale Clarmont says, "We bought it because this craft was designed to actually fly over surfaces. It flies over land, ice, and open water, so we can use it during all four seasons. The reason we chose the Hovertechnics Hoverguard 800 is that it was one of the largest hovercraft manufactured at that time, so it allows us to load the entire search and rescue team into the craft, with gear.”



In the first four years that the Department has had the hovercraft, it has become a critical part of their search & rescue operations and has been credited with saving five lives so far. Two of those rescues earned Lifesaving Medals for the first responders conducting the operations.

In one of these rescues occurred when a 63-year-old man broke through the ice while snowmobiling on a lake near the mouth of the Cheboygan River. Michigan State Police Sgt. Mark Tamlyn said the man’s body temperature had quickly fallen to 89 degrees. He credited the quick response by search and rescue personnel – and the hovercraft – for saving the man’s life despite blowing snow, poor visibility, icy conditions and open water.

Had we not had the hovercraft we would have been delayed in getting to him,” Sgt. Tamlyn said, “In this situation, minutes count.”

Sheriff Clarmont added, “There was absolutely no way you could have gotten to him and saved him with any equipment other than a hovercraft … It’s a great tool for us.”

Besides its critical role as a lifesaving tool, the hovercraft also fills a secondary role in crime prevention. The hovercraft and its crew collaborate with Border Patrol units to search the Mackinac Straits for drug smugglers.





Apr 10, 2014

Hovertechnics Hovercraft plays important role in Maine search & rescue operations

The Maine Marine Patrol and the Maine Warden Service are well-equipped for rescue operations on inland and coastal waters with a Hovertechnics hovercraft that will be shared by the two agencies. The both cover similar areas - ice-bound waterways and harbors, flooding rivers, coastal flats and areas difficult to reach with any vehicle other than a hovercraft. And they often work together in search & rescue operations.

Sergeant Ron Dunham of the Maine Warden Service says, "The hovercraft is like no snowmobile, ATV or watercraft." 

The first responders describe the benefits of their hovercraft during their pilot training ...



The hovercraft was purchased through grants from the Outdoor Heritage Fund and Maine Emergency Management Agency. Marine Patrol Pilot Steven Ingram says, "It's important to have this type of technology. If this hovercraft saves one life, it has paid for itself for the rest of its existence."
The Maine Marine Patrol / Maine Warden Service Hovertechnics hovercraft glides easily over thin, broken ice.
An article in the Penobscot Bay Pilot details how the capabilities of the hovercraft to go where other vehicles cannot gives it important advantages in rescue operations:

THIN ICE: Hovercraft can skim over thin ice and pull a drowning victim into the craft and return to safety in a few minutes.

FLOODING: Hovercraft are critical when when residential areas are flooded and it is almost impossible to use boats to travel down flooded streets because underwater obstacles like fences, fallen trees, submerged walls and vehicles damage boat propellers and put them out of action. A hovercraft is completely unaffected by underwater obstacles and is able to go over any water depth.

SHALLOW WATER: Hovercraft can be used all year round along coastlines where large boats cannot operate due to shallow water conditions. A hovercraft can navigate easily from water to land, over mudflats, marshes, beach areas and along muddy or sandy shorelines.