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This was crap. Something had to be done. And we on black shift were just the guys to do it….

Way back in the last century, we had just returned from a particularly gruesome call. Kids in our area like to go “hill-hopping”. That’s when they take daddy’s Beamer to the roller-coaster-like hills in the rural, wooded area of our district and go fast enough to grab some air. Sometimes they land back on the pavement, and sometimes they don’t. When they don’t, we get called.

After hosing down and restocking the rig, the boys and I trooped into the kitchen looking for a lil’ something.  You know- for the effort…..

“Hey, check this out,” shouted Al as he peered into the freezer. At our station, we shared one fridge with all three shifts, so there’s always a fair amount of scrounging.

He pulled out a quart of Breyer’s and pointed at the lid. There, scrawled in black sharpie was “RED, DO NOT TOUCH!!!!!!”

Red shift had “marked” their ice cream.

Like a dog marks a tree.

“This is just wrong,” Bruce said ripping off the lid and spooning a huge chunk into his mouth. “Wha-eva havven to buvverhood?” he mouthed, chowing down on the mint chocolate chip.

“Yeah. Brotherhood,” we chimed in, each grabbing a spoon and digging into the carton like puppies at a nipple. We didn’t stop until we had polished off the forbidden fruit.

What the hell is wrong with those guys? Sure, it’s understandable to label a pack of good steaks or some special item once in awhile, but this was not the first time. It wasn’t even the eleventeenth time- this had gone on long enough to become “an issue”.

This was something that could no longer be ignored; it deserved an answer- loud and clear.

We on black shift were good at answering. Sometimes we answered too well and got our noses thumped with a newspaper from the bugles, but we usually found a way to straddle the line. And the end result was that a message was sent- and a message was received.

Here’s what we did:

Immediately, all the food in the fridge found its way onto the kitchen counter. Armed with sharpies, we each began marking all the food- leftover lasagna, half a head of cauliflower, 4 cans of pop all got the label “RED.”

Sticks of butter, yogurt cups, tomatoes. “RED.”

A carton of eggs were marked “RED” on the outside, then all the individual eggs were marked with little R’s” to connote ownership.

Some of the eggs were even drained of their contents with a sub-Q syringe and replaced with tomato juice. Red.

RED, RED, RED, RED, RED, RED. In the pantry cabinets, individual slices of bread was marked REDalong with Styrofoam cups and plastic utensils.

Aluminum foil was unrolled, marked, and meticulously re-rolled. Oreos (unscrewed then re-screwed), oyster crackers, banana peppers- all got marked.

We were pleased to find out how embarrassed the tightwads on red shift were when they had been called on the absurd level of frugality. It was all the news, and never forgotten.

We are brothers, dammit. If you want some of my nummies, well then help yourself, my friend. None of this “DO NOT TOUCH” crap in our house.  Need a buck?  Here.  Now don’t ever make me “buy” your brotherhood again…..


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Posted in Brotherhood, Chicagoland, In Da House, Just For Fun

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  • http://firecritic.com Fire Critic

    On second thought maybe you shouldn't come to my firehouse….we have individual locked pantries and individual locked fridges.

    For those of you who do not live in the midwest….Pop is soda, cola, or coke.

    • http://www.firedaily.com Fire Daily

      And for those of you who live out east, pop can also mean beer (although not in this case).

      • http://firecritic.com Fire Critic

        HOWEVER,

        It should be noted that pop can also be a verb.

  • http://thehappymedic.com the Happy Medic

    All this labeling crap…if it’s there when you leave, why would you expect it to be there when you return? One fridge, on pantry and everyone learns to share. The end.

  • Ckemtp

    Wow, here's the rule. If it is YOUR personal leftovers, you're allowed to mark it and date it. Nobody wants to eat YOUR PERSONAL leftover Chinese takeout.

    However, if you leave your Doritos in the cabinet?? They never existed, did they? DID THEY…

  • theroaddoctor

    Nothing wrong w/ a lil “shift shopping”…

  • Ckemtp

    Wow, here's the rule. If it is YOUR personal leftovers, you're allowed to mark it and date it. Nobody wants to eat YOUR PERSONAL leftover Chinese takeout.

    However, if you leave your Doritos in the cabinet?? They never existed, did they? DID THEY…

  • theroaddoctor

    Nothing wrong w/ a lil “shift shopping”…

  • DCFD Retired

    U guys are right. In the common fridge… fair game….. I would just like to add…. If you want to keep something only for your shift, get your own Ice Box and keep it under lock and key….Also, having served 35 years in a city department… beware of what you eat behind others…. i.e., “Ye Ol'e secret sauce”….
    Not a sermon, just a thought………
    PS,
    We picked the lock on one “Uppidy” shift's Ice Box and laid it on it's back. We spent all day popping “pop corn” and filling it up. placed it right side up.Then put back the lock. Those guys were pissed for month's. Took them all day to clean up the mess. They never did figured out who did it…. 10 bucks well spent

  • DCFD Retired

    U guys are right. In the common fridge… fair game….. I would just like to add…. If you want to keep something only for your shift, get your own Ice Box and keep it under lock and key….Also, having served 35 years in a city department… beware of what you eat behind others…. i.e., “Ye Ol'e secret sauce”….
    Not a sermon, just a thought………
    PS,
    We picked the lock on one “Uppidy” shift's Ice Box and laid it on it's back. We spent all day popping “pop corn” and filling it up. placed it right side up.Then put back the lock. Those guys were pissed for month's. Took them all day to clean up the mess. They never did figured out who did it…. 10 bucks well spent

  • DCFD Retired

    U guys are right. In the common fridge… fair game….. I would just like to add…. If you want to keep something only for your shift, get your own Ice Box and keep it under lock and key….Also, having served 35 years in a city department… beware of what you eat behind others…. i.e., “Ye Ol'e secret sauce”….
    Not a sermon, just a thought………
    PS,
    We picked the lock on one “Uppidy” shift's Ice Box and laid it on it's back. We spent all day popping “pop corn” and filling it up. placed it right side up.Then put back the lock. Those guys were pissed for month's. Took them all day to clean up the mess. They never did figured out who did it…. 10 bucks well spent

  • DCFD Retired

    U guys are right. In the common fridge… fair game….. I would just like to add…. If you want to keep something only for your shift, get your own Ice Box and keep it under lock and key….Also, having served 35 years in a city department… beware of what you eat behind others…. i.e., “Ye Ol'e secret sauce”….
    Not a sermon, just a thought………
    PS,
    We picked the lock on one “Uppidy” shift's Ice Box and laid it on it's back. We spent all day popping “pop corn” and filling it up. placed it right side up.Then put back the lock. Those guys were pissed for month's. Took them all day to clean up the mess. They never did figured out who did it…. 10 bucks well spent