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Glendale Police helicopter aids in firehose retrieval

A group of Glendale firefighters pick up lengths of fire hose from a net that was dropped off by a Glendale police helicopter from the burn areas of last week's brush fire to the helipad at by the water tank at Scholl Canyon in Glendale on Thursday, May 9, 2013. The Glendale Police Department used their helicopter to assist the Glendale Fire Department retrieve nearly 5,000 feet of hose used to fight the brush fires in Glenoaks Canyon last week.
A group of Glendale firefighters pick up lengths of fire hose from a net that was dropped off by a Glendale police helicopter from the burn areas of last week’s brush fire to the helipad at by the water tank at Scholl Canyon in Glendale on Thursday, May 9, 2013. The Glendale Police Department used their helicopter to assist the Glendale Fire Department retrieve nearly 5,000 feet of hose used to fight the brush fires in Glenoaks Canyon last week.
(Tim Berger / Staff Photographer)
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A Glendale police helicopter on Thursday hauled away several hundred feet of the water hoses used last week to fight a 75-acre blaze in Glenoaks Canyon.

The hose lines were left behind on May 3 after more than 200 firefighters battled flames that swept through tinder-dry brush and prompted neighborhood evacuations.

PHOTOS: Glendale Police assists Glendale Fire to gather hose after fire

Officials opted to haul away the water hoses using helicopters to save time and avoid potential injuries to firefighters, who would have had to trek up the hillside to retrieve them, said Glendale Police Lt. Steve Robertson.

Helicopters were also used after the blaze was contained to check for potential flare ups, using infrared, heat-sensor technology to relay their locations to ground crews.
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Follow Veronica Rocha on Google+ and on Twitter: @VeronicaRochaLA.

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