HISTORY oF Upper OJAI Search And Rescue

Formed in 1951, and joining the Ventura County Sheriff’s Department in 1958, the Upper Ojai Search and Rescue team has been serving the greater Ventura County community for over 70 years. Below is a article posted by Bruce McLean of the Ventura County Star back in 2001, covering the Ventura County Board of Supervisors 50 year honors ceremony for Carl Hofmeister and Otto Reynolds, original members of the Upper Ojai SAR Team:


History of Search and Rescue for Ventura County

 It's been 50 years since a loose band of volunteers coalesced into the first official members of the Ventura County Sheriff's Department Search and Rescue Team. The team has since gone from horseback riding, hemp-rope-carrying ranchers who inherited the legacy of the cowboy posse to a heavily trained force loaded with high-tech gear, mechanical muscle and modern communication equipment.

"Twenty-five years ago, if you didn't have it in your pack, you didn't eat," said Sgt. Earl Matthews, a team member from 1974 until a month ago. "Now they fly in hot meals with helicopters." But plenty has stayed the same. Aside from participating members of the Sheriff's Department, the eight search-and-rescue units remain volunteer-based. And most members do it for the same reason.

"It's exciting and it can be fun and there's a lot of camaraderie. But you can't just do it for fun, because it's also become a lot of work. I think most of (the volunteers) just want to give something back to the community," Matthews said.

"It makes you feel good to be able to help someone," said Otto Reynolds, one of the original search-and-rescue volunteers. "All you get out of it is what you feel, and it's a great feeling when everything works out."

2001 marks the 50th anniversary of the search-and-rescue team, and the Ventura County Board of Supervisors honored its members Tuesday, April 25th, at the board's weekly meeting. A presentation that included a slide show highlighting the group's accomplishments began at 9:30 a.m. in the board's meeting room in the Government Center in Ventura.

Among those in attendance were local search-and-rescue legends such as 79-year-old Carl Hofmeister and 65-year-old Otto Reynolds, both of whom were there before the beginning.

"We had four or five guys and we all rode horseback. Once in a while, we'd get a call and we'd go help out," Hofmeister said last week. Sitting in the room in his Ojai home where the Upper Ojai team still holds its monthly meetings, Hofmeister said it was just something he and his friends started doing nearly 60 years ago. "We were just trying to be Christian about it and help people in trouble," Hofmeister said.

As the informal Ojai group grew to seven or eight people, a similar group was performing rescues in Fillmore. A few weeks after helping the Sheriff's Department with a rescue, things became a little more formal. The county decided they needed a rescue team, and us [Upper Ojai] and Fillmore were the only ones doing it at the time," Reynolds said.

"They were a bunch of roughnecks just like we were," Hofmeister said of the Fillmore team. In the early days, equipment consisted of a horse and some rope, with a little help from a 1935 Ford pickup truck, Hofmeister said. Calls involved lost kids and injured ranchers. And things would always pick up at the beginning of deer season, when hunters would get lost, hurt themselves or shoot each other by accident.

As the county grew, so did the teams.

But getting in was tough. "We were fussy," Hofmeister said. Membership required 100 percent approval by team members -- a rule that still stands. Those with hero complexes need not have applied, and "no drinkers or troublemakers," Hofmeister said. Only those with the right combination of physical and mental attributes would make the team; those who could take orders, knew the backcountry and could tie a good knot.

"It used to be a good lariat rope and a few simple knots were all you needed," Reynolds said. Working with the Sheriff's Department in the pre-paperwork, pre-liability era also was simpler. "For a lot of years, no deputies would even show up on a call. When we finished up, we'd just call in and say, 'We got 'em. Everything's OK,' " Reynolds said.

From those first teams, search and rescue expanded, became more specialized, more organized. Now there are three mountain rescue teams, an underwater rescue team, the mounted posse, a medical team, a K-9 team and an administrative support group. There are almost 170 volunteers. Helicopters mean searches end in hours rather than days. With cell phones and radios, contact between team members and the Sheriff's Department is constant. Each incident initiates a stream of paperwork.

While some searches make front page news, most don't. And while the searches that end in tragedy take their toll, most end happily -- "99 percent of them," Reynolds said.

There's never been a volunteer death during an operation, and few major injuries. Challenges remain the same. Matthews, Reynolds and Hofmeister said that while it requires a special person to join search and rescue, the volunteer's family must also be a special breed.

"On Thanksgiving Day, the phone rings. On Christmas Day, the phone rings. On your birthday, the phone rings," Matthews said. "Something like five out of the last seven Christmases, we've been out."

And while some find the commitment to be too much, most volunteers stick around for decades. Hofmeister still plays a part at age 79 and Reynolds at 65, attending team meetings and helping with training. "We're their book of knowledge," Reynolds said, smiling. "I'm still a part of it, instead of getting thrown out."

"Until we die, we'll be a part of it," Hofmeister said.

By Bruce McLean
Ventura County Star writer