Safety tips and upgrades for fall

Sow and Grow

Sara Bauder, agronomy field specialist with SDSU Extension
Posted 10/14/20

Soybean and corn harvest is underway or wrapped up in many parts of South Dakota. Although it’s a great feeling to get that crop in the bin, it is easy to get hurried and complacent when it comes to safety measures.

This item is available in full to subscribers.

Please log in to continue

Log in

Safety tips and upgrades for fall

Sow and Grow

Posted

Soybean and corn harvest is underway or wrapped up in many parts of South Dakota. Although it’s a great feeling to get that crop in the bin, it is easy to get hurried and complacent when it comes to safety measures.

Farm equipment road safety

With farm equipment on the road this time of year, we often hear of avoidable accidents. One common misjudgment drivers have is the speed at which a tractor or combine is moving down a roadway. To put it in perspective: if a vehicle travels at 65mps and a combine is ½ mile ahead of it travelling at 15 mph in the same direction… it would take 36 seconds for your vehicle to meet the combine. 

Consider cutting the distance to a ¼ mile, that’s only 18 seconds. Considering all the potential distractions drivers face today, one can see how an accident like this could occur. In order to keep yourself and others safe please take time to consider the following:

Farmers:

• Avoid travelling after sunset and times when more traffic is expected.

• Be sure all safety lights are on and working and all placards are visible.

• Do not move equipment unless everyone working with you is visible and ensure other vehicles are out of the way.

• Avoid parking on roadways, and if it’s necessary to do so, be sure it has been marked down the road.

• If it’s muddy, clean tires and equipment well enough to avoid leaving mud on the roadway.

• Transport combine heads separately from the combine when moving on a roadway.

• Avoid driving distractions such as cell phones.

Auto drivers:

• Be patient. Harvest occurs during a short period of the year; quite often, large equipment operators will pull over and allow you to pass when they are able.

• Leave as much room as possible when meeting large equipment on the road. If the shoulders are good, do not be afraid to slow down and use them.

• When passing machinery be sure to double check for oncoming traffic, slow down, and look for turn signals IF the equipment has them. Remember that the equipment operator may be turning left or swinging wide to turn right and unable to see behind them, making passing very dangerous.

• Do not assume the equipment operator can see you. A lot of farm equipment is rear-view blind.

• As should be done with any other vehicle, avoid tailgating; it is impossible to know when a sudden stop may be necessary.

Grain bin safety

Storing grain or feed of any kind comes with some serious safety risks, but when harvest rolls around safety is often overlooked as many producers rush to make progress. If your bins are older or you simply want to be sure everyone is as safe as possible, consider the following tips and upgrades:

• Exterior ladders. Most bins have an exterior ladder of some sort. Ideally, these ladders should be replaced with staircases that add extra stability and safety; however, this is a major upgrade that not everyone is willing to take. Although the flat, attached ladder style serves its purpose, the safety of the ladder can be improved by adding a cage. In addition, it is ideal to raise the bottom of the ladder so that children cannot reach the bottom rung. 

Hand rails at the end of the ladder (for easy transition to the roof) and guardrails along the roof ladder are also great additions.

• Interior grain bin ladders. Rather than relying on rope, chain, or pipe ladders, farmers should use an attached interior ladder. It helps to paint the ladder or wall behind it a bright color to help detect its location in dusty conditions.

• Safety harnesses and lifelines. Although you may have entered the bin hundreds of times without one, a harness with a lifeline system adds a great deal of safety to your operation. A body harness is best as it spreads the force of a fall or a tug of the rope across a larger area of the body. Waist belts can cause serious injury when used to stop a fall.

• Always work in pairs around bins. The person inside and outside the bin should be able to contact one another.

This information was adapted from ‘Roadway Safety During Harvest’ and ‘Grain Bin Safety Improvements’, both by SDSU Extension Youth Safety Field Specialist John Keimig. For more information on these topics visit extension.sdstate.edu and check out the Oct. 5 Pest and Crop Newsletter.

Upcoming events (for details and registration visit extension.sdstate.edu/events):

• Oct. 14 – Eastern South Dakota Water Conference; held virtually from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. CDT.

• Oct. 15 – Smart Choice: Managing Health Insurance and Resolving Conflicts; held virtually beginning at 6 p.m. CDT.

• Oct. 16 – 2020 Ag Economic Dialogues; held virtually beginning at 10 a.m. CDT.

• Oct. 22 – Adult Mental Health First Aid Training; held virtually from 12:30-6 p.m. CDT.

• Oct 22 – Youth Mental Health First Aid Training; held virtually from 1-5 p.m. CDT.