

Don’t let children under 6 near farm equipment.Many medications are only effective when taken with food. Also, farmers should remember to take frequent breaks to eat. Taking a new medication? Know that medications can make you drowsy or slow down your response time on the road.Please take the time to watch this heart-wrenching video ( ) from the Minnesota DOT about how distracted driving not only cost the life of a farm mom, but also ruined the life of the driver. But distracted driving continues to be a leading cause of vehicular accidents. We hear it all the time: Don’t text or check your smartphone while driving. If you’re not wearing a seat belt, you could get thrown from or pinned under a vehicle, or you could hit your head inside the tractor compartment. Today’s farm equipment is safer today, but it’s also designed to protect you when wearing a seat belt.

Wear seat belts in your tractor or combine. And the same advice goes for farmers too.
ICASH IOWA DRIVER
Especially in rural areas, and on county roads, many Iowans don’t buckle up when they’re either a driver or passenger in a vehicle. Farm safety experts, a county sheriff and an emergency-room physician at the workshop gave tips that they wanted journalists to share when writing stories about farm safety.Ī few of the biggest farm-safety takeaways, for both farmers and their fellow drivers, include the following: Recently, I attended a farm safety workshop for the media hosted by Iowa’s Center for Agriculture Safety (I-CASH), based at the University of Iowa. Yet in the rush to get the kids to football games and marching band practice, and to get the crops out of the fields and into the bins, the fall is also a dangerous time on Iowa roads. It’s that time of year when students are back in the classroom and Iowa farmers are gearing up to harvest a record-large corn crop this fall.
