Barn and stable fire prevention and safety was the subject of the August meeting of the Newtown Bridle Lands Association.
Barn and stable fire prevention and safety was the subject of the August meeting of the Newtown Bridle Lands Association.
Bob Nute, Newtownâs Fire Prevention Officer and state-certified fire instructor, presented a program focusing not on code but on prevention, safety, planning, what ifs and what to do.
Mr Nute began his career in 1972 as a member of the Newtown Hook and Ladder and since 1978 has been a member of the Sandy Hook Volunteer Fire and Rescue. Besides being a state-certified fire instructor, he is a certified Juvenile Firesetter Interventionist and investigator, a Life Safety Educator, a training officer and chairman of the pre-plan committee for Sandy Hook Volunteer Fire and Rescue.
He discussed the misuse of extension cords in the barn and overloading circuits; the need for using a âwaterâ fire extinguisher or grabbing a hose when you see a non-electrical fire; understanding lightning and the need for lightning rods; the need to have smoke detectors with health batteries; and the need to have a well-marked home and barn.
Some tips â
1) Start outside. If you live in an area where wildfires are a possibility, make sure you clear a 50-foot firebreak around your barn. Remove brush, trees, tall grass and debris.
2) Protect against lightning. Install a grounded lightning rod system to protect your barn in electrical storms.
3) Try to have both a water supply and a power supply installed outside your barn. Keep a hose attached to your external water supply.
4) Install smoke detectors. Detectors and alarms that sense heat and smoke can save critical time if a fire does start. Make sure you check them regularly (at least twice a year). You may also wish to connect the smoke alarms with a loud, external siren or an alarm that will sound somewhere it can be heard if no one is in the barn.
5) Store hay and combustibles like shavings in a separate building. Some insurance companies require hay to be stored in a separate building, so check with your agent.
6) Make sure that the hay you store is cured properly and that itâs kept dry. Wet hay can start fires through spontaneous combustion.
7) Donât use extension cords. If you really need to, use an industrial-grade cord and donât overload it.
8) Check electrical cords for damage, and replace any that may have been chewed by mice or squirrels.
9) Consider installing a sprinkler system. While the initial investment may seem high, check with your insurance agent to see if he or she offers discounts for barns with sprinklers. Some may cut your annual premium by as much as 50 percent.
10) Place fire extinguishers within reach. Place them every 40 feet or consider keeping one at each entrance, in the tack room and near feed storage. Make sure theyâre charged and protected from freezing.
11) Keep your barn clean. Dust and cobwebs are fire hazards, as are oily rags and paper towels.
12) Cage all electric light fixtures.
13) Keep a halter and leadrope on every stall door. Consider marking each with glow-in-the-dark paint or reflectors.
14) Ban smoking in your barn (and within 20-30 feet, at least). Post âNo Smokingâ signs and enforce the ban.
15) Post directions to your barn next to the phone.
16) Keep important numbers where you can find them quickly and have an emergency plan in place â along with a plan for how emergency equipment could access your barn most quickly. Ask your local fire department to do a walk-through of your barn to point out other fire-prevention steps you can take.
17) If fire does break out, keep your cool â and know your priorities: get people of out of your barn, call the fire department, get your horses out if you can do so without risking human lives, use fire extinguishers and/or hoses (but only if you can do so safely), step aside when the fire crew arrives and let the pros handle it.
The Barefoot Horse
Judy Reiss and Sarah Block will discuss âThe Barefoot Horseâ at the Tuesday, September 20, meeting of the Newtown Bridle Lands Association. The meeting will start at 7:30 pm in the lower level of the Newtown Meeting House.
Ms Reiss and Ms Block are certified by the American Association of Natural Hoof Care. Ms Reiss lives in Newtown and is the proud owner of a barefoot dressage horse and barefoot donkey; she will be presenting a program addressing the wild horse hoof and the domestic hoof.
Visit www.nblact.org for further information.