horse 
 
 
Horse and pony - Equiworld site index.Horse chat message boards.Horse breeds, types and breeding gallery.Search for horse information on Equiworld.Horse information and equestrian news archive.horsehorse  
[Dressage]-[Driving]-[Endurance]-[Horse-Trials]-[Polo]-[Show-Jumping]-[Showing]-[Side-Saddle]-[Vaulting]-[Western]

C. Jarvis Insurance AgencyINC.
Providing Equine — Liability — Farm and Ranch Insurance since 1946
Newsletter Volume 1, No. 2• April 2002

Disaster Planning: Barn Safety


horse BEFORE:
Plan, Plan, Plan. You never can stop planning ahead for an unknown disaster. Have a plan in place before the disaster.The plan can start with a safety inspection of your farm premises. The inspection should include:


Electrical systems:
• Are the service boxes in a dry, dust free location and mounted on fire resistant materials?
• Are the electrical fixtures free of dust, dirt, cob webs, chaff, hay or combustible materials?
Heating and cooling systems:
• Are they designed for barns and stables?
• Are they installed properly?
Fuel Storage:
• Are the storage tanks located away from buildings at least 40 feet?
• Are the tanks properly grounded?
• Are there fire extinguishers near tanks?
• Are the tanks protected from collision by vehicular traffic?
• Are there clean up protocols for spills?
Are your barns and buildings free of weeds, grass and debris?
• Is the hay cured prior to being stored?
• Are the roofs, walls and windows weather tight?
• Are many fire extinguishers located in every building?
—Are they annually charged?
—Is there 10 pounds ABC or better?
—Are they protected from freezing?
• Is there a phone in all barns with important numbers (fire, police, key personnel)?
• Are there no smoking signs (is the rule enforced?)
• Are horses valued over $100,000 stabled in separate barns?
Paddock and pastures:
• Are they free of harmful objects?
• Are there no broken planks, exposed nails, sharp or broken gates?
• Are the horse rotated to break the life cycle of parasites?

Stables:
• Are the aisles at least 12 feet wide?
• Are the aisles free of harmful objects?
• Are the stalls latched?
• Are the stalls designed to prevent contact with neighboring horses?
• Are electrical fixtures (fans, etc.) wiring inaccessible to horses and properly protected?
• Are the grain and feed rooms locked and containers covered?

This is not a complete list. It is a start on your way to a safer environment for your horses.

horse



BEFORE A DISASTER:

Survey your property for the best location for animal confinement. WRITE IT DOWN.
• Alternate water and power sources should be identified. WRITE IT DOWN.
• Cell phone, portable radios, flashlights, extra batteries, portable generators are all good sources to have on hand.
• Evacuation plans to relocate (route to fairgrounds, other farms, race tracks, humane societies).WRITE IT DOWN.
• Alist of all resources - feed, supplies, vets, EMTs, truckers. Include all emergency telephone numbers (police, fire, hospital (vet and human, EMT, poison
control). WRITE IT DOWN. Make many copies: this information should be available at various locations on the farm.
• Have a current list of the horses on the farm or in the stable.
—What paddock and stall they are in?
—Who are the owners or contact persons and what are their telephone numbers?
— A written procedure on what is to be said to owners/agents in a disaster?
— Make a script and follow it.
— Records of feeding, vaccinations, Coggins, amount of hay and feed and what kind given to each animal should be available. WRITE IT DOWN.

Have a procedure on what animals will be saved in an evacuation and what animals will be put out to safety.
• Have a job description on who does what.
• Have a phone tree of all key personnel and make sure they know how to use it.
• Have a drill every quarter in the barn regarding a disaster.
— Who does what? Who calls who?
DON'T PANIC.
• Have emergency kits available in farm trucks and tack rooms. Emergency kits should have the necessary supplies to treat almost any kind of minor injury or assist in stopping a major injury from getting worse. You should have halter shanks, dressings, bandages, medicines, water buckets, flash lights, radios, etc.

horse WATER/FEED
• Make sure you have enough water/feed for 72 hours. Secure it before the disaster occurs. Most horses drink 5 gallons per 1,000 pound weight and 20 pounds of hay.
• Make sure all horses are identified with halters or neck straps and spray point names on horses left outside to weather the storm.
• If you evacuate and mark horses make ure you have enough feed and hay for 48 hours. Call prior to movement to other farms to make sure the site is still available. Bring the emergency kit with you.
• If you leave horses behind make sure they have water and hay for 48 to 72 hours. Leave them in an area that you have determined appropriate for the disaster situation.
• Make a list of the animals that you evacuate and where they go. Be sure they are identified.
• Reinforce the emergency training drills you have done at the farm prior to the disaster.
Plan, Plan, Plan. WRITE IT DOWN.



DURING A DISASTER
Be calm, don't panic - remember the emergency drill procedures
• Get information from the Emergency Broadcast System. Know the station. Use a battery operated radio if the power is off.
• If you evacuate and take horses, take all important records, feeds, etc. Call prior to shipping to make sure emergency location is still available.
• If you leave horses behind make sure you they are turned out in a pre-selected area that would be appropriate for the disaster situation.
• Leave enough hay and water for 48-72 hours. Power may be lost: a large water tub would be a better choice vs. automatic water.
• Identify all horses with halters and possible splint boots or bandages with information on the horse inside.

horse

DO NOT PANIC

• Horses will be aware of the disaster by the way you act and the environment they will be in.
• Call all owners/agents regarding the disaster. Keep them updated if possible. Use a script or prepared statement when you call.

AFTER A DISASTER
• Call all owners/agents regarding the disaster, even if there is no damage to your property.
• Check fencing, pastures and gates for sharp objects.
• Check power lines.
• Be aware of wild animals and snakes. They could be a danger to you and the horses.
• If horses are lost, contact local farms, veterinarians, humane societies. Listen to the Emergency Broadcast system for people that are accepting lost animals.
• Be careful in approaching animals that have gone through a disaster. They may be frightened and unruly.
• Check with your veterinarian and the Department of Agriculture for information about possible disease outbreaks.
• Examine all horses after a disaster.
• Check all feed.
• Inventory all horses.

TO SUMMARIZE:
It is very important to plan and have written procedures in place before the disaster: phone numbers, cellular phones, flashlights, generators, emergency kits. Have drills every quarter to sharpen the employees' and owners skills.

JOE CARR
American Bankers Insurance Group

C. Jarvis Insurance Agency
33755 Station Street, Solon, Ohio 44139 USA
tel: 440.248.5330 fax: 440.248.8737
info@jarvisinsurance.com
www.jarvisinsurance.com

.



Find out more, visit the links page or find answers on the message board.

horse


Copyright 1994 to 2024 Equiworld at Hayfield, Aberdeen, Scotland - 30 years on the web. Archived Version.