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Here are 12 safety pointers shared by the presenters.
1 - Discuss any hazards during nut harvest and ways to prevent them, including wearing personal protective equipment including goggles, hearing protection, and dust masks. Demonstrate how to use the equipment.
2 - Identify pieces of equipment and tools commonly used during harvest and discuss the potential hazards. Have in place lockout-tag out procedures for every piece of equipment used.
3 - Don’t wear loose clothing that can get caught in moving machinery that includes a power takeoff (PTO).
Ramirez showed how some safety vests are designed so parts of it, fastened at points by Velcro, pull away to avoid snaring the entire vest. Taking an extra safety vest can be wise, she explained, since it can be used to mark hazards in an orchard such as a gate which might otherwise not be quickly recognized.
4 – Keep a safe distance from PTO-powered equipment, keep PTO shields on at all times, and check for missing or damaged shields before hooking up the PTO.
5 - Be able to communicate with others using radio phones or walkie talkies if cell phones might be out of service. Or have someone check on the welfare of workers periodically if they can’t be reached with any device.
6 - Limited visibility can lead to serious injuries. Sometimes a solution is as simple as cleaning a windshield or goggles periodically.
7 - When working at night, harvesting equipment should be able to light up 50 feet ahead.
8 - Avoid distractions, including non-work-related cell phone calls. One participant discussed a phone app that can respond to callers with a message to the effect, “I will get back to you; I am driving right now.”
9 - Inspect orchards before starting work to identify hazards that should be marked or avoided by employees on the ground around heavy equipment. Require all employees to wear reflective clothing or vests. Limit the number of the ground crew to only those people who need to be there.
10 - When moving equipment on a public roadway, be sure there is signage indicating it is a slow moving vehicle. A flagger, lookout, or guide vehicle with flashing lights may be needed. The timing of movement should include considerations of when traffic might be light and driving conditions best, including the avoidance of fog.
11 - Allow only trained and authorized employees to conduct any service, maintenance, or repair on equipment. Create a checklist for equipment inspections.
Juan Carlos Rodriquez, a shop manager at Pistachio Harvesting Inc. in Madera, Calif., said an un-trained seasonal worker should not be allowed to clear clogged machinery.
“Call a mechanic,” Rodriguez said.
12 - The amount of dust created during almond harvest can be reduced by starting with a clean orchard, not setting sweeper heads too low, avoiding extra sweeper passes, and moving slowly.