Farms.com Home   News

Slow Down for Safety During Harvest

Slow Down for Safety During Harvest

Whether you’re a farmer wanting to make just one more pass in the field before a storm rolls in or a driver with just enough time to make it to a dentist appointment, everyone in rural communities should slow down at harvest time – just enough to consider your safety and the safety of those around you, according to North Carolina Farm Bureau Field Representative Callie Carson.

“Weather plays a big part in harvest, and a lot of times farmers will say, ‘I just have one more row, I have one more field, I've got to beat the weather.’ So, a lot of times it's just slowing down. And I understand that in terms of profitability, we've got to get the crop out, but the crop’s not any good if the farmer is injured or not there anymore,” Carson said in a Newsline interview.

She also cautioned rural drivers.

“Rural roadways have obstacles, curves, hills, blind spots, trees, so what we ask our motorists to do is just slow down and pay attention, look for equipment, put down the phone, eliminate as many distractions in the vehicle as possible, and then also pay attention. So, if they see a piece of farm equipment as soon as they see that piece of equipment, slow down immediately.”

Kansas farmer Glenn Brunkow echoed Carson’s advice in a recent Focus on Agriculture column.

Click here to see more...

Trending Video

Designing a Robotic Berry Picker

Video: Designing a Robotic Berry Picker


Since blackberries must be harvested by hand, the process is time-consuming and labor-intensive. To support a growing blackberry industry in Arkansas, food science associate professor Renee Threlfall is collaborating with mechanical engineering assistant professor Anthony Gunderman to develop a mechanical harvesting system. Most recently, the team designed a device to measure the force needed to pick a blackberry without damaging it. The data from this device will help inform the next stage of development and move the team closer to the goal of a fully autonomous robotic berry picker. The device was developed by Gunderman, with Yue Chen, a former U of A professor now at Georgia Tech, and Jeremy Collins, then a U of A undergraduate engineering student. To determine the force needed to pick blackberries without damage, the engineers worked with Threlfall and Andrea Myers, then a graduate student.