Autumn hayrides are fun but there’s little safety oversight; 9 hurt in Milford [Detroit Free Press]
| By Zlati Meyer, Detroit Free Press | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
Hayrides are a staple of autumn fun in
Nine people were taken to the hospital after a hay wagon, transporting 16 people with the
The cause of the
But some hayride mishaps have been much worse. A worker at a Dexter farm was paralyzed from the waist down after she thrown off the wagon she was driving and trampled by horses in 2011. The year before that, a teenager almost died when a hayride wagon ran him over. In 2005, a woman was killed after she fell off a hayride in
In a written statement, the president of the
"At the same time, agricultural experiences are not without the need for all participants to be carefully aware of their surroundings and accept the fact that there is no such thing as a totally risk-free experience, especially where there is a mix of machinery, people and learning or entertainment."
Pure
"It's unfortunate that this accident happened. I don't think it's a common occurrence," said spokeswoman
It can cost farms an additional
"If you go to a water park, you know the risk at hand. ... If you drive down the road, there's risks. I can't tell you what things to look for. Take time and be careful. Keep your eyes on kids," Kling explained. "Tipping over of a wagon, yeah, it's happened over the years. Does it happen every year? No."
Although other state agriculture extensions, such as those in
"They're there. They're excited. They might not be used to being on a farm," said MSU Extension educator
Walk explained that farmers are told about liability and to make sure insurance covers them appropriately. Among the recommendations are training employees about safety, making sure the ground the wagons traverse is level, posting wagon rules for visitors to see, using wagons with sides, forbidding standing in wagons while they're moving, assigning a staffer to load and unload passengers and, if possible, having a second employee in the wagon to watch guests.
"We stop (the wagon) if they start standing up and if there's too many," said employee
"We often call this a disaster waiting to happen," he continued. "When you have the perfect storm of improper loading, torque speeding, incline or decline, there will be (a) time when one of these fails like that. ...If you go down a black-diamond ski path, you expect certain risk. Here ,you expect to be protected, but you don't see it as risky because there are hidden dangers."
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