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Posts Tagged ‘safety’

Watch Out for Drop-Side Cribs

Saturday, May 22nd, 2010

There was a time when any baby in the U.S. who didn’t sleep with its parents was probably sleeping in a drop-side crib — a crib that has one side which can be lowered, to make it easier for parents and caregivers to lift babies in and out. Drop-side cribs were passed from friend to friend and family to family. The cribs were stored in attics and basements and, often, in self storage units.

Now, though, drop-side cribs are being banned in the U.S. The Consumer Product Safety Commission is blaming drop-side cribs for the deaths of 32 U.S. babies and toddlers since 2000, and suspects that drop sides played a role in the deaths of 14 other children.

Cribs are recalled all the time, but usually the reason is that someone discovered a small detail on which a baby’s clothing could get caught, posing a potential strangulation hazard, or because a mattress didn’t fit snugly enough, posing a possible suffocation hazard. This is the first time that a particular type of crib, rather than a particular make or model, has been banned in the U.S.

Instead of making drop-side cribs, starting next year manufacturers are going to make cribs that have shorter legs, so that babies will sleep closer to the ground, to make it easier for a caregiver to bend down to pick up a child. Some cribs may also have a drop gate, a hinge that allows the top five inches of one side to fold down.

Meanwhile, the Consumer Product Safety Commission is recommending that parents throw out their old drop-side cribs, rather than saving them for future use, or giving them away. If you are saving an old drop-side crib in a self storage unit, you may want to take some time to come in and pull the crib out of storage and get rid of it. If you have a drop-side crib that you were about to put into storage, you may not want to bother.

If you are wondering where parents are supposed to put their babies down to sleep, you are not alone! However, there is another option — no crib. It is safe to put a baby on a mattress on the floor, if you’ve baby-proofed the rest of the room and put a gate on the door.

Good luck, parents of babies and toddlers…

Good luck to this season’s ice fishers!

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

A few of my tenants have started coming in to pull ice fishing equipment out of storage…yes, it’s getting to be that time of the year again. Until I went into the self-storage business I didn’t realize how much equipment people need for certain hobbies. Ice fishers, especially, like to keep their gear in storage, because some of it is best kept away from kids: fishing hooks and ice picks, for example. Some of the equipment, like flashlights, a shelter, and a heater, may not be dangerous, but it’s easiest to keep it all in one place, away from home, so that the ice fishing shelter does not migrate into the living room and become a play fort.

For those of you who are preparing for a fishing trip, I’ve listed some of the things you may want to be sure to bring along (whether you pull them out of self-storage or out of your basement or garage):

  • fishing rods
  • reels
  • line (preferably 4-8 lb. ice-line)
  • bait (please don’t keep your bait in storage unless you are renting a freezer unit!)
  • a 5 gallon bucket to sit on
  • hand warmers
  • needle nose pliers
  • your fishing license
  • identification
  • a compass
  • bobber stops with beads
  • assortment of split-shot
  • ice fishing bobbers
  • fingernail clipper (to cut the line)
  • ice scoop
  • First Aid kit
  • jigs, spoons, hooks, etc.
  • ice auger
  • sled for the auger
  • mouth spreader
  • hook sharpener
  • bait bucket
  • small shovel, preferably collapsible
  • ice pick or picks

There are other things you might want to bring if you have them: a shelter, a propane heater and propane, a spud bar (to check the thickness of the ice), a camera, ice cleats, an ice anchoring system, a small flashlight (maybe a wearable one), a lantern, matches or a lighter for the propane heater, tip-ups and leaders, quickstrike rigs, a cell phone if you have one, and GPS if you are lucky enough to have one of those. Something that just came out this year, which you may find handy, is a “glow-buster” lure light…one of my tenants told me that these work better than any bait she’s ever seen.  Don’t forget to bring snacks, handkerchiefs, a hand towel, extra gloves, and any other odds and ends that you particularly need.

Most of all, don’t forget to bring your common sense. That ice isn’t always as thick as it used to be at this time of the year. Check the ice before you go out onto it. And then check it again. Be safe. And dress warmly.

For more information on ice fishing safety, try the U.S. Army Cold Regions Research & Engineering Laboratory website, which  has a tip sheet relating to working on ice sheets.

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