The Corkman

How high should a silage pit be filled?

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ACCORDING to thatsfarmi­ng. com, Both the Associatio­n of Farm & Forestry Contractor­s (FCI) and the Health and Safety Authority (HSA) have expressed their concerns about reports of silage pits being excessivel­y filled to a dangerous height.

They say that such activity puts vehicle operators and others working at the pit at risk of serious injury.

To prevent such risks and raise awareness around the risks posed by excessive filling of silage pits, the FCI have published a factsheet that they have asked their members to adhere to in the interest of safety.

The guidelines set out are as follows:

• Contractor­s and their farming customers should plan and agree on safe operating procedures, especially with regard to silage pit filling heights, specific to the farm they are working on, before silage harvesting commences.;

• As a general rule, to ensure vehicle operator safety and prevent the collapse of retaining walls, the height of the silage being rolled in the pit should never exceed twice the height of the retaining walls;

• Furthermor­e, the finished silage pit should slope at no more than 45° to the retaining walls. Machine operators must ensure the stability of the rolling equipment to prevent loss of control or overturns;

• As a rule of thumb, the width across the top of the finished silage pit should be a minimum of three times the width of the loader, including dual wheels, if fitted;

• Where pits are full to a safe level and where more grass is required to be harvested, the contractor needs to inform the farmer that the option of baled silage must be considered;

• Farmers have a duty under the Safety, Health, and Welfare at Work Act 2005 to provide a safe working environmen­t on the farm, including farm buildings and silage pits, for all people who may work on that farm. There is a further duty to ensure that any contractor, hired to work on the farm, provides and/or works in a safe manner.

• Silage pits should not be constructe­d underneath or near to ESB Networks power lines. As a guide, the table sets out the usual minimum clearance distances required, however, ESB Networks should be contacted and their advice followed for any structure within 35m of the centre line of an overhead power line.

• Finally, the silage storage capacity on the farm should be assessed jointly by the contractor and the farmer to ensure the matching of facilities to existing and future stocking levels.

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