Posts Tagged ‘equipment’

First Aid For Hunters

Monday, December 5th, 2011

Everyone ought to know basic First Aid techniques, but it is especially important for those who participate in potentially more dangerous sports or activities such as hunting. There are all sorts of things that can happen to you whilst hunting.

Besides being shot, you could cut yourself while skinning an animal, you could be attacked by an animal, you could fall and break a leg or you could suffer a routine heart attack that could have occurred anywhere.

However, what makes all these accidents more dangerous when you are hunting is the likelihood that you will be located miles from anywhere whilst it occurs. There is no one to turn to except your companion. No ambulances, no doctors and no hospitals for tens of miles.

The first thing that everybody should know is CPR, which stands for cardiopulmonary resuscitation, which is an emergency procedure consisting of external cardiac massage and artificial respiration. It is vital to know CPR techniques for everyone not only hunters.

You can learn CPR at several local institutions including the hospital, the fire station, some schools, some scouting organizations and some other institutions like the Boys’ Brigade or the St. John’s Ambulance Brigade.

These organizations can usually teach you over CPR if you want, such as what to do in a crisis. There are particular procedures that are common to most if not all crisis situations. For example, the first rule is to always take care of yourself first. Then assess the situation and make the area safe for yourself and anyone who might come into it.

This may sound selfish, but you are no help to anyone if you permit yourself to become injured and the rescue services will be very cautious if the region is unsafe when they arrive. Then either start first aid procedures or call the rescue services depending on the situation.

Healthcare workers teach the ABC method of applying First Aid. ABC stands for ‘Airway, Breathing and Circulation’. So, first look in the mouth and at the throat. Look for and remove any blockages such as blood, dentures or foreign bodies.

Then check for breathing. If the patient has ceased breathing, try to resuscitate him or her because the brain cannot survive longer than a few minutes without oxygen.

Next check the heart beat. If it has stopped endeavour to get it going again. If there is copious bleeding from a wound, try to staunch the bleeding by applying pressure to it through a clean cloth. Get help if there are a number of wounds but apply tourniquets to arms and legs that are bleeding badly. You can use a belt or stockings as make-shift tourniquets.

If the patient has experienced a serious fall, the first rule is not to move the person. You can cause significant injury to someone with broken bones by moving them. You can even cause paralysis, so if someone has fallen, ask whether they can move their fingers and toes (a sign that the spine is almost certainly undamaged) and then phone the rescue services.

Two of the best safety rules when going hunting, are to inform someone where you are going and never to go alone. If you hunt with the same person often, why not both go to a First Aid class together?

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on many topics, but is now involved with Oakley safety glasses. If you would like to know more, please visit our site at Safety Glasses Bifocal

How To Care For Your Fish Pond

Monday, December 5th, 2011

Do you like the sound of running water? Do you find the sound soothing? Well, you can easily create the sound of moving water in your own garden. You can put in a fish pond or a water garden. So, if you think that your garden needs landscaping, it might be a good time to consider a fish pond or water garden.

People think that a fish pond takes lot of looking after, but that is not inevitably true. The fact is that the larger the fish pond, the less effort you have to put into it. This is because a big pond can create its own ecosystem, whereas a small fish pond requires assistance.

The ways that you can help a small fish pond be a decent environment for your fish are as follows:

Pond Filters – use a pond filter with a good pump. Do not forget that you could use a solar powered pump. It will save on the environment and on your wallet. You should use a pond filter on a small pond, because the ecosystem cannot cope with all the plant waste of a small ornamental pond on its own. A pond pump will feed the filtration system and a waterfall or fountain if you want.

Your pond filtration system should be left running twenty-four hours a day, but you can not just set it and forget it. Check that the pump is running daily and keep the filter as clean as needed for it to do its job. You may find that you have to clean it two or three times a week in the summer and autumn but only once a week in the winter and spring.

Leaf Netting: stop leaves from clogging up your pond in the autumn. The net should be suspended a foot or so above the pond to stop autumn leaves falling into the water and rotting.

Feeding: all fish should be given fish food, not bread or scraps. Some fish must have specific fish food in order to preserve their colour. When you buy your fish, the salesperson should advise you what they eat. In general, the larger the pond the less hassle feeding becomes as they will eat natural food like insects, grubs, larvae and flies.

Fish require less food in the winter when they become semi-dormant and live off the fat reserves that they built up in the warmer months, so give food often in the summer and autumn, but less often in the winter. You must check to see if excess food is left floating on the surface.

Winter: make certain that there is a hole in the ice so that the water can take in oxygen and the fish can feed if they want to. You can buy a floating de-icer or some people float a round football in a hoola-hoop, which seems to do the trick unless the temperature gets very low.

In fact, the hoola-hoop is a good idea all year round really. If you place the food in the hoop, it stays in one place and you can see if you have given too much. It also makes a nice site to see all the fish feeding in a group.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on many subjects, but is currently involved with water garden pumps. If you are interested in a Solar Powered Pond Pump, please go to our web site right away for some extra special deals.

Fire Safety And RV’s

Saturday, December 3rd, 2011

An RV – a Recreational Vehicle – is like a house on wheels. It is the landlubber’s equivalent of a barge, you can live in it whilst roaming the country. You are as free as a bird in your RV as you do not have to go where the hotels are located.

Having said that, the RV is also a mobile bomb carrying gallons of petrol or diesel and tanks of propane or calorgas. Therefore, you need to have clear safety procedures in place and you need to know and follow them. Fire safety is of premium importance to the responsible RV driver.

Fire extinguishers are rated as either A, B, C, or D, which indicates the type of fire that they may be used to combat. If you did not already know it, you can not simply squirt any fire extinguisher at any sort of fire. Using the wrong extinguisher on a fire can increase the risk, so be careful.

Having said that, some fire extinguishers can be used on different kinds of fires, so it is possible to find extinguishers rated as AB, BC and even ABC. The National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) recommends that all RV’s carry a BC rated extinguisher near the prime exit from the RV. A BC type extinguisher should be used to combat fires originating from flammable liquids and gases – just what an RV driver needs.

The key point about a fire extinguisher of the correct sort is that it has to be in the right place. It is no good having a fire extinguisher if you cannot get to it to combat the fire when it breaks out.

If the diver’s cab is detached from the sleeping compartment, you should carry an extinguisher in the cab too. Store one outside the RV and one inside it too.

It is a good idea to develop a fire prevention and fire safety course before you set out and be certain that your companions know how best to prevent and how best to handle fires in the RV. Fires in confined spaces such as an RV, a caravan or a boat are particularly terrifying and dangerous, because you are more probable to get overwhelmed by the smoke and gases than in a house. Finding your way out of an unfamiliar RV that is full of smoke is not as simple as you might think.

You should also instruct your companions how to operate a fire extinguisher – after all, most individuals have never utilized one. Keep in mind the word ‘PASS’, which stands for ‘Pull, Aim, Squeeze and Sweep’.

This means, pull the pin, aim at the base of the fire, squeeze the handle and sweep the spray across the base of the fire until it is out. The best distance from the fire is about eight feet, but this is not always possible.

If you have to make a choice between saving the vehicle or endangering your safety, let the RV burn, after all, it is insured. Never put yourself or others at risk for the sake of property.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on several topics, but is now involved with Safety Glasses USA. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Safety Glasses Bifocal

How To Care For Your Koi Carp After A Storm

Saturday, November 26th, 2011

A storm can be distressing for your outdoor fish, especially for large koi carp, which, being large, probably do not have many places to hide. However, if you have designed your koi fish pond well, you will have taken this into consideration when your built the pond. Likewise, the pond must be deep enough for your fish to be able to get well below the choppy surface level.

If you prepared for the storm, you probably put a net over the fish pond, so the first thing you need to do after the storm is clear up any fallen debris and remove the net, so that you can get a good look at your fish and what occurred to them. They may be a bit stressed, so move slowly and try hard not to frighten them. Stress is a killer in the animal world as well as in ours.

Did you take the additional precaution of sand-bagging the rim of your pond to stop it over-flowing and the fish swimming away? If so, take away the sand bags, so that you can get a closer look.

Now you can get a good look at the upheaval, if there is any. Use a net to gently skim off any leaves that have blown under the netting and into the pond. If any plants have been uprooted, put them back where they should be. In general, put the pond back as it used to be, so that the fish feel at home. Again, move slowly and try not to put your fish under any more stress.

If you need to carry out major structural repairs, you could place your koi in a child’s plastic paddling pool until you can sort the problem out. Put the pool in a shaded spot and fold the netting over it several times so that the fish can not get out and cats and birds cannot get in. If you can aerate the water with a pump so much the better.

Put a few plants in there with them for cover and feed in moderation. if the repairs will take a long time, you could ask your local pet store to take them away for a week or whatever. You will need to pay board and lodgings, but it is preferable to losing your prized koi carp.

Once any repairs have been carried out, you ought to check the water quality, which could have been changed by debris falling into the pond or by your repairs. Rain, especially acid rain, can have quite an effect, especially if it rained for a long time.

First check the water for nitrates. If the levels are unacceptable (see the testing kit for details), you ought to normalize them. If the levels are extremely high, first remove the plants from the water.

Then analyze the KH levels. If they are low, say, below 100, then you could add a cup of baking soda per 1,000 gallons of water and test again. Whatever you do, the quickest way to de-stress your fish is to restore their environment to what it used to be with sparkling water to swim in.

Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on many topics, but is now involved with water garden pumps. If you are interested in a Solar Powered Pond Pump, please go to our web site now for a special deal.

What To Do About Fogged Safety Glasses

Wednesday, November 23rd, 2011

It is obligatory in most Western countries for employers to supply safety glasses or safety goggles and it is compulsory for employees to wear them when instructed to. It has been established that wearing safety glasses at work significantly reduces the number of accidents and accidents are expensive.

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) reported that eye injuries cost US businesses around $467 million each and every year, so a few dozen pairs of safety glasses would easily recoup their price. However, it is also vital to use safety glasses that were designed to protect the eyes of wearers in specific professions.

One of the concerns with safety glasses is that they fog up. This means that employees often have to take off their glasses to de-mist them, which lessens the effectiveness of the glasses. Stopping fogging or misting is a major difficulty for makers of safety glasses.

The reason for of fogging is a lack of air flow. This is usually only a problem with goggles, because they tend to be a tighter fit so they become warmer, which vaporizes any moisture created by the eyes or by perspiration. It can also be caused by a low ambient temperature.

Consequently the first step towards solving the problem of fogging or misting in safety glasses is to find out where and why it happens. Fogging will generally occur when the worker moves from a hot region to a cold one, in hot humid zones or where the employee’s body temperature is higher than the ambient temperature.

The first line of attack should be to opt for lenses that will cope with those environments or conditions. Lenses can be coated with anti-fogging or anti-misting coatings. These coatings are applied at the time of manufacture and ought to last the lifetime of the safety glasses.

These coatings will prevent the build up of water droplets on the lenses permitting clear vision. There are other coatings that can be applied as well, so it is a question of seeing what types of coatings are obtainable from your dealer.

It is worth remembering that not all anti-fog coatings are effectual under all the conditions where fogging can occur, so you should be specific when explaining to your supplier why you require anti-fog lenses.

If someone has to enter an area where fogging often happens, supplying an anti-fog cloth to wipe on their lenses is a short term help. These cloths are alright to use on most lenses, so it is wise to enquire. The effects ought to continue for a number of hours.

If personnel move from one zone to another and have to change their safety glasses from zone to zone, they ought to be shown how to recognize safety glasses with the different coatings. Lenses that have been treated at the factory with an anti fog coating are often stamped with the letters ‘AF’.

It is worth learning how to deal with fogged safety glasses, because it can save a great deal of frustration, misery and money, if you just spend a little time getting the correct safety equipment.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on several subjects, but is now concerned with Uvex Safety Glasses. If you want to know more, please visit our site at Safety Glasses Bifocal

Essentials Of Golfing Etiquette

Tuesday, November 15th, 2011

Golf is a carefully balanced game of rules and etiquette, and it’s very important to know the basics of golfing etiquette before you go on the course to play your first game of golf.

Golfing etiquette dictates that it doesn’t matter whether you are playing alone, in a twosome or in a foursome, you must always wait your turn. You must also stay aware of the group on the next hole and wait until they are well ahead of you before hitting your ball.

Golfing etiquette also says that it is never correct to “hurry” the group in front of you. If you are playing with others, wait your turn to hit the ball and never hit at the same time as another player.

While you are waiting for your turn to play, go to your ball and determine what golf club you will need to use and how you are going to hit the golf ball with it. This is called “ready golf” and keeps the game moving along. Don’t rush anybody, just be ready for your turn.

Another useful piece of golfing etiquette, especially for the beginner is ‘playing through’. For example, if your team is holding up the players behind you, say because you are playing consistently over par, let them play through. You would simply wave them through, or if they are near enough to you, just ask them if they would like to play through. You will never make enemies by doing this!

When someone is making a shot, you should be behind them and you shouldn’t make any noise! It is so distracting to be just about to to tee off and just as you pull back, someone decides to jingle coins in their pocket or noisily unwrap a piece of candy.

Replacing divots. Let’s say you are on the fairway and you strike the ball a bit thick and a clump of dirt and grass goes flying, no problem, but golfing etiquette says that you ought to replace it. On some courses you just put the clod back into the hole and step on it to keep it down, but on most courses, there is a sand/seed mixture on the course to put into the divot. Also, if your ball makes a deep impression when it lands on the green, you should use your divot tool to repair it.

As soon as you have finished a hole, replace the flag and leave the green as quickly and quietly as possible (there may be another team teeing off at the next hole) so that the next players can play that hole. Count your score and write it on the scorecard when you get back to your cart.

For sure, there is much more to golfing etiquette than this, but these basic rules of golfing etiquette will enable you to get around the course without upsetting anyone. If we all uphold golfing etiquette we will keep the game nice and friendly, or not?

If you are interested in learning more about golfing etiquette, visit our website on Golfing Tips for Beginners for loads of free tips.

Power Tools And Safety Regulations

Tuesday, July 5th, 2011

Power tools have largely taken over from hand tools all around the world, because they allow individuals to get more work done in an alloted space of time. Power tools work far more quickly than hand tools and without the operative having to expend a lot of energy having to turn a handle or push a saw.

However, the increased productivity that power tools deliver comes at a cost: 1] you have to pay for the electricity that drives the apparatus and 2] there is an increased danger to the operative’s health and safety. The price of the electricity ought to be more than easily covered by the raised productivity, but health and safety is often disregarded until it is too late.

People appear to not comprehend the potential dangers of an inexperienced person using a power tool. For instance, a slip with a hand saw, normally means an ugly joint, but a slip with a power saw can cost a finger; a miss whilst hammering a nail in can cost a bruised finger or an ugly dent, but a slip with a nail gun can be like having a bullet in the leg.

This is why insurance companies have made it imperative for firms employing trades people to send their workers on health and safety courses. Claims from inexpert workers was becoming ludicrous as inexpert trades people gave up their old hand tool in favour of the powered alternative.

It caused a great deal of controversy in the Eighties and Nineties in the building industry among employers and employees alike to have to send people on courses about how to use power tools. In Britain, employers were not allowed to let a carpenter use a rotary saw, for instance, unless he or she could prove that they had been trained to use one. Most individuals thought that the health and safety lot had gone too far.

But there were not so many accidents; less time off work due to injury and not so many claims against the insurance companies.

There was tremendous opposition in our building firm from the workforce, when we declared that nobody could sign out a power tool unless he/she had a valid safety certificate to confirm training in the use of that particular piece of apparatus.

We also had a joinery shop, where traditionally every carpenter could go to make anything he needed. Then this policy came in and just one carpenter out of forty was allowed to use the tools. All of a sudden there was a rush to get safety certificates. The new laws had hurt people’s pride.

They thought that they were being told that they did not know their trade, but once they were disqualified from using power tools, they were made to look like inexpert apprentices again. So there was a rush to get a certificate and power tool companies would send a safety specialist to the workplace to train all the relevant tradesmen in the use of their power tools free of charge and pass out certificates.

Then our firm decided to get their ISO 9000 certificate and power tools had to be given certificates of inspection too. So now we had to employ someone to look after the power tools.

Only tradesmen with certificates of competence could sign out a power tool and a power tool could only be signed out if it had a certificate to prove that it had been passed ‘safe for use’ within the last two months. All power tools had to have a certificate of reliability attached to it, a set of safety rules and a pair of safety glasses. That covered the firm from accusations of negligence.

That was 15-20 years ago in the building industry in the UK. I am not saying all this as a history lesson, but more to point out that people can go to a store and purchase or hire very dangerous power tools without having to prove competence. Contractors at work have to prove that they and the tools are up to the job, but the public does not.

I am not in favour of another layer of bureaucracy, but I do would like to make people aware of the danger of not knowing how to use power tools correctly and without even the most fundamental safety equipment.

Do not use power tools without safety glasses is the first rule. Shield your eyes from splinters and flying debris at all costs. A professional would, so so should you.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on several subjects, but is now involved with Uvex Safety Glasses. If you want to know more, please visit our site at Safety Glasses Bifocal

So You Want To Do A Motorcycle Safety Course?

Sunday, July 3rd, 2011

I live in a nation where fathers are proud that their children can ride a motorcycle at eight years of age. When the beaming parent boasts about this, I always ask of the cost of insuring such a young driver but the Thai answer is to smile. Their children are not insured but if they get into an accident, they simply hope that it will not be a bad one.

However, we all know that many motorcycle accidents are serious and that most of those concerned in motorcycle accidents are young people. Why would someone, a parent even, allow a child to ride a motorcycle without insurance? It is beyond me, but then, I am not a parent. I just think that it is irresponsible.

So, the first thing that a motorcyclist ought to do is take a course – a motorcyclists’ safety course, but even that will not help someone who does not have or cannot buy insurance. However, it is a very responsible thing to do to take a motorcyclists’ safety course, because you will be taught how to dress in safe clothing and how to avoid perilous situations.

The first thing to find out concerning a motorcyclists’ safety course is what it will teach you and whether you will get a certificate for completing it. It is also helpful to know whether having such a certificate will entitle you to a discount on your insurance premium. It could well do, which will more than compensate the cost of the course during your lifetime – with any luck.

A good motorcyclists’ safety course ought to teach about the components of a motorcycle, what you can reasonably expect from them and why. It would also teach you basic motorcycle maintenance and repair. After that, it ought to teach you driving skills and how to sidestep accidents.

Wearing the correct safety clothing at all times is another requirement of a good motorcyclists’ safety course. You have to realize why doing something or wearing something is important. And in essence, it is important because it can save your life and avert accidents, which can save other peoples’ lives as well.

It is mostly teenagers who ride motorcycles and teenagers are not well-known for behaving sensibly, so as a parent or a responsible teenager make certain you find out about motorcyclists’ safety course locally.

The Internet is the obvious location to start looking for a motorcyclists’ safety course, but if you are stumped, then the local authorities, the local police station or the local accident prevention bureau will be able to put you on the correct track and so might the neighbourhood library.

You know that it makes sense so only do it, if not to keep your own child alive, then so that he or she does knock me down while I am out strolling with my wife and my dog.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on several topics, but is now concerned with Safety Glasses USA. If you would like to know more, please visit our site at Safety Glasses Bifocal

Satellite Radio: Is It Expensive?

Saturday, July 2nd, 2011

Satellite radio is highly popular these days and it is increasing in popularity more and more every day. If you are not sure what satellite radio is, you can look at it like cable or satellite TV. In essence, satellite radio is a subscription only service. It has a huge assortment of radio stations that are not available on the ordinary AM or FM services.

If you are wondering about how much satellite radio costs, then the answer is the maddening one: it depends. It depends, because there are several variables, such as the apparatus itself, installation fees and monthly fees. Equipment from the countless manufacturers varies a lot as well.

For instance, Bose is more expensive than a Chinese item from Walmart. Installation charges vary depending on where you live and who you use and the monthly fee will depend on which package or bundle you select. So, regrettably, the answer is: it depends.

There is also a one-off ‘activation fee’. This costs about $15 if you do it by phone and about $5 if you it over the Internet. However, the push is on to get you signed up, so there are frequently promotions on doing away with this outrageous rip-off fee. As if you will not be paying enough in monthly charges for the rest of your life!

If you want to install satellite radio in your car, you have two alternatives, if your existing radio is not ‘satellite ready’. You can either purchase a new car stereo that is ‘satellite ready’ or you can buy a satellite signal receiver and decoder unit and plug it into your present radio. This decoder can be hidden away under the driver’s seat or stashed in the trunk of the car. You will also need a new aerial on the roof.

Costs differ outrageously, but let’s average it out at $600 for a decent, new, satellite-enabled, ready to go stereo fitted and working or $350 for a cheap system using your own radio, but also ready to receive satellite broadcasts. So, you could say, on average, for about $500 you can be listening to satellite broadcasts.

However, just as with laptop computer prices, demand creates downward pressure on prices and by the time you read this article, the price could have halved. Let’s hope so.

Portable satellite radio receivers can be a little cheaper, mostly because there are no installation fees and come out at about $400.

Then there are the monthly subscription fees. As I said above, this depends on the package you select. The average fee is $10-$15 a month, but specialized channels can be extra. For instance, you could receive the Playboy channel for free at one time, but the normal charge is $2.95 per month.

Sport may cost more, especially for a finals match. Sometimes, you can get a discount for paying annually and Sirius even has a one-off, lifetime option at $500. Perhaps the best thing to do is keep an eye on the promotional offers and be ready to pounce quickly when a fitting one comes up.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on a variety of topics, but is now concerned with Bose alarm clocks. If you would like to know more, please go to our website at Bose Digital Radio.

Airbrush Tanning

Tuesday, June 28th, 2011

Since some people started thinking that a tanned body makes them look slimmer, in all probability on the same principle that black clothing makes you look slimmer than white clothing, there has been a rush for instantaneous tans and there is no more instantaneous a tan than to have one painted on. This is known as airbrush tanning.

Airbrush tanning can appeal on different levels. It is fast, you can get any shade you like and there is no danger from UV rays natural or synthetic. Many individuals are frightened by the stories of skin cancer that they can get by sunbathing or using a tanning bed, so an instant golden bronze colour appears quite an attractive alternative.

The fad for airbrush tanning has spurred the tanning industry to manufacture a vast range of airbrush-look-alike products. There are creams and lotions and even pills that the manufacturers claim will turn your skin an attractive golden bronze. Unfortunately, most of them turn your skin a rather ridiculous shade of orange.

Then there are the home airbrush tanning kits. Real airbrush tanning is the equivalent of having your car resprayed. You can either have it done by a specialist who has professional spraying equipment or you could go out and purchase a dozen cans of your favourite colour car spray paint and do it yourself.

A car sprayed in the former way usually looks fantastic, but a car sprayed in the latter fashion normally looks dreadful. Well, the same goes for professional salon airbrush tanning and home airbrush tanning. Even amongst professional spray painters some are better at it than others, so it is best to ask around before you let anyone airbrush you.

So, these are the greatest worries with airbrush tanning. You cannot do it yourself; you cannot trust a friend to do it for you; it is doubtful whether you can even purchase the right apparatus to do it yourself and where do you find a professional whom enough people have allowed to practice on them so that he or she is any good?

Because a decent airbrush tanner will need the correct equipment and plenty of experience. It is not a trade that can be learned from a book. Airbrush tanning is still a fairly new phenomenon, so a good tanner may be difficult to find outside a big city, but you could try asking the owner of your local tanning salon to invite one in once a fortnight for those who have booked in advance. A sort of guest appearance.

As with any paint work, the secret to a good finish is preparation. If you have never been spray-painted before make certain that you prepare yourself properly. Ask your salon to supply you with a list of things that you can do in order to prepare your body in the correct manner.

Preparatory procedures might include shaving and exfoliating but will involve removing all make-up and body oils by showering well. This will give the paint a good substrate to stick to. The better the preparation you do the better and longer-lasting the airbrush tan – ask any painter and decorator or car sprayer.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece writes on quite a few topics, but is currently involved with bronzing tanning beds. If you would like to know more or check out some immense offers, just go to our web site at Tanning Bed Bulbs.