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Check your haystacks for fire risk

December 13, 2024 BY

Farmers are being urged to monitor their haystacks for spontaneous combustion after several recent incidents.

AS THE haymaking season has come to an end, farmers are being urged to monitor their haystacks for spontaneous combustion after several recent incidents, including one close to home in Freshwater Creek.

Once the hay has been stacked, it is important to regularly monitor it for heating and act quickly.

Unfortunately, even with technological advances in machinery for harvesting conserved fodder, there is still nothing cost effective to help monitor the internal temperatures of haystacks, so it’s back to some very simple techniques to keep an eye on your haystacks.

Watch for signs of heating and keep an eye out for signs that a haystack is heating – things like steam condensation on the shed roof, mould growth, acrid fumes and hot, humid air at the top of the stack are all good indicators.

Agriculture Victoria’s Michele Jolliffe said that when building stacks with suspect wet hay, stack the bales loosely to allow air movement and spread the stack over a wider area over several bays, thereby reducing heat build-up.

“Most heating will occur over the first one or two weeks but has been known to reach ‘flash point’ up to eight weeks after baling,” Ms Jolliffe said.

“Monitor the stack temperature regularly to determine the stack temperature which can be measured using a crowbar inserted as deep as possible into the stack and left for two hours.

“After two hours, the crowbar can be removed and felt by hand to give you a rough guide of the internal stack temperatures.

“The temperature of the bale is up to about 50 degrees if you can hold the crowbar without discomfort; it is up to 60 degrees if the bar can be held for a short time only and up to 70 degrees if the bar can only be touched briefly.

“If you can’t hold the bar, temperature is above 70 degrees and fire is a real possibility, so treat the stack with caution.”

Other methods farmers have used over the years are to push a small pipe into the stack and lower a small thermometer to the end of the pipe to measure the temperature of warming hay.

However, this technique should not be used for severely heating hay as it may oxygenate the inner section of the stack and cause a fire to start.

If a stack starts to get dangerously hot, pull it apart as quickly as possible.

Be aware that as the bales are pulled out of the stack, especially in a tightly built stack, oxygen will get access to the hot spot and potentially cause ignition.

Make sure water is readily available and suitably qualified people are able to assist in fire suppression if required.

Agriculture Victoria warns farmers to avoid walking on the stack as the extremely high temperatures may have charred the centre.

Any extra weight on the stack may cause it to collapse into the dangerously-hot centre and cause serious injury.

If there is the slightest risk of a fire starting due to wet hay, never keep machinery in the hayshed and do not allow children to play in or near

heating stacks.