Episode 317 - Emily’s Back! Farm Emergency Planning You’ll Actually Use - The UMN Extension's Moos Room cover art

Episode 317 - Emily’s Back! Farm Emergency Planning You’ll Actually Use - The UMN Extension's Moos Room

Episode 317 - Emily’s Back! Farm Emergency Planning You’ll Actually Use - The UMN Extension's Moos Room

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

Emily is back from medical leave (hooray!) and she and Brad dig into an essential topic for every operation: emergency planning. You can’t predict every detail, but you can make the first decisions easier when seconds count.

What we cover:

  • What an emergency plan is (and isn’t): a concise, written set of steps and key info you can default to under pressure.
  • Start with a farm map: access routes, gates/fences, livestock locations, hazardous/flammable materials, and utility shutoffs.
  • Make the red sheet easy to find: an emergency contact list (911 first), then vet, sheriff/emergency management, insurance, milk hauler, feed/suppliers, and owner/manager.
  • Stock the right supplies: standard first-aid kits, a trauma kit with a tourniquet, and consider an AED; plan to keep kits replenished.
  • Three scenario buckets to plan for:
    1. Shelter in place (blizzards, extended outages): backup power/fuel, blocked access routes, pared-down chore list, role assignments, keeping people safe.
    2. Evacuation (fire, flood, tornado damage): best escape routes for people/animals, which gates to open and in what order, a designated meeting point (and Plan B), and who calls whom.
    3. Medical emergencies (injury or health event): known conditions (EpiPens, diabetes, heart issues), where supplies/AED live, basic first-aid/CPR training, clear directions for EMS, and—on larger sites—who meets the ambulance at the road and whether a safe helicopter landing area exists.
  • Mind the paperwork: review insurance coverage before you need it.
  • Keep it simple and living: a few clear steps beat a thick binder no one reads.

Resources mentioned:

  • University of Minnesota Extension: Operations contingency plan templates for livestock operations.
  • Extension Disaster Education Network (EDEN): disaster-specific farm resources.
  • Cultivating Change Foundation (Emily & Joe Rand received the Cultivator of Change award).
  • Save the date: Ag for All Conference for LGBTQ+ farmers, ag professionals, and allies — March 7, 2026, Waite Park/St. Cloud, MN.

Have questions, comments, or scathing rebuttals? Email TheMoosRoom@umn.edu
.

Chapter markers (optional)

  • 00:00 – Emily’s back! (and why breaks matter)
  • 03:18 – Why farms need emergency plans
  • 05:41 – What an emergency plan actually is
  • 08:07 – How plans help when stress spikes
  • 10:45 – Simple planning story (cats + hamper)
  • 12:03 – What belongs in the plan (map, shutoffs, hazards)
  • 15:11 – The red emergency contact list
  • 19:06 – First-aid vs. trauma kits (tourniquets)
  • 24:44 – Shelter-in-place: questions to answer
  • 26:11 – Evacuation: routes, gates, meeting points
  • 28:04 – Medical emergencies: AEDs, training, EMS access
  • 32:35 – Keep it living, keep it simple
  • 33:00 – Resources + wrap-up

Questions, comments, scathing rebuttals? -> themoosroom@umn.edu or call 612-624-3610 and leave us a message!

Linkedin -> The Moos Room
Twitter -> @UMNmoosroom and @UMNFarmSafety
Facebook -> @UMNDairy
YouTube -> UMN Beef and Dairy and UMN Farm Safety and Health
Instagram -> @UMNWCROCDairy
Extension Website
AgriAmerica Podcast Directory

No reviews yet
In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.