
The Farm Safety Survivor Series
Agriland Media Group is delighted to launch a new, limited farm safety series in association with AXA and the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine (DAFM).
Agriland Media
Show overview
The Farm Safety Survivor Series has published 4 episodes during 2024. That works out to roughly 1 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a fortnightly cadence.
Episodes typically run twenty to thirty-five minutes — most land between 22 min and 23 min — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. It is catalogued as a EN-language Education show.
The catalogue appears to be on hiatus or wound down — the most recent episode landed 1.5 years ago, with no new episodes in over a year. Published by Agriland Media.
From the publisher
Agriland Media Group is delighted to launch a new, limited farm safety series in association with AXA and the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine (DAFM). Produced by Agriland Media Group, the new ‘Farm Safety Survivor Series’ is a four-part podcast, video and editorial series to promote more awareness of farm safety. Agriland news journalist, Rubina Freiberg will host a series of podcasts each of which will focus on a specific area of farm safety, covering the topics of livestock, machinery, slurry, and mental health.
Latest Episodes
Ep 4Minding Your Mental Health
Please be advised that this episode will focus on mental health and will discuss topics including depression and suicide.The fourth and final episode of the Farm Safety Survivor Series brought to you by Agriland, in association with AXA and the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine (DAFM), focuses on mental health.In today’s podcast, Agriland news journalist Rubina Freiberg speaks to Andy Nolan, who comes from a beef farming background in Co. Laois, and Samaritans Ireland executive director, Sarah O’Toole.In his mid-twenties, Nolan’s mental health issues came to a head. About five years later he decided he wanted to get help, and managed to get in control of his mental health. “When I did eventually get help, it was a huge, huge relief”.Help is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week to anyone who is in distress, lonely, struggling to cope or feeling suicidal by calling Samaritans for free day or night on 116 123 or alternatively via email on [email protected]
Ep 3Beware of farm machinery
The third episode of the Farm Safety Survivor Series brought to you by Agriland, in association with AXA and the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine (DAFM), highlights the dangers associated with farm machinery.In today’s podcast, Agriland news journalist Rubina Freiberg speaks to Aengus Mannion from Co. Sligo who was left seriously injured after he was crushed by a teleporter in 2009, and Teagasc farm machinery and milking machine specialist, Francis Quigley.In May 2009, Mannion was herding cattle when a teleporter hit him from behind, ramming him into a tree. Having sustained serious leg injuries, the beef farmer underwent over 20 operations over a three-year period in hospital.
Ep 2The Risk of Slurry Gas Poisoning
The second episode of the Farm Safety Survivor Series brought to you by Agriland, in association with AXA and the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine (DAFM), focuses on the safe handling of slurry.In today’s podcast, Agriland news journalist Rubina Freiberg speaks to Mervyn Clendenning from Co. Longford who was overcome by slurry fumes in 2021, and Health and Safety Authority (HSA) inspector, Jason Murray.Clendenning had just let the cows out of the parlour after milking when his contractor started agitating. After noticing a smell, he went to leave the parlour but collapsed and fell down the stairs, cracking his head off the concrete floor.
Ep 1The Dangers of Handling Livestock
"I never thought it would happen to me."The first episode of the limited Farm Safety Survivor Series brought to you by Agriland, in association with AXA and the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine (DAFM), focuses on safe livestock handling.In today’s podcast, Agriland news journalist Rubina Freiberg speaks to beef farmer Mick O’Dea from Co. Laois who was seriously injured in a bull attack in 2019, and Teagasc health and safety specialist, John McNamara.In September 2019, O’Dea was loading cattle when a bull followed him into the lorry and struck him three times, knocking him down onto the floor of the lorry.