Campfire burns accounted for 68% of recreational burns treated at Alberta Firefighters’ burn units. Be extremely careful with your children when you are camping. It is very easy for a child to fall into a campfire. Remember, too, children (like adults) are often mesmerized by the open flames and will want to “play” with the fire by poking it with a stick or adding fuel to the flames. Teach your children to respect fire. Your lessons will be strengthened by your own example.
·
Never
leave children unsupervised around a campfire, even for a second. Ensure a
proper adult/child ratio when groups gather around a campfire.
·
Make
a rule that bans horseplay close to a fire pit.
·
When
building a campfire, do not use gasoline as a starter. The flash flame from
igniting fuel-soaked materials can reach several feet beyond the perimeters of
the fire pit and severely injure bystanders.
·
Build
a fire suitable to the task at hand, and avoid huge bonfires when children are
present. Always be alert to changing wind conditions and watch for flying
sparks and embers. Keep away from the down wind side of a fire.
·
In
addition to flash and flame burns, children are at risk for severe contact
burns, particularly at campfires built in sand pits. Because ringed pits
resemble sandboxes, many children mistake them for play equipment.
·
Children
need to be taught that the stones ringing a fire pit become extremely hot and
can not only burn little hands, but melt the bottoms of shoes. Be alert to hot
coals and embers that may fly outside of the fire perimeter. This is a good
reason to ban bare feet near a campfire.
·
Often
people extinguish pit fires by smothering them with sand. Unfortunately, this
practice can create an oven in which coals continue to burn for hours. Children
have sustained third degree burns that have required skin grafts after contact
with the hot sand. Extinguish pit fires by dousing them with water, stirring
the ashes, and pouring more water over the site. Repeat this procedure until
the pit is completely extinguished.
·
Most
tents are very flammable. Fatalities have occurred when tents in which children
were sleeping caught fire. Make sure children do not have matches or a lighter
when they are “camping out.”
·
When
cooking on a campfire, pick up pots and pans with a pot holder – and only after
you know were bystanders are, in relationship to your planned path.
·
When
roasting marshmallows, assist young children. Never shake a flaming marshmallow
– it could turn into a flying, flaming, napalm-like ball.
Copyright
1995 Safety Health Publishing Inc.
Martin
Lesperance is a fire fighter/paramedic and is the author of the best selling
book “Kids for Keeps: Preventing Injuries to Children”. Martin delivers keynote
presentations dealing with injury prevention. His talks are funny, but still
have a strong underlying message. Visit his website at www.safete.com