What are the most common backyard danger zones?
Believe it or not, your backyard oasis can be an accident waiting to happen. Keep your family healthier at home: Don’t overlook these surprising hazard zones in your yard. Here are four hot zones–and how to protect your family.
Trampolines
Bouncing up and down on a home trampoline may look like fun, but the popular piece of backyard equipment is “intrinsically dangerous”
The National Electronic Injury Surveillance System estimates that 98,000 trampoline-related injuries occurred in 2009, the most recent year for which statistics are available, resulting in 3,100 hospitalizations. That’s down from 3,300 hospitalizations and 112,000 injuries in 2004.
About 75% of trampoline injuries occur when multiple people are jumping, and kids 5 and under are usually at greater risk for significant injury. Fractures and dislocations make up 48% of injuries. Common injuries in all age groups include sprains, strains and contusions.
RELATED: The 10 Unhealthiest Places In Your Home
Green Weed-Free Lawn
Ingredients in popular pesticides have been linked to cancer, hormonal changes, and liver or kidney toxicity. Now research points to another surprising peril: mental health hazards. Numerous studies have found that farmers who work with pesticides have as much as six times the risk of depression; even farmers’ wives who use sprays in their homes and backyard gardens have nearly double the risk.
What you can do
Use an all-natural herbicide like corn gluten meal to keep weeds at bay. Apply it in early spring (when forsythia or dogwood first blooms) to prevent annual weeds from reseeding; it also fertilizes your existing grass with nitrogen, so it is healthier (and can crowd out weeds). To help your lawn grow a stronger root system and better withstand weeds, skip daily watering.
Tiny Pools of Water
Even the smallest amount of standing water can give mosquitoes a hospitable place to multiply, which raises your risk of bites–and infections such as West Nile virus.
“I’ve seen mosquitoes breeding in a soda bottle cap,” says Joseph Conlon, technical advisor for the American Mosquito Control Association.
What you can do
Do a weekly check of buckets and plastic covers and dump any water to keep pests away. Also, change the water in birdbaths and fountains.
RELATED: 6 Things In Your Home That Can Cause Cancer
Common Yard Plants That Can Kill
Before you throw down your spade and run from the garden for good, it’s important to know that even the deadliest of plants is usually harmless unless ingested or otherwise mishandled. If you have these plants in your backyard, protect your kids and/or plants. This includes Oleander, Caster bean, Daphne, Lantana, Yellow Jessamine, and Monkshood.