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STAY AWAY FROM POWER LINES DURING YOUR SPRING CHORES AND CLEANING Whether


you’re pruning a tree, installing an antenna


or


operating farm equipment, steer clear of overhead power lines. Contact with a live wire can damage your equipment. If you’re touching that equipment when it makes that contact, it can seriously injure or even kill you.


• If it looks like you or your equipment will come within 15 feet of any power line, make a new plan. Any closer is too close for safety.


• Assume any wire you see is a live electrical line. Do not assume the wire is a telephone or cable line. Call your electric cooperative to make absolutely sure. Do not touch a branch if it is touching a wire. If the wire breaks, assume it is energized and can injure or kill you. Report the problem to your electric cooperative and keep everyone away from it until help arrives.


• If you’re using a ladder, keep it far enough away from all power lines that it won’t touch one if it falls over. The Consumer Product Safety Commission reports that ladders contacting power lines cause nine percent of electrocutions each year.


• Take the day off if it rains. Climbing ladders and working with big equipment in bad weather is an invitation for you to lose footing and knock something—or yourself—into a power line.


SAVING MONEY ON WATER HEATING IS SIMPLE


Besides heating and cooling your home, heating your water uses more energy than anything else in the house. In fact, the U.S. Department of Energy estimates that the typical family spends up to 18 percent of its utility dollars on water heating. Good news: It’s simple to lower that cost. Here are eight tips:


1. Get rid of your old showerheads and bathroom faucets: They pump out way more water than you need to comfortably get clean. In their place, install low- flow faucets and aerating showerheads. The less water you use, the less you have to pay to heat it.


2. 4.


If you notice a leaky faucet, repair it immediately. The U.S. Geological Survey estimates that a faucet that drips 20 times per minute will waste a full gallon of water every day. If that happens to be hot water, you are washing money down the drain with every drip.


3. Lower the thermostat on your water heater to 120 degrees. The Department of Energy says that’s a safe and sanitary temperature, and it will keep you comfortable at bath time too.


Insulate your electric hot water tank—but don’t cover the thermostat. If your tank is gas fueled, don’t cover the top or bottom of the heater or its burner compartment. You might need to ask a plumber for help.


5. Wrap the hot and cold water pipes that connect to the water heater—for about six feet out. 6. Drain about a quart of water from the tank every three months to remove sediment. Built-up gunk in the water heater can make it inefficient because it has to work harder to transfer heat to the water.


7.


If you’re in the market for a new water heater, choose a high-efficiency model with the Energy Star label. High-efficiency water heaters use 10-to-50 percent less energy than traditional models.


8. Water heaters last for up to 15 years, but new models are so much more energy efficient than older ones that it’s worth it to replace yours if you’ve had it for seven or more years.


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