This year’s larger crop means some farmers have been putting up extra storage.

Look Up and Live is this year’s Sask Power Farm Safety campaign.

Curtis Weber,  President of High Voltage Consulting knows all too well the dangers of overhead power lines.

"In 1999, I was working at a job building grain bins. On the third day of the new job we were tempted to move a hopper bottom underneath of an overhead line that we had identified was on our site," he said.

"In doing so, I was holding on to the hopper bottom itself and we didn't move down far enough with our crane and we made contact with a line, which sent three cycles of 14,400 volts of electricity through my body."

For Weber, the incident resulted in the loss of limbs.

"I received third and fourth degree burns to over 60% of my body, the remaining 40% was either burnt to a lesser degree or used as a skin-graph to help fix up other areas," he said.

"The electricity entered the right side of my body, so I lost my right arm just below the elbow and it exited the left side of my body, taking with it, my left leg just below the knee."

Weber, who was 17 at the time with a promising hockey career now travels around giving safety presentations in hopes it helps prevent a similar accident.

Weber was one of the featured presenters this year during Canada’s Farm Progress Show.