No one was hurt, well, the wife sprang her ankle jumping over the fence to get her husband to tell him the barn was on fire.
N(E's brother and the man we bought this house from) lost the milk cow and 6 calves, the smoke got to them.
They lost 2 dozen chickens. But got out their 5 horses. Buggies are usually in that barn but the wife had decided to clean all 3 buggies so they were up at the house. Hubby hauled the 5 horses to F's barn until the barn can be rebuilt Saturday night.
The fire marshal thinks that a bird took something in the barn that must have caught a spark from the chimney on the sugar shack (maple syrup shack). They know it didn't "blow in" even with the high winds we had as N had closed up all the doors on the side of the barn that was towards the sugar shack because he didn't want the smoke to go in the barn.
Over 10 ft tall of hay and straw, even wet it was smoldering.
Light from fire truck so everyone could see. They still was there at midnight. Fire started at 3 pm. E said the hay/straw stack got spread out around 9 pm and they just kept spraying water on it as they knew higher winds were coming in the next morning around 3 am.
Fire department had to take water from the pond 2 doors down from us. We offered our pond if they needed more.
E said they stood around (no work on Sundays) and decided what the battle plans were for rebuild . Eighty percent of the cement block foundation is useable.
SO today they have a group of Amish going to a woods that an Englisher offered if they could use any of the trees for lumber. They have to use their horses to pull it out of the woods after they cut it down. E got a line of someone that could haul the logs to N's and another of someone to haul 2 saw mills (just the saw and stand) to N's also. Hubby is on stand by after he gets his hauling job done today in case they need something else hauled. N is hoping to get at least 1 stall put in his other barn so he can have 1 horse for his buggy for his family other wise they are "car less" buggy less , stuck at home and have to walk miles for anything.
Prayers for peace.
Blessed Be
I'm so sorry for your neighbors. What a loss of so much of their livestock.
ReplyDeleteSomehow, I missed this post. How awful for that to happen and lose cows and calves, a tragedy for sure. I'm glad they have help with all they need.
ReplyDeleteI am so sorry this happened. Reminds me when I was a kid, my uncle lost a herd of cows when a lightning strike hit their barn. It was a terrible loss.
ReplyDeleteHow sad! About 33 years ago out at our farm, family farm we lived off the farm, we had a couple of barns burn down. It was so devastating. Had a pig operation with farrowing (baby pigs) and lost about 300 plus. Absolutely horrifying and my husband, brother in law and father in law. Closed up and never farmed animals again.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteit was a double of prior comment
Delete