“My brother was in there half an hour before mixing feed and there was no smoke or smell,” Simon told Farms.com today.
Once they saw smoke, the brothers ran into the barn, figuring dry bales of hay or straw were the source. But after removing the dry bales from the barn, they saw some wet hay was burnt and actually began to spark.
It was mere moments before flames completely engulfed the barn.
“I called 911 then ran over with some fire extinguishers to try controlling the fire,” Visser said. “Firefighters showed up about nine minutes after I called them. Once my fire extinguishers emptied, it took about 30 seconds for the whole thing to go up (in flames).”



All photos courtesy of Simon Visser
Firefighters from multiple stations were able to control the fire and prevent it from spreading to other buildings, including the family’s home and a new dairy barn complete with robotic milkers. The fire destroyed a barn as well as bales of hay and straw.
“The situation could’ve been much worse,” he said. “Losing the feed obviously hurts but no people or livestock were injured, so at least that’s a positive.”