Flames stretched 80 feet high — taller than Ray Deutsch's three silos — when he was roused from bed with a sharp pounding on his front door.
It was 4:30 a.m. Friday, an hour before he would normally wake to begin daily chores on the Scott County dairy farm where he was born and raised. A neighbor heading to work stopped to alert Deutsch and his wife, Cindy, that a raging fire was gutting their century-old barn.
By the time he reached it, the roof of the 140-foot-long wooden barn was beginning to buckle and it was too risky to run inside. The barn, built in 1915, soon collapsed in a heap of ash and tin. The Deutsch family lost 63 dairy cows, four calves and three dogs. It was a loss that has crippled operations on the Elko New Market homestead and has Deutsch questioning how — or whether — to rebuild.
"You tell yourself it's not your fault, but sometimes you feel that way," said Deutsch, 61, as tears rolled down his face. "Maybe if I'd just been a better farmer, this wouldn't have happened."
A network of friends and fellow farmers began arriving before sunrise to comfort the family, offering to shelter their 14 remaining dairy cows at nearby facilities so they could be milked.
Firefighters battled the blaze for 14 hours in subzero temperatures, but nearly 3,000 bales of hay lying beneath the rubble kept the pile smoldering for days. Even an overnight blanket of snow didn't staunch the heavy smoke.
"We couldn't do a whole lot," said Elko New Market Fire Chief Todd Friedges, who was first to arrive on the scene. "It was gone already."
The State Fire Marshal has yet to determine a cause, but authorities said early indications are that it was not set deliberately. Friedges believes the cause is likely electrical, as there was no heat source in the barn (cows create their own), just lights.