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<blockquote data-quote="madbeancounter1" data-source="post: 119193" data-attributes="member: 2046"><p>When I was knee high to a toad stool we milked about 50 head or so of Holstein. </p><p></p><p>When the Palm Sunday tornadoes went through nothern Indiana I got stuffed in a neighbors basement while everyone else was milking. Tornadoes came within a 1/2 mile of the farm. Dad said he never heard them over the noise of the milkers and vaccum. </p><p></p><p>A good friend down the road wasn't so lucky. Their operation was quite a bit larger than ours. They lost a barn with all their spring heifers and another barn where they had feeder calves. Fortunately the only damage to the barn they were milking in was that roof was taken off. They never heard it coming either.</p><p></p><p>I wondered why Dad didn't come in that night after chores... he had taken the big PTO powered generator down to the their place so that they would have power to finish milking with and stayed to help.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="madbeancounter1, post: 119193, member: 2046"] When I was knee high to a toad stool we milked about 50 head or so of Holstein. When the Palm Sunday tornadoes went through nothern Indiana I got stuffed in a neighbors basement while everyone else was milking. Tornadoes came within a 1/2 mile of the farm. Dad said he never heard them over the noise of the milkers and vaccum. A good friend down the road wasn't so lucky. Their operation was quite a bit larger than ours. They lost a barn with all their spring heifers and another barn where they had feeder calves. Fortunately the only damage to the barn they were milking in was that roof was taken off. They never heard it coming either. I wondered why Dad didn't come in that night after chores... he had taken the big PTO powered generator down to the their place so that they would have power to finish milking with and stayed to help. [/QUOTE]
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