Something with their milkers, feeders, or waste disposal. Surely it wasn't their farts, that would be ridiculous.
But how does 2.1 mil squate feet explode?
The floor is concrete, the milking stalls use alloys. Like the robotic milkers. It also has sprinklers systems and water cleaning constant feces and for their drinking?
Something exploded. Dunno what this is? Is it any gases in the automatic equipment. Was it collecting their methane?
It's insane to even contemplate. A large amount of fertilizer could create such a massive explosion, but we would be talking about like a grain silo filled with it. But, you don't grow feed in or around a dairy farm; you bring feed in, so there isn't any reason why you would expect a massive stockpile of fertilizer in or near a dairy farm.
We'll likely never get the truth, at this point I just say it's an act of war from an undistinguishable enemy, and the best defense is to disperse the valued resources to prevent mass scale events such as this from occurring to the detriment of the masses.
If everyone had a homestead we wouldn't need factory food production to the extent we do today.
That size is absurd. It's over half a mile square. 20,000 cattle. Why wouldn't it be localised to a section? How does over half a mile square ignite or exploded. In a concrete, and alloy structure?
Does it harvest any methane, was it flammable materials used, does it use any other type of gas in the machinery or feeders. Where are the sprinklers? There needs to be water for waste and drinking and cooling.
I find these things to be deliberate, or the result of very poor services and regulations.
However it was a brand new building less than a year. Milkers these are robotic and cost huge upto around a quarter of million, sometimes more. It needs how many 20,000 heads. Clearly it hasn't done something right?
In a spate of disasters to food production and haulage. How is this press accidental?
How are 20000 cows exploding?
Look at size. I then read the article, not the picture. Over 2 million squarefoot.
I am still struggling to understand how 2 million square foot explodes? Also it was only built a year ago?
Check out rural Wisconsin newspapers. Dairy farms blow up all the time. [sarcasm]
That's the next step. Telling us, there are hundreds of livestock explosions every year.
Seriously, same thought; how TF could 20k cows be close enough together to die from a single explosion smaller than a megaton?
Something with their milkers, feeders, or waste disposal. Surely it wasn't their farts, that would be ridiculous.
But how does 2.1 mil squate feet explode?
The floor is concrete, the milking stalls use alloys. Like the robotic milkers. It also has sprinklers systems and water cleaning constant feces and for their drinking?
Something exploded. Dunno what this is? Is it any gases in the automatic equipment. Was it collecting their methane?
It's insane to even contemplate. A large amount of fertilizer could create such a massive explosion, but we would be talking about like a grain silo filled with it. But, you don't grow feed in or around a dairy farm; you bring feed in, so there isn't any reason why you would expect a massive stockpile of fertilizer in or near a dairy farm.
We'll likely never get the truth, at this point I just say it's an act of war from an undistinguishable enemy, and the best defense is to disperse the valued resources to prevent mass scale events such as this from occurring to the detriment of the masses.
If everyone had a homestead we wouldn't need factory food production to the extent we do today.
Hoping to get to that point myself.
That size is absurd. It's over half a mile square. 20,000 cattle. Why wouldn't it be localised to a section? How does over half a mile square ignite or exploded. In a concrete, and alloy structure?
Does it harvest any methane, was it flammable materials used, does it use any other type of gas in the machinery or feeders. Where are the sprinklers? There needs to be water for waste and drinking and cooling.
I find these things to be deliberate, or the result of very poor services and regulations.
However it was a brand new building less than a year. Milkers these are robotic and cost huge upto around a quarter of million, sometimes more. It needs how many 20,000 heads. Clearly it hasn't done something right?
In a spate of disasters to food production and haulage. How is this press accidental?