I had the same type questions as this author when I read the initial reports.
Perfectly timed for when the cows came in to be milked.
A well planned operation
If this were written by Eric Udder I’d question the article itself.
Some background on large scale operations...I had no idea.
Not sure what kind of explosion engulfs and destroys a nearly 2 million sf building and 18k cows.
How do you dispose of so many huge carcasses?
Don’t under estimate the power of methane. In my ute I work on dairy farms. More than one fire and small explosions from methane in the area. Of course we were dealing with 3-400 head not 18,000, that is a potential for a very large amount on methane.
Those operations feed hay, vast quantities of it. I have no doubt that it was the hay that burned first, but some barns have plastics in the fencing and feeders.
Nordstream III.
Not to mention all the fires killing off chickens at major farms. This seems like part of a deliberate plan to drive America into food crisis.
I watch ABC and BBC News every day, and they have not reported this story at all. You would think that the death by explosion of over 18,000 cows would be a major story.
In January 2023, 100,000 chickens were killed in a fire:
Officials: Estimated 100,000 hens died in Connecticut fire
https://www.ctpublic.org/news/2023-01-30/chickens-killed-in-fire-at-connecticut-egg-farm
Did one of the balloons traverse over this dairy farm? And someone’s just posted about 100K hens just died in a fire.
Food production facilities and trains de-railing are a daily disaster now. No questions asked?
Even USA Today is saying that many cows would cover 26 football fields. I tried researching the company itself and found very little about it. Weird!