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CattleRMe

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FOXNEWS.COM HOME > U.S. & WORLD
N.J. Stable Fire Kills 24 Horses
Friday, March 24, 2006

UPPER FREEHOLD, N.J. — A fast-moving fire swept through a wooden stable at one of New Jersey's largest horse farms early Friday and killed all two dozen horses inside, including 12 foals less than a month old.

The fire at Perretti Farms apparently was caused when an electric line that keeps water in the wall-mounted troughs from freezing ignited a center stall about 1 a.m., State Police investigators said.

The wooden building, piles of hay and petroleum-based wood varnish quickly fueled the flames, said state police Detective Dave Yusko. Temperatures reached the range of thousands of degrees, and the animals were quickly overcome by the smoke.

Perretti Farms staffers said a worker on hand for foaling, which happens primarily at night, noticed a puff of smoke rising from the stable, where 12 mares each shared a stall with their foals. The worker sounded an alarm and farm manager Fidencio Cervantes ran from the house where he lives just 500 yards from the stable.

Anthony Perretti, son of founder William Perretti, said Cervantes was extremely agitated at being unable to rescue the horses he had nurtured.

"The farm manager was crying. He was hysterical," Perretti said, his voice breaking. "This is like family. You wait three or four years for these dreams to happen."

Among the noted animals were 6-year-old My Starchip, and 5-year-old Funny Malentine. Both were born at Perretti Farms, said farm marketing director Bob Marks.

William Perretti was a restaurateur and auto dealer before founding the farm in the late 1980s on what had been potato fields, according to Anthony Perretti and the farm's Web site.

Now stretching across 900 acres, with a similarly sized farm for yearlings in Kentucky, Perretti Farms specializes in the breeding and racing of standardbreds, with 200 broodmares, six stallions and about 170 foals over the course of a season.

Standing in front of the charred skeleton of the stable, Marks said the combined value of the dead horses is about $1.2 million. But the loss to Cervantes, who Marks said was back at work breeding Friday afternoon, was impossible to calculate.

"He's traumatized," Marks said. "All of those horses were his babies."


Last week a guy I know lost his calving barn to fire with some animals lost also. Not to this extint. It crossed my mind then the other night as I shut the lights off in the calving barn that is home to my "bottle babies" the what ifs. Is it because so few barns burn that we don't have some kind of alarm system that would go off in the house if a fire alarm went off or the cost?
 
A guy here in Harding County lost his barn in the middle of the night a couple weeks ago. He also lost the 60 head of cows in the barn, his machine shed next to the barn, and all the machinery in the shed. Kind of hard to recover from a loss like that, even if you have insurance. It's a tough deal.
 

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