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The Rural Voice, 1998-05, Page 30Trial by fire For the Fisher family, getting their new dairy barn built was just the beginning of their adventure in expansion Story and photos by Keith Roulston !W PPM Int 1to4 The new free -stall barn on the farm of Alan Fisher of Owen Sound (top) has been a huge labour saver over the older barn (seen in the foreground). The milking parlour (bottom) is open to the rest of the barn. But there have been tremendous growing pains for Fisher (above, right). Alan Fisher doesn't have the barn he set out to build — and he's glad he doesn't. In fact, after the adventures of the Fisher family over the past few months, he's happy to have any barn at all! But perhaps you have to go back four years for the beginning of the 26 THE RURAL VOICE adventure. Fisher, who had always been interested in the dairy business since growing up on the family farm nearby (his father sold that farm in the late 1950s and then moved to the current farm where they raised horses) had been dairy farming since he left high school. Though he still dabbles in race horses, the cows have always been the backbone of the farm. Four years ago come August, Fisher got caught by a Holstein bull they were using to breed heifers at their farm across the road (they own 350 and rent another 150). "I was only 12 feet from the fence but it was two feet too far," he recalls of his attempt to avoid the charging bull. His son, who was nearby, was able to rescue him and get him to the truck but he was in such bad shape that his wife, Donalda, who is a registered nurse, didn't expect him to make it to the hospital. He had five cracked ribs, a torn breastbone, a broken collar bone, a collapsed lung, a bruised heart and doctors at first suspected internal bleeding. He spent a week in intensive care. Donalda and the family picked up the work at home while he was healing, doing a wonderful job, Fisher says. They also learned just how inefficient the old barn was. As he slowly recovered his first thought was that he wasn't going to invest a lot more in the farm but coast toward retirement. But with their son Tom set to graduate from the University of Guelph last spring