Thursday morning blaze at Collins Elevator near Norwalk

Annie Zelm's picture
05:24 AM
Oct 14
2010
Register photo/ANNIE ZELM Collins residents watch the smoking remains of the feed mill building as firefighters wait for it to cool before demolishing the tin and wood remains with an excavator. A fire destroyed a grain elevator in Collins on Thursday morning on October 14, 2010.
Collins

FULL STORY: An early-morning fire ravaged a feed mill and office at the Collins Elevator, a small-town landmark and a staple for many area farmers.

It’s not yet clear what caused it, but state fire officials said it started in the gift shop and resulted in an estimated $250,000 in damage.

Flames engulfed the tin and wood building as the fire spread.

The bulk of the grain is stored across the street and was not affected, but the fire still destroyed grain that sat in the warehouse area, as well as tens of thousands of dollars in equipment.

Firefighters hauled water to the rural area on South Railroad Street using a portable pond, keeping a close eye on a full propane tank that stood just a few feet away from the blaze.

A neighbor spotted the flames and called the Collins Fire Department at 4:44 a.m. Thursday. Five area fire departments responded and quelled the blaze within three hours, Collins fire Chief Alan McGinn said, but about a dozen firefighters remained there throughout the day to cool hot spots.

By noon, they stood waiting for the charred remains to stop smoking so they could begin excavating them.

The state fire marshal’s office is continuing its investigation.

Owners Galen and Sue Sayler have operated the family business since 1972 to help supplement their grain and livestock farming.

One of the few remaining feed mills in the area, it served countless small farmers from Cleveland all the way to Oak Harbor.

“I hate to think of everything yet,” Galen Sayler said as he tried to assess the damage. “We lost a few thousand bushels of corn, wheat, oats and soybeans, maybe $10,000 to $15,000 worth of feed in the warehouse ... the seed and wheat in the back was also destroyed, about $5,000 worth.”

That’s not counting all the furniture and equipment inside the office, which totals tens of thousands of dollars, he said.

His wife, Sue, and daughter, Gayle Kovach, also ran a country store and gift shop inside, selling pottery, baskets and other odds and ends.

Sayler and his wife had hoped to step down from the feed business soon to concentrate on farming hogs and livestock, as well as about 800 acres of fields they own a few miles away.

He’ll leave it up to his son and daughter to decide whether to rebuild, he said.

His son, Dan Sayler, stood shaking his head with a group of neighbors, watching the mounds of smoldering debris. He said he’d have to sit down with his wife and talk about what to do now.

Business had been picking up in recent months with the closure of the Sunrise grain mill and trouble at Central Erie Supply and Elevator, he said.

“We were getting new people every day,” he said. “Everyone who still had a horse or a few cows.”

Whether or not they reopen the mill as a business, he said his family would still use it for grain to feed their own animals.

Lifelong Collins resident Steve Heitsche and his brother Ted said they weren’t sure where small-scale farmers will go now.

The grain elevator and feed mill seemed to define their town of fewer than 2,000 people, which has little more than a post office.

“No one seems to know where Collins is, but everybody knows where the grain elevator is,” said Steve Heitsche, who remembered stopping into the store for candy when he was as young as 4 or 5. “I remember them mixing the feed for the animals, making the feed bags. It’s definitely a shame — it was a nice little mom-and-pop operation.”

 

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kan's picture
Oct 14, 2010
07:03 PM

kan says

My heart goes out to the Sayler family and the local farmers.  Growing up down the street and riding bikes down to the Elevator for a candy bar was a treat for us doing our chores all week.  I wish all the luck for rebuilding.  It is aweful to see a landmark like this to be destroyed, but in return I am glad no one was injured.

Americanonly's picture
Oct 14, 2010
03:56 PM

Americanonly says

I use to deal at this elevator when I raised livestock and our kids were in FFA and 4H.  It's sad to see this happen and to see what is also happening to the small farmer.  Look at all the small dairy farms that have gone out of business.  Many livestock farmers have stopped raising livestock because of the situation with the elevators... who can you go to get grinding done and now how much farther will the small farmer have to drive to take their grain to market.  Take a good look at the county fairs and see how the livestock has gone  down and also look at how the displays of crops have gone way down.  Our children use to show cattle, dairy, goats, chickens, rabbits and hogs, and the barns were FULL.  Now it saddens me when I walk through the Eire and Huron co fairs and see how it has changed DRASTICALLY when it comes to these areas.  Each year it seems to be harder on the small farmer.   

Cityslicker's picture
Oct 14, 2010
03:39 PM

Cityslicker says

Hopefully someone can strike a deal with the closed down Mason Rd. elevator, and get a place to store the fall harvest. Seems logical to me.

Sid E. Slicker
beepx22's picture
Oct 14, 2010
11:19 AM

beepx22 says

yeah seems that the local farmers are really taking it to the chops this season, along with the elevator companies... hope noone is caught in that blaze.

 

Dude i Roc's picture
Oct 14, 2010
10:54 AM

Dude i Roc says

"Another One Bites the Dust"!!  The small family farmers hauling grain by wagon are deprived of yet another local elevator.  The family farm is an endangered entity.  Local farmers are growing older and getting tired! Local farmers are stewards of our earth AND our economy. Conscientious farmers have practiced "ecology" long before it evolved into a political platform.  Farmers regard the soil as a living resource that is entrusted in their care.  I drive out to the country areas just to smell the green of the corn, the beauty of the waving wheat and the hedges of soybean beauty that abound in summer. I am so sad. We need to support small farms in  our area. We need to ask why the small elevator businesses are  being abusively scrutinized! Get banking/financial entities to try to provide evidence of "fiscal integrity"! This elevator fire is tragic and will have broad impact.

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