BMancwtw Farming, Saturday, April 23, 1994 From The Ashes Of Destruction... LOIS SZYMANSKI Maryland Correspondent NEW WINDSOR, Md. Just a few weeks after losing his barn and his livestock to a fire, all Joel and Maura Jo Nupp can talk about is the generosity of the community around them. They are over whelmed by the giving nature of their Carroll County neighbors and they want people to know that there are still a lot of good folks in the world. • It is said that tragedy breeds hope, and maybe that is so, but the heartbreak that comes with destruction can be the worst kind, especially when that destruction is a fanner’s bam. For the family of Joel and Mura Jo Nupp of New Windsor, Maryland, the big old bank bam on their farm signified everything they had dreamed of for years. They had moved to the Carroll County farm to fulfill a dream of raising their children in a farm environment as Jeol had been raised. After purchasing the place in Justin, Michelle, and Matthew, play with Big Mama, a -pout ..vied pig at. some of their new piglets. The burned out foundation of the barn can be seen In the background. The Nupp family poses with their new Jersey calf, Lucky, the Border Collie, Jasper, and a new baby kitten. Parents, Joel and Maura Jo are proud of their children’s inter est In the animals. January, they began to fill the bam with young livestock. 4-H projects for their children, Justin. 8; Michelle, 6; and Matthew, 3 y ears old. The livestock was a sign of a bright future ahead. Then on March 9, their dreams went up in smoke. “Maura Jo was going out to bottle feed the baby lambs,” said Joel. “At first she thought it was snow, and then she saw it was smoke.” After dialing 911 and calling Joel at work, Maura Jo dashed to the bam to try to save the animals, but it was too late for most of them. Five piglets, a calf, two lambs, two cats, and a goat perished in the fire, despite the efforts of over forty firefighters from surrounding communities. The only animals to survive were two horses and the children’s pony. The Nupp family credits their dog Jasper with saving them. “When my wife opened the door, the dog just made a beeline for the bam. My wife unlatched the gate and my old gelding came barreling through. But then they (the horses), kept circling the bam and trying to run back in,” Mr Nupp says. It was Jasper who stopped (hem. Over and over the dog herded the horses away from the fire, until they gave up and headed down the hill. Since them, the Nupps have taken to calling Jasper, “The Wonder Dog.” By the time Mr. Nupp got home his neighbors were already at the farm. Beating the firetrucks in, it was the neighbors who supported a sobbing Mrs. Nupp. But that support was only the beginning. “After the fire, we were numb,” Mr, Nupp recalls. “I sat on the ground and bawled like a baby. For days, we didn’t sleep, or take calls.” Then, the Nupp family found out that neighbor Laurel Hummel had been taking then calls.. many calls. Donations began to poor in. The Gunpower 4-H Club called and wanted to give the Nupp family a cash donation. Mr. Nupp, a proud man, politely refused. But that Elght-year-old Justin Nupp poses with a pot bellied pig donated to them by Robert Heaton. didn’t stop the 4-Hers. Instead, Nupp’s reply was “I don't know," they bought 82 bales of hay to fencing arrived. Robin Kessling replace the hay the Nupp family donated a piglet. Then Nicki Rat had lost They delivered it to the hff, director of the Carroll County house, unloaded it and stacked it Humane Society called. They had neatly before covering it with a a pig at the Humane Society that tarp. How could Mr. Nupp say had been found wandering Route "no?” 140 in December. No one had I’ve learned that in Carroll County, you have to learn to take help. I’m not used to taking from others,” Mr. Nupp added. Tim and Candy Cole donated two lambs to Justin and Michelle. Dr. Kay Wagner and the Carroll County Livestock Club donated two $lOO gift certificates, one to Tractor and Supply Company and one to Southern States. Bob, Shir ley from the Carroll County Extension Center called to ask what they could do. When Mr. ifomesteod JTotes and neighbors donated after the fire. claimed the pig, and the board had voted unanimously to give the pig to Justin. How do you say “no” to a 250-pound pig named Petunia? ‘The pig is so big,” Justin says. Now, the Nupp family has taken to calling Peunia, Bib Mama. “A man I didn’t even know. Bill Franz from Linwood kept calling. He was persistant that I have some hay,” Mr. Nupp said. “I told him I didn’t have any place to keep it. So he brought a stock trailer, (Turn to Page B 4)