When Morning Fog Turned Deadly: The Mike Biadasz Story

August 15, 2016, started like any other day on the Biadasz family farm near Amherst, Wisconsin. Michael Biadasz, a 29-year-old beef farmer with endless energy and a contagious smile, woke up ready to tackle a familiar chore—one he’d completed dozens of times without incident.
Nobody could have predicted that this routine morning would end in heartbreak.
A Regular Task Turns Fatal
Mike approached the manure pit that morning with his usual good humor, even pausing to snap a Snapchat photo, joking about the “liquid gold” he was preparing to mix. Stirring the manure before hauling was standard procedure—nothing he hadn’t done safely before.
But nature had set a deadly trap.
While Mike worked the farm equipment, toxic gases rose from the pit and became prisoners of the atmosphere. An odd combination of elevated warm air and dense morning fog created a lethal ceiling, trapping methane and hydrogen sulfide close to the ground instead of letting them drift away harmlessly. The invisible poison moved fast.
When his coworkers showed up at half past six expecting a normal workday, they discovered Mike lying motionless at the pit’s edge. Sixteen cattle nearby had also fallen victim to the same silent killer.
The Moment Everything Changed
Steve Burclaw had spent three years working alongside Mike, and their professional relationship had bloomed into genuine friendship. That morning, he arrived to help with the hauling, completely unaware of the horror waiting for him.
“Everything looked completely normal,” Burclaw remembered. “Just fog. We’d seen plenty of foggy mornings.”
Nothing prepared him for finding Mike’s still body beside the pit.
Portage County Coroner Scott Rifleman later explained that Mike’s death resulted from an extraordinarily unusual weather event. The atmospheric conditions created something almost unheard of—gas poisoning in wide-open outdoor space. Typically, dangerous gas buildups only occur in confined areas, but that morning, the weather essentially built an invisible dome of death over the farm.
A Family’s Unthinkable Loss
Bob Biadasz was drinking his morning coffee when his phone shattered the peaceful routine. A friend’s voice carried news that no parent should ever hear: Mike, his son, his business partner, the young man who represented the fourth generation of their farming legacy, was dead.
Bob’s memories of Mike went far beyond his son’s impressive farming abilities and tireless work ethic. What he treasured most was Mike’s natural warmth—his remarkable ability to forge connections with anyone he met, regardless of age or background.
The loss shook the entire Biadasz family to its core. Mike’s parents and three sisters faced a future they couldn’t fathom, one without his laughter and presence. The community’s response reflected Mike’s extraordinary reach—over 1,200 people attended his visitation, outnumbering every resident of Amherst combined.
“I had no idea how many lives Mike had touched,” his father shared with the Stevens Point Journal.
Turning Grief Into Purpose
Devastation gave way to determination. Rather than let their grief consume them, the Biadasz family channeled their pain into meaningful action. They created the Mike Biadasz Farm Safety and Education Memorial Fund, transforming their loss into a mission to protect other farming families from similar fates.
The fund focuses on spreading awareness about manure gas hazards and equipping farmers with critical safety knowledge. Through training sessions, educational programs, and pushing for improved regulations around manure storage and ventilation, they’re working to ensure farmers have access to life-saving information.
Their philosophy is straightforward: farmers feed our world and deserve every available resource to keep themselves and their workers safe.

Mike Biadasz Farm Safety and Education Memorial Fund

Remembering a Life Cut Short
In the days following Mike’s death, family and friends created a moving tribute along the road to Biadasz Farms, lining it with tractors and equipment. Mike’s black pickup truck, surrounded by blue and red farm machinery, became a powerful, wordless memorial.
“Farmers already face enough danger,” one person wrote on Facebook. “This family shouldn’t have had to endure such a freak tragedy. Heartbreaking.”
The Biadasz family’s ongoing work continues sparking important changes in farm safety protocols nationwide. Their commitment to education, awareness, and advocacy ensures Mike’s death wasn’t in vain.
Learn more about their mission at the Mike Biadasz Farm Safety and Education Memorial Fund’s Facebook page or website.

A Legacy That Saves Lives
Mike Biadasz’s death exposes a harsh truth: farmers confront invisible dangers every single day. His story underscores why safety awareness in agriculture isn’t optional—it’s essential.
When we share Mike’s story, we do more than remember him. We actively help prevent future tragedies and ensure farmers everywhere can access the protective resources they need. Keeping Mike’s legacy alive creates the safer farming future he would have wanted for others.

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