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The Rural Voice, 1981-01, Page 19GUEST COLUMN Raising pigs - an art or a science BY RICHARD SMELSKI OMAF SWINE SPECIALIST I can remember a past chairman of the pork producers Mr. Fraleigh, saying that raising pigs is an art not a science. This baffled me. Everything you do in the barn can be scientifically documented - ventilation rates, formulated rations, breeding schedules and even records. This to me is the scientific approach. Yet I know and you know that there's much more than raising pigs by the book. It's recognizing that pig before he scours. Pigs piling tell you something. Tail biters, rough hair coats, sneezing, even the curl on the tail can tell you something else. But all of these items are negative indicators. It's like a hockey team measuring their success by the goals scored against them. The thing that cannot be measured is the psychological stress of an animal. Even though scientists are measuring several hormones to get this figure on, stress, I believe there can be stress on an animal in just the way the manager treats them and the state of mind he is in. Winthrop GENERAL STORE OPEN: Monday • Friday till 9:00 Saturday till 7:00 Grocery & Hardware Work Boots - Rubber Boots CEDAR POSTS FENCE SUPPLIES 45 Gal. Steel Barrels -Gas- DOUG & GAIL SCHROEDER 527-1247 I can remember a herdsman of a larger operation saying he could tell the mood of his workers just by the way the sows reacted that day. He would walk through the barns noting the mood of his workers just by the nervousness of the sows. Another owner said his first herdsman made his sows nervous. They were eating 6.5 Ib. per day and still losing weight. His new herdsman who is much calmer and affectionate to pigs, feeds the sows 4.5 Ib. and they're gaining weight. Research from the Netherlands show sows that were treated roughly but not mistreated averaged 16.5 pigs per sow per year. Where the herdsman took more time with the sows, petting them, and where the pigs were least man -shy, they had a performance of 21 live piglets per sow per year. The researcher, Dr. Hemsworth, says "there seems to be a direct connection between stress and conception rates." When I first started my job, an old pork producer told me you can tell a good manager from a poor one just in the way they unload hogs at the marketing yard. Some kick, scream and do everything but carry their pigs off the truck, while others very quietly and patiently have the pigs come off the truck with no big scene. Whether raising pigs is an art or a science doesn't really matter. Some people have the natural ability to work with animals while others develop the talent through common sense and trial and error. But the person who doesn't want to learn more about his pigs and realy doesn't enjoy his work has the biggest task of them all. For this reason, building booms or large operations should never worry the 'good' managers. If you enjoy what you're doing, you'll probably be getting above average pro- duction. However, the person, who is building because he can't get more dairy quota, his current barn is not producing or needs more cash flow to buy his tractor, should take a closer look at his needs. The producer who know and enjoys the 'art' of raising pigs should always do a little bit better. T. B. ALLEN LTD. Feed and SHUQG, Fertilizer Call .... 482-3363 523-9606 523-4414 ALLBORO FARMS have all requirements for • Elevating • Drying and Storing your Corn CaII .... 523-4470 Londesboro, Ontario THE RURAL VOICE/JANUARY 1981 PG. 19