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The Rural Voice, 1983-08, Page 55YOUNG FARMER Saving 268 hours by Perry Van Osch Nothing adds up more than cutting a few minutes off daily chores on the farm. It all started when I was given a project at high school to do a time and motion study for my agricultural class. I was ask- ed to minimize the time spent on daily chores, so I decided to do my project on the feeding program of my dad's dairy herd. But first a little about what a time and motion study is: it is an efficiency study to reduce the cost of doing work and the number of steps to do the job. Our tex- tbook said to waste material resources is bad, but to waste human resources, through spending unnecessary time and effort on our work is even worse. In a way, it is an insult to the human intelligence. To get back to saving 268 hours out of a year, it started with us buying a feed cart and another shovel. The old method of feeding the cows was by wheelbarrow. We had a conveyor running from two silos in- to an auger, which we turned down to fill the wheelbarrow. It required fifteen trips to and from the auger to feed the thirty- four cows. After the roughage from the silo was fed, we then fed ground ear corn and mixed grain to the cows with five - gallon pails. But before we could feed the chop, we had to find the one shovel which was downstairs in the main barn. With three people using one shovel, it was hard to find and it was not always available for use to shovel the chop in the grainery. The old method of feeding the cows took up to forty-five minutes timed, at twice a day, 365 day/year, which amounts to 547.5 hours of work. If a hired man was being paid to do this work (there isn't), it would amount to a lot of un- necessary money being spent. The new method of feeding, with two feed carts and an extra shovel has greatly improved the situation. Instead of fifteen trips, it now requires four trips. The first feed cart is filled from the auger. Then, while the second feed cart is filling, I feed the roughage from the first cart, dumping it in front of half the cows. This allows us to leave the feeding system running, where before it had to be shut off. After feeding out the second feed cart, it is then put under the chop box; but this time, there's a shovel upstairs for shovelling the chop, not downstairs, with the hunt on for it. After the box is filled and the cart full, it only requires one feed cart to complete the feeding. Before, numerous pails of chop were carried. This new method of feeding, after the time and motion study a year Perry Van Osch: "The improvements have more than paid for themselves as the same chores are now being done more efficiently in less time." was done, took twenty-three minutes. This cut the time down to about half, which is quite a help when you spend up to two hours in the barn. In conclusion, we started out with a forty-five minutes task and cut it down to twenty-three. A saving of twenty-two minutes at twice a day and 365 days/year comes to a saving of 268 hours. It only required the purchase of a feed cart and a shovel to save that much time. The improvements have more than paid for themselves as the same chores are now being done more efficiently in less time. It may seem a little silly about the shovel, but the project turned out to help substantially, where at first, I thought it was going to be pretty dull. H The Gree -Bruce CANADA FARM LABOUR POOL has students available to help you with haying and all your summer needs. WALKERTON 881-3671 OWEN SOUND 371-9522 Canada Farm labour Pool THE RURAL VOICE, AUGUST 1983 PG. 53