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The Rural Voice, 2001-01, Page 22It's about more than pigs Florian Possberg is building 5,000 -sow hog operations in Saskatchewan, but he likes the healthy local economy Ontario's family -based operations provide By Keith Roulston He came to tell Ontario pork producers about his company's huge 5,000 -sow units in Saskatchewan but Florian Possberg ended up praising the family -farm structure of Ontario's pork industry. Possberg, from Big Sky Farms Inc. in Big Sky, Saskatchewan, told farmers attending "Recent Developments in Pork Production" in Shakespeare, November 29, that he'd agreed to speak at the conference on the proviso he could spend an extra day in Ontario to learn more about the industry here. "What I saw yesterday in Ontario is in my mind what agriculture should be," said Possberg of his visits to family pork farms. One of the farms he'd visited was the 500 - sow farrow -to -finish operation of Brad and Diane Boersen of Sebringville, who also spoke at the seminar. Ontario had a healthy farm community surrounding healthy towns and villages by comparison to what he described as the "heart - wrenching" sight of whole communities in Saskatchewan shrivelling up. "You have something special here," he told the audience, "and boy you don't want to losejt." 18 THE RURAL VOICE Possberg said his 5,000 sow units, which require an investment of $60 million each, are necessary for the conditions there because Saskatchewan doesn't have a livestock environment. "We've lost the leadership to run efficient 300- 500 -sow units," he said. Saskatchewan had been spoiled by decades of what he termed the "AAA -syndrome": "April, August and Arizona". Farmers had come to expect they could make a living by growing wheat, working in April to plant, August to harvest and spending the winters in Arizona. Big Sky grew from a smaller family farm operation, Possberg Farms Ltd., which started in 1983 as a 240 -sow, farrow to finish unit. In 1990 he expanded the farm to 600 sows and in 1992 he built a second 600 -sow unit. But he became convinced that the family farm structure wasn't the best way to grow, Possberg said, and so in 1995 he brought in some off -farm partners and formed Big Sky Farms Inc. The new company built three - site operations and built around 2,500 sow units in 1995, 1997 and 1998. Each unit had a breeding, gestation and farrowing site, a nursery site with two barns of 4,800 pigs per site and two finishing sites of 8,000 to 10,000 places each. This past May construction started on the first 5,000 -sow unit and in December a second 5000 -sow unit began construction. The big units will help the company reach its goal of producing two million hogs a year by 2008, Possberg said. The company works with rural communities that are looking to boost the local economy by getting one of the big units to locate there, Possberg explained. "We develop in communities where we've been invited to develop. We're there to save the viability of that community." Winning a Big Sky unit means creating 40 jobs in a rural area where jobs are scarce. Big Sky spends three years working with community leaders to develop a close relationship, he said. "We need time to get to know each other — to see if we are right for the community and if the community is right for us." It's like a courtship, he said. "Once we start pouring concrete, we're married." Going to 5,000 sow units instead of 2,500 -sow units means there are fewer courtships and marriages, he said. As well there are construction savings. He estimated it takes $300,000 to develop a site for a barn