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The Rural Voice, 2000-04, Page 38New production concepts, new marketing arrangements and new buildings have revolutionized the pork industry in the past decade but those the new buildings have also brought farmers into conflict with their neighbours. The next generation of pork barns, however, might change all that. Those dealing with the public's concernp over environmental dangers posed by huge volumes of liquid manure and complaints over the nuisance of the smell from large hog facilities feel there may be answers on the way. A new barn design could turn liquid manure into solid, composed manure while biofilters could scrub the stink out of air exhausted from under - barn liquid manure storage tanks. The barns, patented under the name High -Rise Hog Facilities, already exist in Ohio. Milton Dietrich, chief building official for the southern Huron townships of Hay and Stephen, was part of a trip to see one of the barns. "It takes quite a bit to impress me," he says. "I was impressed!" Wayne Caldwell, senior planner with the Huron County Planning and Development Department has been involved for several years in trying to mediate between the concerns of the public and the needs of the farming community. He helped in developing a model bylaw used by Huron County's townships in requiring nutrient management plans before new large livestock operations can be built. He's excited about the possibilities of barns that turn liquid manure into solid manure. Take the liquid out of liquid manure, he says, and you get rid of about 85 per cent of the problems. The beauty of the idea behind High -Rise Hog Facilities is that it allows farmers to have the labour- saving convenience of a slatted -floor liquid operation with the lower volumes of solid manure — and the bonus is a reduction in smell. Dietrich was amazed at how irt.104!it 0 Ohio area has brokers buy, sell and transport manure. The pair wanted to•design a system that would create dry, transportable hog manure. Analysis already showed that hog manure is a better crop nutrient than poultry manure. The concept starts with building a ground -level manure pit. Built into the concrete floor of the pit are plastic pipes with 3/8 - inch holes. Four fans are connected to the'pipes to blow air through them. A layer of some absorbent carbon -based material such as wood shavings or corn stover is spread across the floor of the pit. When the barn is filled with pigs, the manure drops down through the slatted floor and the moisture is absorbed by the bulking material. The air being pumped through the floor provides oxygen for composting and also helps dry the absorbent material. There are also fans blowing across the top of the manure mixture. Menke explains that the whole object is to dry the manure and he hopes to be able to get the moisture content down to between 30 and 60 per cent. The bonus is that by not allowing the manure to decompose in a wet state, there's less odour. The composting process also ties up the nitrogen in a more stable form. If there is any excess water, such as water used for washing down pens, it's collected by a gutter down the centre of the pit and is pumped to outside storage tanks. The manure is removed through end doors in the pit using a ski -steer loader. The volume of manure is much lower than if the liquid was still present. According to the company's description, you can walk through the High -Rise barn and you won't notice much difference than an ordinary hog barn, except you'll be nine feet above ground level. The slatted floor and the feed and watering systems will be GOING UP? A new Ohio design for hog barns could put pigs up in the air, and bring the issue of waste down to solid ground 34 THE RURAL VOICE By Keith Roulston simple it was. It seemed too simple to work, he said, but it did. The concept for the new design came from Tom Menke's experience with the poultry industry. Menke, an agronomic and environmental consultant from Greenville, Ohio is a partner in Four M Farm Inc. He and partner Bob Makin,. a livestock consultant based in Indiana, started talking several years about ways to deal with the odour and handling problems with hog manure. Both had experience in dealing with poultry layer barns where manure from cages drops down to a ground level pit below where it remains dry. The poultry manure can be dried to 15 per cent moisture and can be transported long distances so a farmer doesn't have to have a large landbase himself. In fact one of Menke's customers holds an annual auction to sell his poultry manure. The western