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The Rural Voice, 1993-07, Page 26Home, home in the shelter Kincardine farmer finds you don't have to have an expensive building to raise pigs - By Keith Roulston 4 Anyone driving up the winding laneway of Mark Stewart's Kincardine -arca farm can see this is a man with a strong bcnt of curiosity, so the fact that he raises pigs in what amounts to a large tent comes as no surprise. A sign at the road advertises Mark's hobby of keeping Perchcron draft horses. In pens at a bend in the lane arc a few head of fallow deer, while ponies romp on the other side of the lane. In the yard Guinea Hens roam, keeping down the insect population and providing tasty meals for the table come fall. Last year his brother even raised emu. But what most pig farmers come to see is the Biotech shelter behind the barn that houses 150 hogs, winter and summer. After four years raising pigs almost in the open air, Stewart's experience is a source of curiosity for farmers finding the prices of new swine housing a forbidding prospect given the volatility of pork prices. With 15 years' experience operating the swine operations of G. A. Stewart Farms he can recommend the shelters to others looking for ways to cut costs in pork production. The idea for raising pigs outside under minimal shelter conditions came when he attended a seminar held by a feed dealer and heard Dr. Cathy Templeton speak on the experience of farmers in the West raising pigs under such circumstances. Comparing the cost of adding a new barn or experimenting with a Biotech shelter, he decided to try something new. Mark Stewart finds raising pigs in outdoor shelters cheaper, healthier. over a 15 -foot -high aluminum arch frame. The arches are anchored by railway ties buried to half their depth in the ground. The tarpaulin is pulled so tight it doesn't whip in the wind. Around the edge of the building Stewart installed a skirting of 2x6 inch pressure -treated planks. Inside there is a 16 -foot cement pad at one end that holds the feeders and energy - free watering bowl. The rest of the floor is made up of a one -foot deep sand bed with a new six-inch sand covering added each time the barn is cleaned between fills. A divider is put down the middle to make the shelter into two pens. Along with a feed tank and auger system the entire structure cost $14,500. He figures a barn would have cost $26,000 then, more now with today's lumber prices. The shelter has been up for four years now and Stewart says he sees no reason the tarp shouldn't last Shelters have been successfully used in harsher western climate 22 THE RURAL VOICE He built a 30x72 foot shelter (the shelters come in 30 foot widths by whatever length you want). The shelter consists of a heavy-duty woven fabric tarpaulin pulled tight