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The Rural Voice, 1998-03, Page 28O‘' t$'o STEEL Sq�F We are a STEEL SERVICE CENTRE located in Barrie and Owen Sound, accommodating the needs of Contractors, the Fanning Community and Manufacturing • Beams • Pipe • Angle Iron • Channel • Sheet • Flat • Tubing • TV Towers Call Us Today! Owen Sound 1399 2nd Ave. East Phone (519) 371-8111 Fax (519) 371-6011 Barrie 10 Sargeant Dr. Phone (705) 728-0660 Fax (705) 728-6562 QUALITY FLOORING FOR FARROWING BARNS V -bar Flooring • 2 ft. to 10 ft. lengths • 2 ft. widths • knurled or smooth bars • galvanized • self supporting Vandepas Welding R.R. 2, Kenilworth, ON 519-848-6537 Call for the dealer nearest you! 24 THE RURAL VOICE pigs, $18.32 per tonne (55 cents a bushel). The greatest potential for savings is for the one -farm feeder, Yungblut said. For pigs under 70 kg. there are no problems with feeding high oil corn to make up the full corn part of the ration but with pigs over 70 kg. it should be diluted by one third with regular corn because the high oil content could damage the meat quality. High oil corn has the added value of causing Tess dust when it is ground into feed and millers say it takes Tess power to grind it. Shorter season varieties are likely to be available in the next few years, Yungblut predicted. The corn may come off the field one per cent wetter than regular corn but it dries down well. 1t needs to be stored separately from regular corn and should be analysed and a nutritionist should be consulted for best use. Batch farrowing allows smaller operators adopt large operators' technology Dr. Frank Kains spoke on batch farrowing as a way of letting smaller operators adopt the technologies of large operations. By having sows farrow in groups there can be better attention to detail and more litters available for cross -fostering, he said. It allows all-in/all-out operations with fewer rooms, allows major tasks such as washing and processing to be done less frequently, means that more weaner pigs can be offered for sale at one time and there are regular periods of less work during which maintenance, holidays and field work can be scheduled. Disadvantages include the need to breed a larger number of sows at one time, but widespread use of artificial insemination can reduce this concern. Some farmers don't like the heavy burden of work at one time instead of spreading it out and may need to hire part-time help during peak times. It may take six months to get the system going during which time pigs are weaned at a wide variety of ages and cash flow may suffer. i