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The Rural Voice, 1998-04, Page 46Dave and Brenda Linton are not followers, so it came naturally that they chose not to jump on the bandwagon headed toward three -site hog production. It was also natural that when they wanted to build a new barn last summer there was no turn -key operation that suited their needs. The Lintons operate a 100 -sow farrow -to -finish operation on 370 acres of land near Brussels in Huron County. Last summer, with the help of local contractors, the family built a new dry -sow barn, using a group penning system for their sows. The barn is designed to be people and animal friendly while still maintaining efficiency. The result is a 40 by 100 foot, naturally ventilated barn, set up behind their normal farrowing and finishing barns. Here sows are kept in groups of 10 through most of their pregnancy. Each of the 12 pens extends across the entire width of the barn, except for a feed and service alley down the south side of the barn. One end of the pen is used for feeding while the other end is bedded with straw for a sleeping area. The centre of the pen, which is slightly lower, is the dunging area. In this section the pens are separated by gates which can be closed to confine the sows to one or the other end of the pen. Then a tractor and scraper can be driven through the barn to quickly and efficiently clean out the manure. The barn is a result of a lot of thinking and a lot of research into alternatives in swine operations. The impetus, Dave said recently, came at a family Christmas five years ago. Surrounded by non -farming relatives he boldly stated that he wasn't going to follow an industrialized model of pig production but would choose instead a people -friendly and pig - friendly model. Still, he recalls, during the next few years he wasn't really changing his traditional farrow -to -finish way of doing things and family members pointed it out. The change came when Dave and Brenda went to the Potpourri du Porc conference in Shakespeare in 1996 and heard Dr. Bernie Rollins speak. Rollins, a professor at University of Colorado and a friend of Temple Grandin, urged pork producers at that 42 THE RURAL VOICE The best of both worlds The Linton family wanted something different so they designed and built a dry -sow barn that is friendly to both pigs and people, yet is not labour intensive By Keith Roulston Key to the Lintons' solid manure dry sow barn is the central dunging area using a system of gates which allow easy drive- through scraping (above in the finished building, at right, seen during construction). Natural ventilation (bottom) allows for a bright, outdoor -like atmosphere in warmer weather.