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The Rural Voice, 1983-03, Page 13J quality of the meat they are buying. The Murrays use minimum medication in their farrowing operation. A vet from London does visit the farm once a month to check over the livestock. The young pigs are weaned at four weeks, fed to 45 -50 pounds, then shipped to a finishing operation. The Murrays ship about every ten days. The week The Rural Voice visited the operation, 54 weaners were loaded to go to Tony VanBakel's farm at R.R.1 Blyth. This week (Feb. 3) weaner pigs are being sold for $1.66 a pound for a 45 to 50 pound weaner. Compared to last years high of $1.54, a new high has already been set. "This winter has been a bad one for pigs", said Tony VanBakel, "with fluc- tuating temperatures, and moisture up and down when the pigs should have dry conditions." VanBakel's finishing operation takes the hogs another step further, until they tip the scale at 217-220 pounds, then they are shipped to the assembly yard in Blyth. VanBakel has 1300 hogs in his barn right now, which is a bit below capa- city. His stock is brought from three different local suppliers. As each load of pigs comes to his barn, they are quarantined for a week to check for diseases before turning them into the main barn with the rest of the stock. Dealing with three suppliers has proven to be a problem. VanBakel gets a load of weaners from one supplier and before that load is out of his quarantine room, a second load is ready for pickup from a different supplier. Despite the juggling, VanBakel has taken a few chances, by cutting some of the loads back in the number of days they are quarantined. Tony said the best situation would be to deal with one supplier or, ideally, own his own farrow to finish operation. The VanBakels are relatively new to the hog industry too; they have been in the finishing operation for six years originally coming from a dairy opera- tion. VanBakel spends a couple of hours. per day, feeding and doing cleaning chores around the barn. His wife (Nel- lie) helps in the barn on shipping days and between them, they load about 80 finished hogs. Two loads, sometimes three, go to the Blyth stockyards before 8 o'clock in the morning. Costs are trimmed where possible. VanBakel grows his own corn and grinds his own feed mixed with the necessary mineral concentrates. The VanBakels will not know the buyer of their stock until the cheque arrives from the Ontario Pork Producers Marketing Board in Toronto (OPPMB) �1.��I�1I��l�Ifl�1�f ! ��I i � n�f l�►�I iifl�I�I�i � Imo- i i i�►if►�►�► II-I-iIi - f i f�� ►�� i I -�� The board is "on computer" and the VanBakel's cheque records the number of hogs shipped, their weight and the price per hundred weight. Prices used to fluctuate on a daily basis. but through the efforts of the marketing board, a pool price, the average of that week's prices, is paid to the producer. Once the hogs have been shipped to the local stockyard, it is only a matter of hours before they are slaughtered. John Watson at the Watson Stock- yard explained the selling procedure (the Blyth yard is merely an assembly yard and no actual auctioning of stock is done at that location). The stock is unloaded and herded into a pen, in reality a large weigh scale. which can hold 25 hogs per weighing. The weight is flashed in the office on a digital readout and recorded This new scale head was installed about a year ago and has made weigh- ing much simpler Before the new scale, Watson said. the stock was weighed with a platform pen and a series of weights to balance the loadto determine the weight of the stock. (cont on next page] FEED LINE SEEDS For all your needs In addition to Vigour Plus Soybeans, First Line Seeds has: • First Line Seed Corn • Barley • Oats • White Beans FIRST LINE SEEDS LTD R.R. #2 GUELPH ONTARIO, CANADA N1H 6H8 FOR MORE INFORMATION IN YOUR AREA. CONTACT. JOHN HAZLITT, benmiller acres 524-7474 R.R. 4 Goderich. N7A 3Y1 BEV HILL, Hill & Hill Farms Ltd. 482-3218 Varna, Ontario. NOM 2R0 HUGH SCOTT, H.J.A. Farms Ltd. 345-2886 R.R. 2 Staffa. NOK 1Y0 GORDON STRANG, Strang Farms 235-1466 R.R. 3 Exeter. NOM 1S0 THE RURAL VOICE, MARCH 1983 PG. 13