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The Rural Voice, 2001-04, Page 28The Better Bilt Products Leverlock Keeps your Sliding Doors Simply Secure Available at: T.S.C. Stores Home Hardware (SKU #2328-163) or your local Building Supply Yard Better Bilt Products RR #5 Brussels. Ont. PH: (519) 887-6571 FAX: (519) 887-6776 STEEL. SERVICE CENTRE INC. - 479 MacEwan Street, Goderich • N7A 4M 1 - YOUR LOCAL SUPPLIER ISO 9002 REGISTERED FOR YOUR STEEL REQUIREMENTS Beams, Rounds, Hot & Cold Finished Rounds & Bars, Channel, Reinforcing Steel, Square Tubing, Angles. Flat Bar, Expanded Metal. Bar Grating. Matt's for Concrete Work, Primed Beams & Lintels, Stainless Steel and Aluminum Please Call: TOLL FREE: 1-888-871-7330 PHONE: (519) 524-8484 FAX: (519) 524-2749 24 THE RURAL VOICE The pigs in Jack and Marg Kroes Clinton -area finishing barn -like the straw they get to sleep on. loading and moving pigs. One side of the aisle is the grower area, one the finishing area. Moveable dividers are installed at the aisle ends of the pens. These shorten the pen by six feet when the pigs are small, then are moved back to allow more space when the pigs grow. Pens are bedded with straw in one end and pigs are encouraged to dung at the other. Pigs can be closed into the bedded end of the pens using swinging gates so that the dunging area can be scraped down with a tractor and loader. Several curious people have visited the barn over the years but' Jack doesn't know of any who have followed his lead.0 Lintons still like their setup Despite dire predictions of trouble when they decided to build a barn to group -house their sows, Dave and Brenda Linton would do it again. In fact they just might — as they contemplate building a new straw - based barn for their finishing hogs too. The Lintons built their group - housing barn in the summer of 1997 after being influenced by the animal welfare ideas Dr. Bernie Rollins from the University of Colorado and Dr. George Bergman, a veterinarian from Cass County, Michigan. The 40 -by -100 -foot, naturally ventilated structure contains 12 pens extending across the width of the barn (except for an access alley on one side). One end of the pen is used as a feeding area. One end is bedded with straw. The centre area is recessed and is used as a dunging area. This section of the pens is separated by gates which can be closed to confine the sows to one end or the other of the pen while a tractor scrapes down the area. The barn has generally functioned as conceived, Dave Linton said recently. He had to make one alteration by welding added bars on the gates to reduce the opening after one sow got its head stuck (ironically while a CBC radio crew was visiting). He's also added a large shelf that allows a one-week supply of straw to be brought in at a time. One other modification has come in management, where the Lintons make greater use of catch boars to determine pregnancy instead of moving the sows out to crates for pregnancy testing. Generally though the barn has accomplished just what it was designed to do — provide a situation as close as possible to an outdoor setting within the better controlled atmosphere of a barn. In summer, with the curtains right up, "It's almost like being outside except there are no birds," said Dave in the original April 1998 article in The Rural Voice. The Lintons are convinced their sows are more contented in their surroundings. They are kept in groups of 10 through their gestation cycle. Their success is drawing interest. Recently their operation was video taped for a resource tape telling how group housing works. And the Lintons are so pleased with the way the barn works they looking at an extension to their barn complex to try raising finishing pigs on straw too.0 The Lintons' bam provides as close to outdoors conditions as possible with the control of indoors.