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The Rural Voice, 2002-04, Page 34A whole new outlook Ashift to contracting has changed Acre T Farms' ideas about farm buildings By Keith Roulston The barn where Acre T farms held an open house near Bayfield recently stood in stark contrast with the barn viewed by 1200-1500 farmers near Walton back in 1994. That barn caused a stir with its 39,000 square foot capacity. This barn, constructed on an existing farm site, would hold 800 feeder pigs in an all -in -all-out system. That barn was representative of the new style of Ontario hog barn, built to endure the rigors of modern hog production with sandwich wall concrete. This barn was more like an earlier generation of hog barn, with steel covered stud walls, but also with Targe curtain -wall side openings and ridgepole chimneys of a naturally ventilated barns. The barn represents a change in philosophy on the part of Acre T farms as well as lessons learned by operations of many barns over the 30 THE RURAL VOICE New barns being constructed for Acre T contractors (the one at the top opened near Bayfield in February) look a lot different than their first big barns that wowed fellow producers (bottom) in 1994. Inside the barns use dry feed systems that are simple to operate (directly below.) _ i