Loading...
The Rural Voice, 2003-04, Page 20Creature Comfo What's best for the animals turns out to be best for t owner in Reid Wilson's new group housing drg sow ba By Keith Roulston A new dry sow group housing barn is the latest addition to the expanding operation of Reid Wilson and his family at Wilson Livestock Company Limited., Wilson, below, says the barn saves labour and keeps the sows happier. The sows in Reid Wilson's new group -housing dry -sow barn are happy. The owner is even happier. "I can't get over how well it works, from the point of labour" says Wilson, who runs Wilson Livestock Company Limited, a 500 -sow farrow -to -finish operation just north of Milverton, with his wife Rhonda and son Nicholas. The new dry -sow barn, built as part of an expansion that also added 1,000 finishing spaces and 900 weaner spaces, holds only 100 of the farm's dry sows, but if he was 16 THE RURAL VOICE replacing the space he already has in another nearby barn, this is what he'd do again, Wilson says. He estimates, for example, that it takes only 30 seconds to feed 100 sows using a two -auger, drop feeding system that puts feed in four areas of the pen. The Wilson barn was built by Fred Groenestege Construction of Sebringville, based on the experimental set-up at the University of Guelph's Arkell research farm. There one of four dry -stall rooms was changed into group housing with drop feeding on the floor. Despite the fact it was the first group -housing barn he had built, there weren't any real problems elicoiintered, Groenestege says. He basically duplicated the Arkell experiment, except that the pen size dropped from 40 by 20 feet at Arkell wtt,SOyy LIVESTOCK COWp��'YL11A�i£ A to 32 by 20 feet for the Wilson barn. (The Wilson barn also has windows.) About one-third of the pen's floor space is slatted. The remaining space is subdivided by five-foot stub walls to provide extra privacy and more wall space for the pigs to lie against. The walls create four mini -rooms with one feed drop in each of those spaces. "It's neat" says Groenestege of the simplicity of the system. "Sometimes we tend to make things too complicated", he adds. Wilson's willingness to grab onto a new idea made the building of his company's first group -housing barn possible, Groenestege says. Wilson has always been ready to look at new ideas. He had one of the first computerized feeding systems for 10 years before getting rid of it. It Cost per sow -place for 3 different styles of dry sow barns 100 sows 300 sows 1000 sows $971 $800 $713 Stall barn Group pens 18 sq. feet single feed line $660 Group pens 26 sq. feet Double feed line privacy walls $904 $527 $500 $733 $686 Estimates compiled by Fred Groenestege Construction