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The Rural Voice, 1993-07, Page 27Stewart's pigs enjoy the sunshine of a late spring day near the open end of their shelter. several more years before it needs replacement, despite the pounding it takes from the winds whipping up off Lake Huron. The tarps are advertised to last five to seven years if they're kept properly tied down. Another saving is on electricity, both the monthly bill and the initial wiring costs. By using the energy - free water bowl, the only electricity in the shelter is for the flex -auger system and three light bulbs. How little use the lights get can be shown by the fact they haven't been changed in four years, Stewart says. Yeh, well saving money is all well and good, a skeptic might say, but how do the pigs do raised in such primitive conditions? Very well, Stewart says. The shelters are situated with the ends to the east and west which means there is plenty of fresh air. The pigs are a lot healthier than in the other barns in the operation where, despite the fans, there always seem to be stale air pockets, he said. The air is cleaner, with less dust, and there's less dampness than in enclosed barns. When the temperature fluctuates there are health problems in the other barns but not in the shelter. The hardiness of the pigs is built up in the shelters, he says. But what about the weather? Can the pigs survive in the cold? In the winter Stewart puts a deep bed of straw on the floor of the pens. The pigs bury themselves in the deep straw overnight. He remembers with a smile one morning in his first winter when he came to the shelter and wondered if the pigs had run away because none was in sight. Then he saw the straw move and realized the pigs had buried themselves under the straw. "It's the way my dad raised pigs 40 years ago," he says. In the winter he stores eight large straw bales inside, enough straw for a batch of pigs, so he doesn't have to The air is cleaner, and fresher and disease is less in outdoors open the tarpaulin at the ends of the shelter. He piles bales three -high along the ends of the building to break the wind in the winter. In winter he provides a high- energy straight -barley ration to help BioTech Shelters BIOTECH SHELTERS for LIVESTOCK BALES MACHINERY Distributed in Ontario by: Ardyne Farm William & Marilynn Crow R. R. 22 Cambridge, Ont. N3C 2V4 (519) 822-8559 LONDESBOROO` SEED PLANT CUSTOM SEED CLEANING GRAINS — BEANS — FORAGE SEEDS • Horse Feed and Supplies • Pet Food and Supplies BOB SZUSZ, PROPRIETOR PHOHE: 519-523-4399 P.O. BOX 272 LONDESBORO, ONT. NOM 2H0 "'RURAL VOICE THE MAGAZINE OF THE AGN.0 4r,JNAi ' fl rFr T Shirts in youth medium, adult small,. adult medium, adult Targe and adult X -large $10.70 (including tax) JULY 1993 23