Loading...
The Rural Voice, 1994-06, Page 42MIDWEST ... Builds Better Silos CONTINUSTORE - Top of the line bottom unloading oxygen controlled silo. - Breather bags, full access rugged Little David unloader. ECONOSTORE - Economical High Moisture Corn Silos with your choice of unloader. CONVENTIONAL - Exclusive large intermittent hinged door system. - 4' forming system. - Larger chute for easier climbing. - Optional outside doors. EXPERIENCE MIDWEST SILO - All silos built with experienced crews and the quality SYSTEMS LIMITED you have come to expect from Midwest Silo Systems. EQUIPMENT (519) 656-2340 - Full line of T.M.R. Mixers and Farmstead Equipment. P.O. BOX 280, WELLESLEY, ONT. NOB 2T0 Be the best, not the biggest, the philosophy at Lowry Farm systems Trying to save money can cost you money if you're a dairy farmer into TMR, says Lynn Lowry of Lowry Farm Systems at Amberley. Lowry is pointing out the need for a good scale when you are mixing a ration. A mixer, he says, is a piece of equipment. A scale is a management tool. If a mixer is worth $20,000 a scale is worth half that, he says. "People are overly generous when they go to feed their cows." Concentrate is worth a lot of money, he points out and it's not doing either the cow or the farmer a lot of good if it is wasted. Many farmers say they can pay for a TMR system in three years and some can do it in a lot less with the help of a good scale, he says. Lowry carries Luck/Now and Oswalt TMR mixers and the J -Star scale, which he feels is the most reliable. Lowry feels some farmers should also be more serious about dealing with manure handling 38 THE RURAL VOCE problems. There are grants available now but these may someday disappear. Lowry carries Houle equipment that can take dry manure from a tie -stall system, chop it and add water and pump it to a lagoon or storage tank. Houle also designs systems for handling dry -storage runoff and waste from milk house systems. Research shows farmers should also be looking at the value of vertical silos over bunk silos, he says. "The lost feed in a bunk system over a 20 -year period is just amazing," he says. He offers equipment to replace the original bottom - unloading equipment in sealed silos which is becoming costly to repair, turning the silo into a top -unloading system. Lowry Farm systems was started 28 years ago this summer. "Instead of getting to be the biggest guy on the block, we're trying to be the best guy on the block," says Lowry.0 Midwest Silo Systems marks 20 years in the dairy industry One silo may look like another when you're driving down the road but for a leading silo building company like Midwest Silo Systems Limited at Wellesley, 20 years in the business means being ready to change with the needs of farmers. When the company started out, says Cal Schmidt, it specialized in oxygen controlled, bottom - unloading silos. That was back in the time when dairy farmers were managing with a goal of increasing butterfat production. Today the goal is increasing protein so farmers are using a larger corn silage component in their rations and more farmers are looking to traditional, top -unloading silos. "You have to stay on top of the trends and respond to what the customer needs," Schmidt says. He's in his 30th year in the business, having started as a summer student. That kind of experience helps the company to continue to make improvements in its designs. This year it has introduced a larger chute to make it easier and safer to climb to the top. There is also the option of outside doors that can be installed every few feet on the silo, an additional safety and convenience feature. Servicing all those bottom unloading systems it built is an important part of Midwest's work. "We really pride ourselves in our service," Schmidt says. For today's systems the company installs TMR equipment and unloading equipment. The company's expertise isn't confined to farm silos. A related company, MWI Silo Systems Inc., has built industrial silos as far away as Peace River, Alberta and Prince Edward Island and as large as 60 by 148 feet. Schmidt is the only Canadian ever to head the International Silo Association and is current president of the Ontario Silo Association.0