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The Rural Voice, 1996-11, Page 20Following the leader One of the first to adopt three -site production, Acre T. Farms continues to set the pace with new nursery barns Story and photos by Keith Roulston 40 Joe Terpstra's Acre T Farms adopted three -site pork production back in 1991. The system suited management and herd health needs of his huge Huron County operation. 0 n one of the few beautiful clays of the early call, cars and pickups lined the sides of the narrow concession in Grey Township, southeast of Brussels. Township residents, and pork farmers from a wider area, were here to see the latest expansion project of Acre T. Farms Ltd. — a huge nursery barn. Actually, the barn the visitors are crowding through is just half of the latest expansion. Across the concession and down a piece is its twin. Each of the barns has eight rooms capable of housing 50 weaner pigs in each of the 12 pens in the room: a total of 4,800 pigs for each barn. The two new nursery barns, added to the 4,500 in an existing nursery barn, mean the family-owned company can house more than 14,000 early -weaned pigs at one time. For most of the people touring the barn this day, the size 16 THE RURAL VOICE of the operation defies understanding. The new barns are part of company that sends 80,000 hogs to market each year, and sells 20,000 weaner pigs as well. Besides looking at the computerized feeding system or the plastic -panel penning and stainless steel hardware or the liquid manure tank the size of the Grand Canyon, the curious are here to see how one of the leaders in three -site pork production is playing out this new production system. Joe and Miriam Terpstra and their family began three -site production back in 1991 when few people in Ontario knew what it was. Joe says they were watching what the large U.S. integrators were doing in separating the various phases of production and it was attractive for their own operation. The key was in disease control and staff management, he said. In a large three -site operation, staff can specialize which keeps them from moving from one facility to another with the potential of carrying disease. "It's something we've never regretted," says Miriam, who heads the office• staff at Acre T., part of the total of 18 full and part-time employees, not including Joe and Miriam themselves. "It's been very beneficial for us for managing and for health," Joe adds. "It's getting very close to our thinking that it's the new way of maintaining a high -health herd." Old attempts at high health herds were hard to maintain over long periods, he says. With the three -site system, even if you were to get a certain disease, there's plenty of opportunity to close down one facility long enough to rid it of the disease. The two new nurseries are split down the middle with four rooms on each side of a loading area. This allows for an all -in, all-out system for one side of the barn at a time. There's little downtime. By the time the rooms can be cleaned out and disinfected, they're ready to receive the next batch of pigs. The new barns contain a computerized dry -feeding system capable of creating a new ration each day for the pigs as their their nutritional needs change with their age. The pigs are fed six times a day, though the computer can be programmed to feed them as many times as is desired. Weaners enter the barn at 14-15 days of age from one of the two farrowing operations, one 1200 -sow unit and one 2,000 -sow unit. They stay for 55 days. They're then trucked off to one of four finishing units holding 4,000 pigs each, or they're sold as weaners to other producers, or chosen as breeding stock for their own farm. The whole operation is integrated so that all young pigs, whether from the nucleus herd or the multiplier unit, flow through the same three -site process. Two people are assigned to run the three nursery units. Believe it or not, this whole operation has grown in only 14 years since Joe and Miriam began with 250 sows. Doing things big in the Terpstra family is nothing new — other members of the family have huge dairy operations — Joe's just alone in the pork business among the family. "Years ago Dad always had some pigs," he remembers. "My other brothers didn't like pigs. I enjoyed cows and I enjoyed pigs. It didn't make a difference to me." The growth has come rapidly since the decision to adopt three -site production in 1991. That year saw new facilities added then a huge jump came in.1994 when a 39,000 square foot finishing barn was opened across the township