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The Rural Voice, 1998-01, Page 22We're the independent sort," says Marg Kroes as she explains why she and her husband Jack decided to build a barn with a difference on their farm just west of Clinton. "We're not against three -site production," she adds. "We're just taking a different route." In fact the Kroes are bucking the trend in several ways. First of all, at a time when pork farmers are specializing in one area (farrowing to weaner, nurseries or finishing hogs), the Kroes are moving in the opposite direction. They've operated a weaner operation since they started farming in 1983 after purchasing the farm of Marg's parents, Gary and Cory Haak. They'd been selling the weaners from their 120 -sow herd on a formula basis but their long interest in finishing their pigs (they talked of it as early as a 1991 story in The Rural Voice), was intensified by the slump in weaner prices a couple of years ago. They chose moving into a farrow -to -finish operation because, Jack says, "I like working with sows, but I didn't want to have 500 sows. We figured we were already doing three-quarters of the work." Farrow to finish gives the producer more control of his own future, Jack says. There's a lot more room for weathering market fluctuations. Once they settled on moving to farrow to finish, they also took an unusual road. While most finishing barns are slatted floor, liquid manure facilities, they moved to a straw -based system. They'd finished some pigs in summer on a straw -packed machinery shed floor and learned pigs loved straw. They explored the idea of the outdoor -shelter type of buildings but in the end designed an indoor barn that works on the same principle. With a steady stream of weaners coming from the farrowing barn, they couldn't afford to have any finishing barn production delays because of adverse weather, Jack reasoned. The 140 by 94 foot barn contains 18 cement -walled pens, each capable of holding 50 feeder pigs. The pens are arranged on either side of a centre aisle which will be used for loading and moving pigs. Moveable dividers are installed at the aisle end of the pens. These dividers shorten the pen by six feet when the pigs are small, then are moved back to allow more space when the pigs grow bigger. Taking a different rid Jack and Marg Kroes are bucking the trends in swine production By Keith Roulston Marg and Jack Kroes decided they wanted to go in a different direction than the trend in pork production. They expanded their operation to finish their weaner pigs and built a straw -based finishing barn. 18 THE RURAL VOICE When the pen is shortened, two large round bales of straw are stored in the extra space. The centre aisle divides the barn's grower side from the finishing side. Automatic auger systems deliver a grower ration to one side, a finishing ration to the other. They've been filling the barn one pen at a time with the weaners from their farrowing operation in the original barn next door (which was renovated by Marg's parents in 1971 with the both floors of the original bank barn as well as a 40 by 75 foot lean-to addition devoted to the farrowing, weaning and dry sow operations). When the pigs arrive in the grower -finisher barn, the sleeping area at one end of their pen is fitted with a light- weight cover made of the same Fabrene material used in the cathedral ceiling, stretched over a wooden frame. This keeps them keep five degrees warmer than the rest of the barn. here is no added heat in T the building. The ceiling is insulated to R20 and the end walls to R20. The barn uses natural ventilation with the uninsulated sidewall curtains thermostatically controlled to open when the temperature hits 16 degrees Celsius. He's been told that the bar can be kept six degrees cooler when the pigs are on straw, Jack says. The curtains are going up and down a lot, he says. Even without the barn being full yet, the curtains were often open on the cool days of November. The pigs seem very comfortable, he says. "I know they're not cold. I often find them stretched right out." The high ceiling with its reflecting white Fabrene covering, along with the side windows that run the length of the building, provide a bright, spacious environment for both pigs and workers. The pens, Marg explains, are designed for pigs to establish zones. The straw bedding is distributed next to the centre aisle. Feeding is in an area near the centre of one of the side walls. The pigs are encouraged to mess near the outdoor walls. In this portion of the pen the walls are gate - dividers. Every other day but Sunday, these gates are swung closed, leaving the pigs in the rest of the pen while Jack drives the tractor and scraper through the alley and