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The Rural Voice, 1998-05, Page 12"Our experience assures lower cost water wells" tole, !NI . 1 elP111 „1 ir• „� 98 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Member of Canadian and Ontario Water Well Association s • Farm • Industrial • Suburban • Municipal Licensed by the Ministry of the Environment - y • DAVIDSON WELL DRILLING LTD. WINGHAM Serving Ontario Since 1900 519-357-1960 WINGHAM 519-664-1424 WATERLOO KELLY PORTABLE SEED CLEANING Grain, Beans and Forages Bag or Bulk Convenient and Economical Serving Mid -Western Ontario Kincardine, Ontario N2Z 2X4 396-4559 1-888-844-1333 8 THE RURAL VOICE Scrap Book New manure technologies tested The search for a way to deal with manure from large livestock operations continues on various fronts. In western Canada, two different projects are using two different approaches to the problem. Lome Swann of Abbotsford, B.C. is using a manure separation system imported to Canada by Dr. John Chen from his native Taiwan where 10,000 similar units are already at work. Swann operates a 450 -sow, farrow -to -finish operation that produces 22,000 litres of liquid manure daily. Using the separation machine, which takes up a space 4.8 by 2.5 metres, the manure is drawn up a conveyor belt and the solids are separated from the liquids with paddles over a series of screens. The solids are dropped into a pile and begin composting immediately. The liquids are pumped into a lagoon. Tests at Swaan's farm show 74 per cent of the solids are removed from the manure, as well as 46 per cern of the nitrogen. Reducing the amount of solid in the liquid pumped to the lagoon has saved Swaan having to dredge his earthen lagoons. The machine has also reduced the smell and neighbours a half -kilometre away have said they don't notice when he is spreading the material on the 20,000 trees he grows in a nursery operation. Meanwhile Alberta Agriculture is studying the possible application of a "snowfluent" system to dispose of wastes from hog farms. The system, developed by Delta Engineering, converts waste water into snow using snowmaking machines similar to those used on ski hills. The waste water is transported at high pressure through atomizing nozzles mounted on towers. Compressed air sprays fine droplets into the atmosphere. As the droplets freeze, the water is shaped into hexagonal -shaped crystals about the size of a grain of salt. Contaminants are separated from the water and are trapped in the centre of the frozen droplets. When the particles arc shot into the air, a portion of the water is vapourized and the rest accumulates in a snowpack which won't drift because it is too dense. However, the process reduces nitrogen and phosphorous by more than half. Most of the nitrogen is released into the air. Most of the bacteria is killed by the freezing process.0 — Source: Western Producer Cattle know how to Iick post -birthing pain Two University of Guelph researchers say cows know how to lick the pain associated with giving birth — literally. Carlos Pinheiro Machado, an animal and poultry science masters degree student, and Prof. Frank Hurnik believe the amniotic fluid ingested by licking newborn calves minimizes post -birthing pain. The researchers say tests they performed at the Elora Research Station suggest there's a "placental opioid enhancement factor" in the fluid, i.e. it has an analgesic effect similar to ASA. "When it comes to pain management in cows, Mother Nature knows best," says Professor Hurnik, who has studied animal behavior in other farm animals and helped design an oval farrowing crate for pigs (Rural Voice issue of October 1993). "Licking appears to help them feel better." Researchers conducted their year-long study with 36 dairy cows. The animals were divided into two groups — those with the opportunity to lick their calves (and ingest amniotic fluid) after giving birth and those that were distanced from their calves immediately following birth. Both groups were exposed to heat - lamp -like devices in their stalls. Researchers observed how long the animals remained comfortable with the heat the lamps gave off. They found cows that licked their calves tolerated it longer, suggesting an elevated pain threshold. "We believe that the analgesic effect of the amniotic fluid was responsible for this increase in pain threshold," says Hurnik. "We don't know the chemistry at work — we need to work with a chemist to analyse the fluid's composition."0 —Source: British Columbia Agri Digest