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The Rural Voice, 1998-10, Page 22Research for a new farrowing system has now found its way into a handful of pork operations and early results show It pays to keep mamma happy Story and photos by Keith Roulston Tim Gerber (left) says the early rewards of the new Farrownest farrowing system have been a space saving, fewer crushed piglets and healthier, more contented sows. The system combines the oval farrowing crates (lop in the Gerbers' barn) designed by Dr. Frank Ilurnik and Jim Morris with the warm kennels of the Nuertingen system (seen below in an experiment at the University of Guelph's Arkell research farm in 1996. 18 THE RURAL VOICE rofessor Frank Hurnik would p be pleased to hear Tim and Art Gerber talk about the new farrowing crates they installed in their barn near Gadshill in Perth County. It's not just that the Gerbers think they're getting more live and lively pigs from the new crates, designed by Dr. Hurnik and Jim Morris of Ridgetown College, but the reason they installed the crates. The oval design actually takes up Tess room than conventional crates allowing the Gerbers to make use of a narrow available space in an old nursery that would have been impossible with conventional crates. Back when we talked about his new design ideas in 1993, Hurnik was concerned that he had to make the crates practical enough so farmers would be willing to replace the old rectangular crates with the oval ones, which were designed after observations of sow behavior. While Tim Gerber likes the new crates for all the reasons Humik had in mind such as keeping the sows happier and losing fewer piglets to crushing, it was the space requirements that caused him and his father to select them. They'd built a new finishing barn and hot nursery and the old nursery at only nine feet wide, was too narrow to accommodate the traditional crates and two aisles needed, one at each end of the crate. But since the new oval crates allow the sow to turn around, they needed only one aisle and could make full use of the space. The Gerbers bought only part of the package now called Farrownest and manufactured by J. K. Reid at Moorefield. Hurnik's design now incorporates the oval farrowing crate with the concept of keeping young pigs in heated kennels, ideas brought to Canada by Dr. Gerhard Schwarting of Germany (Rural Voice, May 1996). Because of their space situation the Gerbers attached their own home-made kennels to the crate, allowing the piglets a warm, safe environment away from their mother. But the heart of the Farrownest is still the crate Hurnik designed after his studies of animal behavior led him to believe that the old rectangular farrowing crates had greatly reduced labour, but were not