| Iowa
Producer Opts for FAST™
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Joe Rotta
created a "nursery within the
food court" to handle small
wean-to-finish pigs. Rotta is
pictured in his new 2,400-head
facility near Storm Lake, IA. |
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Iowa producer
Joe Rotta opted for the FAST»
(Farmweld Automatic Sorting Technology)
system for a new 2,400-head wean-to-finish
facility because it promised to
cut the amount of hired labor needed
for sorting pigs and reduce sort
loss. He also figured by using super
large pens and no alleyways, he
would capture more useable space
in each 1,200-head room. "Getting
rid of the alleyway saves you about
60 pig spaces per room" says Rotta,
who is based in Merrill, IA.
Rotta's new barn
is a wean-to-finish building. To
help accommodate just-weaned pigs,
gating can be arranged within the
food courts so there are four separate
areas for sorting different sized
baby pigs. "Some of those first
rations are expensive," says Rotta.
"If you can get bigger pigs off
of them sooner, there should be
some savings."
Rotta also set
up the ventilation and heating systems
to create warm zones in these same
areas. "We sort of created a nursery
within the food court," says Rotta,
who has previously utilized wean-to-finish
facilities with 85 pigs per pen.
Rotta is anxious to see how the
baby pigs do in 300-head pens (or
600-head if double filling is used)
but says the facility adaptations
and his employees' experience handling
small pigs should help get pigs
started successfully.
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