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The Carroll family of Carthage,
Il, recently started production in this new wean-to-finish
barn with 100-head pens. |
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When the Carroll family of Carthage,
IL, heard about potential square footage savings by using
big pens in their new wean-to-finish barns, they were intrigued.
"it was kind o-finish interesting idea," says Dan Carroll,
who raises hogs with his brother, David and father, Darel.
By designing pens to accommodate 100 pigs,
the Carrolls figure they can load buildings at 6.5 sq. ft.
per pig versus the traditional 7.5 sq. ft. Besides, with death
loss and some routine sorting, Dan estimates space allocations
will be closer to 6.8 or 6.9 sq. ft. by the time pigs near
finishing.
This past March the Carrolls filled the
first of four new 1,200-head wean-to-finish buildings. The
buildings are tunnel ventilated, with gas infrared overhead
heating tubes, concrete slats and separate feeding systems
for split sex feeding. The buildings have center walkways
with six, 100-head pens on each side.
A swing gate is installed at the front of
the pens to aid in catching and sorting pigs. "The pigs do
learn to run in the large pens," says Dan. "You have to have
some stick-to-itness when you are trying to catch them, but
one person can do it."
A single, five-hole Farmweld Jumbo Feeder
is located at the center of each pen creating an island that
pigs can access from both sides of the feeder. The large pen
size lowers the budget for feeders slightly since single five-hole
feeder handles 100 pigs, whereas two three-hole feeders are
needed to accommodate that number in 25-head pens.
David Carroll says that the little pigs
adjust well to the big feeders. "A lot of times you come into
the barn to see two or three pigs eating from the same hole,"
he says.
A five-foot sect ion of gating is attached
to each feeder to hold four Farmweld DRIK-O-MAT® Water
Cups, mounted back-to-back, four inches from the ground. Dan
says pigs weaned into the new facilities "have had no problems
with the big cups." He observes, "They walk all around the
pen and check it out and they find the drinkers right away."
The Carrolls say they are also impressed with the data showing
that the DRIK-O-MAT cups waste a lot less water than other
drinker options.
Dr. James Lowe, a veterinarian at the Carthage
Veterinary Service who works with the Carroll family, says
there is not yet data from which to draw firm conclusions
about big pens in wean-to-finish barns. However, he says,
there is evidence that large pen size may reduce end weight
variation.
"At feeder pig weight, we know the weight
spread between the lightest and the heaviest pigs is tighter
in big pens," says Lowe. "If we can make the group more uniform,
it may not improve average performance, but we'll have fewer
pre-markets and more (productive) days per turn."
He suggests the improvement stems from the
pigs' natural behavior and the social effects of larger groups.
"Pigs probably get along best in groups of six to eight,"
contends Lowe, basing his opinion on research conducted by
animal behavior experts. "In a group of 25, they can figure
out who everyone else is." In other words, they can identify
their place in the pecking order. "If you take one out, then
you upset the social order," says Lowe.
On the other hand, if you have a group of'
100 pigs, there may be 20 social groups of four to six members.
"if you pull one out, then you affect five pigs, but not the
other 95," Lowe explains. "In a group of 25, if you pull one
out, you'll affect the other 24." Consequently, Lowe says,
pigs may get stressed, slip in feed intake and experience
a lag in growth.
Pigs in larger pens seem
to be more organized for
sleeping, eating and dunging.
Pigs in larger pens seem to be more organized
about how they zone their pens for sleeping, eating and dunging,
according to Lowe. "Because there is more space, they can
physically separate and there is less confusion," he says.
By putting in the larger pens in their new
wean-to-finish barns, the Carrolls estimate they trimmed about
$4 per pig space off their total building costs. "If it is
true that you can use less square footage per pig in large
pens, that would save an additional $10-13 per pig space,"
notes Dan.
The Carrolls say it will be a couple of
years before they'll know whether the 100-pig pens have any
negative effects on performance. They say that if they see
any problems, they left themselves an out. "We can always
add gating to make smaller pens," says Dan. For now, "we are
going to see how this works out."
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