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The same morning a concrete crew was arriving to work on a new
nursery at Truline® Genetics, senior partner Everett Forkner
was hurriedly laying out a plan to eliminate nurseries altogether
at the Richards, MO, seedstock operation.
Forkner assembled his management team including his wife, Ruby;
two sons, Mike and Steve, production managers Chris Hendren and
Steve McNorton; and the operation's cropping manager, son-in-law
Travis Beisly on that March 1997 morning after an idea suddenly
gelled the previous afternoon.
For weeks, Everett had been mulling over ways to convert the operation's
four-stage, all-in/all-out system into wean-to-finish. After a fire
ravaged one of their nurseries, the Forkner team had temporarily
weaned into adapted finishing barns. However, Everett had just about
convinced himself that wean-to-finish was not a permanent option
for flowing pigs from their nucleus breeding sow herd.
Like many operations, the flow pattern had been devised over several
years, with several sites, including contract finishers. The site
where the fire had occurred also had an older farrowing building,
a grower unit and several finishers. There were already plans in
the works to convert those buildings into nurseries. In addition,
the operation had made the decision to build two new 1,000-head
finishers. At first, what seemed most logical and economical was
to rebuild the burned-down nursery and continue with the conversion
plans in order to create a large nursery complex.
Idea to Incorporate Wean-to-finish
Then came Everett's idea flash: Why not build two new wean-to-finish
barns instead of the planned, traditional finishers? And instead
of creating the nursery complex, use the earmarked remodeling money
and insurance payment for a third wean-to-finish barn, which Everett
estimated would cover about two-thirds of the cost. Late into the
evening, he scratched out a plan and budget for the new idea, and
by 9 o'clock the next morning, the team had made the decision.
The operation is now in the process of switching the entire flow
over to wean-to-finish. Three 1,000-head wean-to-finish barns have
been built, each with three rooms with center alleyways and 12 pens.
Each pen houses 25-28 pigs. Two weeks' production fully loads one
room.
Because the buildings are carved into three rooms, the Forkners
opted for power-ventilation and forced-air heating. Heat lamps provide
added zone heating over comfort mats, which are used for two to
three weeks after entry. Flooring is total concrete slats.
Everett says Farmweld Jumbo Feeders are working well for small
and large pigs. "They really do the job of what's required for
wean-to-finish." He says he's also been impressed with how little
feeder adjustment is needed. "They are virtually maintenance-free,"
he says.
Sold on Farmweld DRIK-0-MAT®
Initially, the Forkners experimented with watering
options. The first two buildings were designed with one Farmweld
DRIK-0-MAT® Water Cup per pen and one swinging-type waterer.
However, Everett says he noticed that the pigs "definitely preferred
drinking from the cup." He says he was also impressed with university
results demonstrating water savings with the cup versus the swinging-type
waterer. He also noticed significant wetness on the slats around
the swinging-type waterers compared to minimal wetness around the
cups. After considering those factors, the Forkners chose to design
the third wean-to-finish building with two cups per pen and no swinging-type
waterers.
Everett says he expects wean-to-finish not only to cut the labor
and expense of moving pigs and powerwashing, but to also improve
overall growth performance and the accuracy of genetic selection
in the Truline breeding program. He believes that by eliminating
the stress of co-mingling and moving, health will improve and growth
will become more consistent from batch to batch. "My personal opinion
is that wean-to-finish will be a big enhancement for greater accuracy
in our performance evaluation and genetic selection."
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