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Bob
Baarsch says that Farmweld equipment
has proven to be a valuable
component in facilities such
as this 1,200-head nursery. |
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A
week after taking over his parents
farm in 1984, Bob Baarsch recalls
sitting in his farmhouse and telling
his wife, Kathy, "You know
I worked really hard this week and
I can look out the window and see
everything I did." It was a
welcome change after spending several
years as a feed company executive
in a tightly structured corporate
environment. Coming home, Baarsch
says, offered him an opportunity
to "be his own boss" and
better measure how his creativity
and hard work could shape a business.
Eighteen years
later, instead of looking out a
window when he wants to visualize
his accomplishments, Baarsch relies
on a PowerPoint® presentation.
Today he is at the helm of a multi-faceted
swine business that hes proud
to say provides income for 40 local
households in and around Spring
Valley, MN, the community where
he was raised. He has recently joined
with two other livestock producers
and a local elevator to build an
edge-of-technology feed mill and
is spearheading a firm thats
developing software to help swine
producers better track feed inventories.
He also does monthly commentaries
as part of a corporate-sponsored
pig think tank, "The Morrison
Group."
Baarschs
swine business reflects the courage
and deftness to put new ideas into
practice. Back in 1986, when farrowing
output outgrew production facilities,
Baarsch sought other local farmers
willing to finish pigs in return
for a fee. "We were one of
the first in the area to do contract
finishing," he says. "We
werent into crops and it was
obvious that hogs were our only
future and with no land base, we
knew wed have to concentrate
on sows," Baarsch says. After
proving contracting worked for his
operation, Baarsch Pork Farm (BPF)
expanded to 500 sows in 1988 and
in 1994 to 850, with one hundred
percent of the nursery through finishing
done by outside contractors.
A second phase
of expansion began in 1996 when
Baarsch and a college friend became
partners to create Next Generation
Pork (NGP). The partners first signed
with the Pipestone System as shareholders
in Pipestones Shetek, MN,
sow unit. That equaled production
from approximately 1,100 sows. Then
in 1999, NGP signed a contract with
Fisher Family Farms, a family-run
farrowing operation in Middleton,
MO, which brought another 1,250
sows into the fold. Also in 1999,
NGP built a new 1,500-sow unit thats
located a couple of miles from Baarschs
original site. Again, one hundred
percent of the nursery through finishing
is handled at contract sites.
Sitting across
a desk as Baarsch explains the progression
of his swine operation, you can
almost see Baarsch at work on a
puzzle, carefully turning pieces
to determine if they fit. But work
on his puzzle will never be done,
he says. "Once you start thinking
youve found the quintessential
system, you are wrong," says
Baarsch. "Ive learned
you always must be evaluating, always
experimenting.
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Bob
Baarsch keeps in touch with
his 20 contractors and 20 employees
via cell phone and routine meetings. |
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"For example,
weve evaluated wean-to-finish,
weve evaluated large and small
nurseries, large and small farrowing
units. It comes down to picking
which ideas fit your system,"
says Baarsch.
When drawing
up plans for specific sites, Baarsch
and his 20-employee team, including
two field reps that work with the
systems 20 growers, carefully
evaluate whats working in
the BPF/NGP system. Baarsch is also
a firm believer in talking to consultants
and other respected producers. He
says networking both formally
and informally can be very
valuable when participants trust
each other enough to share honestly
and openly. "If the people
you know will give you financial
information what the barn
cost to build, feed conversions,
cost of gain thats
the crucial information," says
Baarsch.
The newest
facility in the NGP system is a
1,200-head nursery completed in
late 2001. The site marks the third
time area farmer Mike Lunning ventured
into contract pig raising with NGP.
Lunnings first building was
a 600-head nursery that had been
converted from a farrowing house
in the early 1990s. His second was
a new 1,200-head nursery built in
1996. That facility is 41
x 120 (12.5M x 36.6M) with
5.5 x 18 (1.7M x 5.5M)
pens holding 30 pigs. Each pen is
equipped with one cup, a water nipple
and Farmweld feeders positioned
at the fencelines.
The latest
building is also 41 x 120
(12.5M x 36.6M). Originally, pens
were going to be designed similarly
to the older nursery with fenceline
feeders. However, Farmweld Owner
and President Frank Brummer suggested
to Baarsch that the pens be doubled
in size to 11 x 18 (3.4M
x 5.5M), with one six-hole Farmweld
Challenger Nursery Feeder positioned
in the middle of the pen. Two Farmweld
Wean-to-Finish Water Cups are mounted
back to back next to the feeder.
"We thought this configuration
would better accommodate the pigs
behavior and how they used a kitchen,
bathroom and bedroom (area in the
pens)," says Baarsch.
"We
think the Flip-to-Clean is a really
nice option."
Farmweld dry nursery feeders are
the design of choice because they
are easy for starting pigs compared
to other types of feeders. "Starting
babies on tube feeders is difficult
because they are always trying to
play with the water," says
Baarsch. "Then the water gets
onto the pellets and they break
down and cake up and plug the tube,
which leads to wasting the most
expensive of the diets in the growth
cycle."
The new Flip-to-Clean
System was installed at Lunnings
new building. The system, which
allows a feeder to be cleaned in
place, reduces the energy and time
required during power-washing. "One
of the issues with dry feeders is
washing them," says Baarsch.
"We think the Flip-to-Clean
is a really nice option."
Other components
in the new building include plastic
flooring. Baarschs first experience
with plastic flooring from Farmweld
was in Lunnings first nursery.
He says he has been extremely impressed
with Farmweld flooring. First, the
plastic panels are easy to clean.
"Theres something about
Farmwelds panels manure
doesnt seem to stick to them,"
says Baarsch. "I assume it
has something to do with the smoothness."
Baarsch also
likes the orange plastic flooring
because it is highly durable and
it brightens the nursery rooms.
"It provides a better environment
for people that work in the barn,"
says Baarsch.
Farmweld Drik-O-Mat
Wean-to-Finish Cups were installed
at Lunnings new nursery in
order to reduce water waste. "We
knew we wanted a cup and not a nipple
because weve seen so much
wasting of water and we have limited
manure handling capacity,"
says Baarsch. A properly designed
cup will also start pigs faster
than nipples, according to Baarsch.
"Getting water in the first
24 hours is really important,"
he says. One of the two cups in
each pen has a traditional cup nipple.
The other cup has a special training
nipple that can be set to drip for
the first 48 hours after entry.
The water in the cup allows pigs
to "smell, feel and see it,"
Baarsch says.
According
to Mike Lunning, the cups are working
well. "The pigs can get their
heads into the cup and drink easily
even when they are small,"
says Lunning.
Farmweld equipment
is one piece of the puzzle in Bob
Baarschs pork operation. While
he states it is difficult to perform
actual side-by-side trials comparing
equipment, he is very pleased with
the results from the barns in his
system where Farmweld equipment
is used. "As far as pig performance
and longevity, it has been a good
value," concludes Baarsch.
Contact Bob Baarsch by email at:
rbaarsch@deskmedia.com
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