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No Camping In the Food Courts
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Dick Fitzsimmons has been closely monitoring
pigs in his FAST™ (Farmweld Automatic Sorting Technology)
facility for performance and behavior. |
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Before Mapleton, MN, producer Dick Fitzsimmons
retrofitted a finishing facility into a FAST™ (Farmweld Automatic
Sorting Technology) barn, he wondered how the pigs would react.
He’s now on his second turn in the facility and has devised
a few unscientific tests to study his pigs’ behavior.
No Camping in the Food Courts
Some people question whether pigs linger in the
food courts because they contain both feeders and waterers. Fitzsimmons
says that’s not the case and found a way to prove it. He
simply closes off the entrance gate to the scale for about an hour
and a half, along with all the gates between the loafing area and
the food courts. Then he watches what happens.
“All the pigs will be gone out of the food
courts,” says Fitzsimmons. That tells him pigs are circulating
between the loafing area and the food courts. “You are always
getting turnover,” he says.
Favorite Sleeping Spots
While it is obvious to Fitzsimmons that his pigs
move about throughout the pens, he questioned whether they develop
their favorite resting places. To check this out, he used a can
of Sprayola and marked five or six pigs sleeping in one general
spot. He sprayed a mark on their heads. Then he moved to another
area and sprayed pigs on the back and went to a third area and
sprayed pigs on the rump. When Fitzsimmons returned several times
over the next few days, the pigs were sleeping in basically the
same locations.
In addition to behavior, Fitzsimmons is also
very interested in monitoring the growth of the FAST pigs and issued
electronic identification ear tags to all 600 pigs. At this point
he is just collecting data. So far he says he’s surprised
at how much variation in weight he’s seen.
“As an industry, we assume we are closer
to producing uniform pigs than we are,” he says. “I
think that’s part of the reason a scale will help us. In
the past 20 years, we’ve started using things like artificial
insemination to try to fix it and we still aren’t there.
If we can’t do it genetically, maybe we’ll have to
do it mechanically,” says Fitzsimmons.
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for more information on Farmweld's FAST System |
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