Veterinary Consultant Upbeat About FAST™
The FAST
system has sparked new enthusiasm in growers. FAST
is a positive alternative to traditional facilities that require
more intense physical work.
Dr. Barry Kerkaert, a consulting veterinarian
at the Pipestone (MN) Veterinary Clinic, is upbeat about the potential
advantages of FAST™ (Farmweld Automatic Sorting Technology.)
So much so he phoned the writer of this story to add to an already
long list of potential benefits he described in an earlier interview.
“One of the best things about the FAST system is that it has
sparked new enthusiasm in growers,” says Dr. Kerkaert.
“Two of our biggest challenges are loading animals and washing
barns,” Kerkaert says. “FAST is very attractive because it decreases
washing time, and it makes loading much easier. Some people even
say it makes loading fun.”
Dr. Kerkaert says he knows of one person who was considering exiting
the business because of orthopedic problems. According to Dr. Kerkaert,
this individual is now considering retrofitting older buildings
with the FAST system and continuing to raise pigs. Dr. Kerkaert
says he sees FAST as a positive alternative to traditional production
facilities that require more intense physical work. “In the
pig business we need to always be looking for innovative ways to
make the job more appealing,” he says.
The reason that loading pigs onto slaughter trucks from FAST barns
is easier than from conventional facilities is because pigs are
used to walking single file through the scale, a narrow space similar
to a
loading chute. FAST facilities require less washing time because
there is less gating used in the very large pens.
Dr. Kerkaert also thinks FAST offers “tremendous” potential
in other areas such as improving barn space efficiency, reducing
sort loss at marketing, helping producers predict or know growth
for better nutrition management and helping them better predict
performance.
Because barns with very large pens eliminate the need for long alleyways,
Dr. Kerkaert says FAST buildings pay for themselves. “The
cost of gating and feeders is a wash (versus non-FAST buildings),”
says Dr. Kerkaert. “And the useable pig space we gain from
the elimination of the walkway offsets the cost of the scale.”
More useable pig space can be realized in several
different ways:
| 1 |
|
Shorter
barns which reduce construction costs, or; |
| 2 |
|
Added
pig spaces, depending on permit restrictions, or; |
| 3 |
|
Better
pig performance because of added square footage per pig. |
As with all new technologies, Kerkaert says there
is a learning curve in some aspects of managing FAST facilities.
Areas he’s studying closely are the most efficient protocol
for training pigs, how to maximize the opportunity to better manage
feeding programs using the FAST scale and how to maximize the efficiencies
of better space utilization.
|