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Showing posts with label pig. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pig. Show all posts

Thursday, February 15, 2018

Flat Aggie Visits Triple E Pig Farms in Illinois

A huge thanks to the Knox County Pork Producers Association for showing Flat Aggie a pig farm in Illinois.  If you would like to see more from them, they can be found on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram!  I am still jealous of the shirt they gave Flat Aggie! ;) A Kansas Farm Mom

Hi.  I’m Flat Aggie and I’m at Triple E Farms in Altona, Illinois.  They have invited me to see their pig farm this week.  Before I could come into their pig barns I had to stay away from any other pigs for a couple of weeks, shower, put on clean clothes and these plastic boots over my shoes. 


 Doing all of this is called bio-security and is to protect their pigs from anything outside of the barn that could make their pigs sick.   For a pig farmer the health and care of their pigs is top priority.   
The next thing I did was meet everyone who cares for the pigs and who will be showing me around the farm.  Starting from the left is Dan who is one of the owners of the farm, Brenda who takes care of farrowing which is where the piglets are born, and Brian who cares for the mama sows before they have their piglets.  
Before we get started I need to tell you a few new words that I learned today.  I have already used a few of them on this page.
    A piglet is a baby pig.
    A sow is a mama pig that has had piglets.
    Farrowing is the process of having baby pigs.
I’m sure there will be more new words to learn later.  
So let’s get ready to see some pigs!
I was able to be there and watch when this newborn piglet was drinking his first drink of milk from his mama!  

The first milk they drink is called colostrum and is VERY important for the newborns to get.  Colostrum has antibodies that are vital to the piglet’s immune system and also contains protein, energy and vitamin D.  Part of Brenda’s job is to make sure every piglet gets colostrum.  You can see these piglets look a little wet and slimy because they were just born a few minutes ago.
These piglets were also born today.   Piglets that were born at the same time to one sow are called a litter. 

 Now we need to count how many piglets this sow had and write that down on a card that all of her information is kept on.  Keeping accurate information is important on a farm.  Can you help me count?  How many piglets do you see?


 The pigs on this farm are raised inside barns that have heaters and fans that keep the pigs warm in the winter and cool in the summer.  Technology is used to make this happen.   I am standing next to a mini computer that turns on the heat when the temperature gets too cool, turns on fans when the rooms get too warm for the pigs comfort and keeps small fans running all the time to keep fresh air moving through the barns. 

The display is showing the temperature of this farrowing room.  Can you read that temperature?  

I learned that farmers look at each and every pig on the farm everyday to make sure they have everything they need to be healthy, comfortable and content, like we are doing here with this mama-to-be and these two and a half week old piglets.  (I think they liked me.)
 

At around 2 weeks old the piglets will get something extra to eat while they are still drinking milk from their mama’s.  They will get feed that is small that they can easily chew and tastes good, called pellets. This feed will help them get use to eating a dry food.    I can tell you that they love them.  As soon as I put the pellets in that blue bowl they started to eat them immediately!


It snowed a lot while I was here and the snow had to be moved so we could get to the pig barns.  This is just one of the piles.  Of course I had to play on it.  Wouldn’t you?  

Later we had some more fun making snow angels too!  The snow makes for a lot more work for the farmers, but luckily for the pigs, they are inside the barns and don’t have to fight through the snow for water and feed.


So today on the farm we started early because it is Weaning Day!  What does that mean? Well I wondered that too.  When piglets are around 3 weeks old and they are old enough not to need milk anymore, they can eat a solid food like those pellets I put in that blue bowl I showed you earlier this week.  This is called weaning!  Weaning takes a team of people who pick up each pig in each litter, like Dan is doing here, and put them into that green cart with the scale on the front.  

Then each litter is weighed and that number is written down on a sow card that each sow on the farm will have when they have their piglets. 
There can be a lot of information on this card, but at weaning we write down how many piglets were in the litter she weaned and the total amount that the litter weighed (the two yellow arrows).    
Can you figure out how much each pig weighed at weaning?
 How about how much they each weighed at birth?
When all the pigs are weighed they are loaded onto a trailer.
I got to meet Matt today.  He is a nice guy and I got to take a picture with him.  He is a local farmer and a truck driver.  He hauls the weaned pigs on a trailer and takes them to another farm where they will grow.  He knows just how much bedding to put on the floor depending on the weather.  When it is nice out he will use wood shavings but when it is extra cold, like it is now, he will also add some straw to keep them nice and warm for the ride.  It was fun to see the pigs walk and run onto the trailer and play in the bedding.  

Once weaning was done we took a break.  Picking up all those pigs was more work than I am use to.  I had some delicious milk and a granola bar to energize myself for the next job to be done.  We all had a good laugh at my milk mustache!    

Getting the weaning done was not the end of the day.  The farrowing room where the wean pigs came out of is dirty and it has to be cleaned before the next group of baby pigs will be born in the room.  So I had to learn how to power wash!  Brenda said I should wear a rain suit because I would get wet and she was right.  

It’s kind of a wet and dirty job, but it is also an important job because having a clean room when piglets are being born is so important to keeping them healthy.  That thing that Brenda is holding is the pressure washer wand where hot water comes out and blasts the dirt off everything.  Once the room is cleaned, then it will be disinfected and left to dry.

The next day the room is nice and dry, so I’m helping move the next group of mama’s-to-be into it.   The sows just walk right in the room!
They follow the walkways that lead them each to their own farrowing stall where they will have their piglets.  Then, everything I saw this week will start over again.  There will be Brand new piglets born in here in a couple of days.  So exciting!
I met Dr. Fairbrother today.  He is a veterinarian, that means an animal doctor.  You know when someone has a pet, like a dog or cat, that pet is taken into the veterinarian’s office for a health checkup.  Well did you know that on a farm the veterinarian actually comes out to the farm to see the animals?   How cool is that!  

He comes once a month for a regular farm visit.   I went with Dr. Fairbrother as he walked through all the barns and checked on the pig’s health and well-being.  He talked about how the pigs were doing with the farmers.   It was very interesting and I found out that farmers and veterinarians work closely together to ensure the farm has healthy and well cared for pigs.


Before I left the farm I wanted to look one more time in farrowing at the newborn piglets.  It was getting late and all of the sows had been fed and chores were done for the night.  The lights were off with only the heat lamps on to keep the piglets warm and everyone was asleep. I snuck in to get one last picture!  It was a great week and I learned a lot about how farmers raise and care for their pigs.
I hope you enjoyed my adventure at Triple E Farms as much as I did!

If you want to continue your education today, be sure to check out

Sunday, February 14, 2016

Flat Aggie Visits the Anderson Farms Hog Operation



I arrived at Anderson Farms in Shabbona, Illinois on a cold day in February and was greeted by the family dog, Max! 
 
I was excited to see all the grain bins, barns, buildings, trucks, and tractors around the farm. This looked like a very busy place to spend some time.
   
I was told that the family are third generation farmers here in northern Illinois. They farm 1,000 acres of corn, soybeans, and wheat. 

They also operate a 350 sow, farrow to finish, hog operation that produces an average of 570 pigs a month or 7,000 pigs a year. That is a lot of bacon, pork chops, sausage, and pepperoni!
    
I started my tour of the farm where the pigs are.  This is one of the gestation barns where only the pregnant sows live.  They are pregnant for 3months + 3weeks + 3 days!  The breeding, gestation and farrowing barns are all connected so it is easier to move the sows from one barn to the next, no matter the weather! This farmer walks them, inside between the buildings. Breeding means to “get pregnant.” Although they have one boar (dad hog) they use artificial insemination at Anderson Farms when breeding the sows. Sows are the mom pigs. Farrow means “to give birth.” 
       
This farm uses some of the current technology available to swine (generic word for all pigs or hogs) producers to help get “the chores” done. As a simple explanation, the RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) ear tag each pig has helps store and track information about the sow the farmer enters in a database.   


Some of the information includes how old they are, how much they weigh, how many litters (group of piglets born at one time) they have had, any injuries or illness, and how far along they are in their gestation period.
          
As the sow passes thru this gate of the feeding station, it’s ear tag is read and the appropriate amount of food is then dispensed for eating. When they are done, they exit through the other side, and another sow can go eat. 


I asked where they get the pig feed from and I was told that they mix it right there on the farm! So, we went to take a look. I was also told that this is also where the barn cats live!

They use their own harvested corn, add some soybean meal, vitamins and minerals. They make different batches in the feed mixer, pictured behind me, with different amounts of the vitamins and minerals depending on the age and stage of the pig. The feed is then transferred into the feed cart through an auger. They haul the feed to the building it was made for and fill the feeders on the outside of the building. Another auger gets the feed to the pigs inside. This is a daily occurrence with 3,000 pigs on the farm at any given time!
   
When the sow is ready to farrow, the farmer walks her to the “farrowing house” where she is place in a stall. She is limited to the center of the stall by gates to protect the piglets and reduce their chance of being laid on. A heat lamp and a heat mat are also there to keep the piglets warm when they are first born. A newborn piglet weights about 4 pounds.
             
An average litter is 14 piglets. If a sow is unable to care for any or all her piglets, some or all can be placed with another sow. At Anderson Farms, the largest litter one sow had was 20 live piglets born. The largest litter one sow was able to feed until weaning (separated from the sow) was 16 piglets! The average one sow could feed is 11. 

By 10 days old they are supplemented (added to their diet) with feed. In the farrowing house, the sows are all hand fed by the farmer. No RFID feeding stations here.  At 21 days old it is time for the piglets to be weaned from the sow and moved to the finisher. They weigh about 14 pounds now. 

Weaning day is quite the production here on the farm. All hands on deck. That includes the farmer’s college kids hoping to sleep in when visiting at home! After regular morning chores are done, which includes walking through all the buildings and making sure all the pigs are fed or have feed available, all waterers are working, and a basic wellness check is made, it’s time to wean (separate the piglets from the sow).
     
On this farm they use an old school bus to haul the piglets from the farrowing house across the farm to one of the finisher buildings!
They give the piglets one last vaccination before they separate the barrows (boy pigs) from gilts (girl pigs) and put them on the bus. Apparently barrows and gilts mixed in a pen do not get along well together! They are separated to decrease the potential fights that could lead to injuries. They will stay in the finisher for about 5 months, until they are ready for market.

I knew farmers were busy, but after spending three weeks at Anderson Farms during the winter just learning about their livestock, or hog farming, I can’t imagine how much busier it gets when they add their crop farming and begin planting the crops in the spring! I am off to Iowa now to learn more about what happens in the finisher and how another swine producer’s operation works.

Monday, February 24, 2014

Pig Farmer Math



Back by popular demand It's Farmer Math!!  OK, well it was suggested by The Farmer and my kids that we needed to start this again.  Yesterday,  while feeding cows the boys and I read through the posts and came up with the math questions.  I hope you enjoy them.  I hope you share them with your kids and grandkids.  Yes, farmers have to know a lot of math!  This goes with the reports from when the 4 Flat Aggie's went to 4 different pig farms in 4 different states, Iowa, Indiana, Minnesota and  Kansas.

1. The average litter of piglets is 11.  If a sow gave birth to 15, how many more did she have than the average litter?
 
2. If Flat Aggie watches 12 sows give birth and each sow has 12 piglets, how many piglets did Flat Aggie see born?
3. A hog barn can hold 1000 pigs.  Flat Aggie visited a farm that had 5 barns.  How many pigs could the farm have in all?
 
4. A pig weighs 60 pounds when it is moved to the finishing barn and it is there for 120 days.  It weighs 300 pounds when it goes to market at the end of 120 days.  What is the daily rate of gain for that pig? (How many pounds per day did it gain?)

MASTER FARMER MATH:
 
Flat Aggie looked at a sow card and saw the sow had given birth to 14 litters of piglets.  The average litter size was 11.  The average baby piglet weighs 3 pounds.  

5. How many piglets has the sow given birth to?
6. How many pounds of piglets has this sow given birth to?
7. If 98% of the pigs make it to market, how many would that be? (Round to the nearest whole number)
8. If the above 98% weighs 300 pounds each, how many pounds of market pigs did that sow produce?
 
9. If the average pig carcass weighs 74% of the animal’s live weight, how many pounds of pork are the product of this sow?

ANSWERS:
1.)    4 piglets  2.)144 piglets  3.) 5000 pigs  4.)2 pounds per day  5.) 154 piglets  6.) 462 pounds  7.)  151 pigs  8.) 45300 pounds  9.) 33522 pounds