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121
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BUY AND SELL / Agricultural / Diff Feed Mixer For Sale
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on: March 08, 2008, 05:13:56 PM
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Kocencio Inc. Poultry nd Piggery Equipments,Metal Fabrication #93 Parada Road.Bo. Parada Valenzuela Metro Manila
Tel: 022943424 and 02943420
available : Micro Feed Mixer and lot lot more
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122
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LIVESTOCKS / SWINE / Diff Feed Mixer
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on: March 08, 2008, 05:05:17 PM
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 Horizontal mixers consist of a series of paddles or metal ribbon blades mounted on a horizontal rotor within a semi-circular trough. The blades move the material from one end of the mixer to the other, tumbling it as it goes. These mixers usually discharge the mixed product from the bottom, using the same mixer blade action. See above for inside views of both a paddle mixer and a ribbon mixer. Another type of mixer, which is similar to the horizontal type in action, has a bowl-shaped or flat-bottomed container in which a series of paddles are mounted on a spindle driven by a motor mounted either above or below the mixer (See pictures below). This type of mixer has the same advantages over the vertical type of mixer as the horizontal mixers mentioned earlier. In addition it is cheap and is therefore frequently used in farms, particularly in South East and South Asia. It can also be used for mixing moist feeds.  The vertical mixer(illustrated on the right) consists of one or more vertical screws which elevate the ingredients to the top of the mixer where they fall by gravity to the bottom, to be mixed and re-elevated. Vertical mixers are the most common type found in small livestock feed mills. However, the vertical type is less well suited to aquaculture, poultry and fish feeds than the horizontal type, which are much more efficient in blending in small quantities of liquids (such as added lipids) or in mixing ingredients with different particle sizes  Wet Feed Mixer Vertical mixers are unsuitable for mixing wet ingredients. Horizontal mixers are more suitable but, because of their complex construction, are often difficult to clean properly. There is also a tendency for sticky materials to adhere to the blades and to accumulate at one end of the mixer. Simple bowl or circular mixers, pictured above, are the most suitable types for mixing wet ingredients or mixtures of wet and dry materials. They can also be used for mixing dry ingredients. This type of mixer is available in sizes suitable for mixing a few kilograms or of dealing with several tons of ingredients. The larger types discharge the mixed product from the bottom.  500 kilo horizontal mixer for inquiry check Buy and Sale Section - http://pinoyagribusiness.com/forum/agricultural/diff_feed_mixer_for_sale-t414.0.html tel: 022943424
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125
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LIVESTOCKS / SWINE / Re: Hog Farm Gate Price
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on: March 05, 2008, 06:55:46 AM
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merry pa rin po kung may ibebenta pang mga pigs ang mga farms po nila...  tama ka talaga bro. kaya lang ito tumataas dahil kaunti na ang malalaking baboy. 
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126
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LIVESTOCKS / SWINE / Re: Hog Farm Gate Price
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on: March 03, 2008, 11:41:09 PM
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Bulacan - 98 to 110, Oversize - 102, Tarlac - 105 , Rizal - 101 to 102 , culd sow - 77,
Laguna - 105 ,Cavite - 105 culd sow - 83 , Batangas - 100 to 102 , Quezon - 100,
Pangasinan- 96 to 102 culd sow - 85 ,Pampanga - 103 to 108 Culd sow - 85 ,
Nueva Ecija - 102 Culd Sow 75 ,Or Mindoro - 95 , La Union - 95 to 100
Naga - 90 to 95 culd sow - 75 ,Ilocos - 95 to 100
Bacolod- 80 to 83, Cebu- 88 to 92 Culd sow - 70 ,Leyte - 88 , Ilo
ilo - 85 , Dumagete - 80 ,Dipolog - 82 Culd sow - 65 ,Aklan - 82 Culd
sow - 60 , Ozamis- 80
Cagayan de oro @ 84 , Davao - 80 to 84 ,Davao Del Sur - 79 , Gensan - 84
to 88 Culd sow - 67 , Zamboanga - 80, Zamboanga Sibugay - 77,
Pagadian - 78, Surigao - 80 Koronadal City - 85 to 86
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130
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LIVESTOCKS / SWINE / China
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on: February 29, 2008, 11:25:34 AM
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China looks back and forward at year of the pig Posted: Monday, February 11, 2008 11:44 AM Filed Under: Beijing, China
By Ed Flanagan, NBC News Researcher
China may have run in the year of the rat this week, but the nation's heart is still hungrily set on the pig.
With pork prices having jumped over 50 percent in the past year, national attention has shifted to the ever escalating prices for basic foodstuffs. Pork is a staple in the Chinese diet – 65 percent of the 110 lbs of meat the average Chinese eat each year is pork – and the near daily increases in price here have become a banner issue for poor and middle-class Chinese. Now with some of the most severe rates in years, government officials here are quietly wondering if unchecked inflation could potentially lead to a repeat of the public incident that followed the last period of economic hardship.
The pork price hikes have come as a result of factors arising both domestically and abroad. In China last year, blue ear disease ravaged the pig population during what was an already poor production year due to low 2006 prices. Meanwhile, the demand for corn and maize for ethanol production raised global prices for livestock feed, making it far costlier to raise porkers fit for the market. Most recently, the severe cold weather and storms that have hit central and southern China – traditionally regarded as the nation’s breadbasket – have destroyed much of the season’s crop across the board and wrought further havoc on prices nationally.
The biggest contributor to the inflation rate though is the booming Chinese economy and the rapidly growing incomes that it has brought. To the government’s credit, the nation has pulled millions of people above the poverty line in the past decade. However, with this new economic flexibility has come a greater consumption of meat as the population increasingly shifts to a western style diet that features more meat.
The consequences of this swine shortage and the public’s affinity for pork on their dinner plates are now playing out in China’s markets. During a recent visit to the Pifa Wholesale Market in Beijing for another story, one butcher noted that because of pork’s reputation in China as being the affordable meat, the runaway inflation has irked customers and caused them to go out in search of a better deal.
"When pork prices went up, people started buying chicken. When chicken prices went up they switched to fish," he said. "People remember how cheap pork used to be, so it’s hard for them to understand why it’s so expensive today."
It is that question that has become a source of serious concern for the Chinese government, which has the unenviable task of having to somehow explain to its outraged populace how even with a pig population of 500 million (compared to a US population of just 100 million), it has been largely unsuccessful to curb runaway prices.
While the government has made use of price freezes in the past to temporarily halt rising inflation, the government’s other key mechanism for controlling prices is the much vaunted "strategic pork reserve" – a network of government warehouses full of frozen pork. Much like the US government in certain situations will use its own strategic petroleum reserve to help control domestic prices, China has injected pork into the market during moments of rapid inflation or politically sensitive times to ensure a steady supply and reasonable prices.
The pork reserve has been a critical component of the Chinese government’s battle with inflation as it has allowed officials to create positive publicity around their attempts to manage the inflation. Without question, the potential for civil unrest that might follow continued inflation is a source of considerable concern for a government that is always weary of the many millions of Chinese who have not prospered under China’s economic miracle. The 30,000 tons of pork the government pumped into the market last September and the thousands more it injected just this past month in anticipation of the Chinese New Year festivities was as much a nod of deference to the hundreds of millions quietly toiling in the countryside as it was a move to placate the far more vocal urban population.
As distant as China’s pork problem may seem in the United States, Americans should be concerned about the ramifications of a nation of 1.3 billion people unable to raise enough pigs to satiate its enormous appetite. Outside of China, there is a great deal of concern over the side effects of the Chinese pig industries’ rapid transformation into a US style system of consolidated farms. Eager to improve production with new farms that boast populations of over 1,000 pigs in close quarters, new strains of the blue ear disease that ravaged the population last year are popping up, creating the potential for new super viruses that could inhibit continued growth in the pork industry.
China has already started to import U.S. pork to supplement its poor production last year, striking a deal with American pork producer, Smithfield Foods Inc. in September of last year to export 60 million pounds of pork. While some believe that the relatively small Smithfield deal will pave the way for greater U.S. penetration into the Chinese pork market, should there be another mass culling of Chinese pigs due to illnesses like blue ear disease, Americans can expect higher pork prices as China looks to the U.S. to meet its own market demand.
Perhaps of greater concern to Americans though is the fear that China could eventually respond to the increasing cost of producing domestic corn and livestock feed by beginning to import more from abroad. Should China elbow its way into the world grain trade, the combined effects of more corn being siphoned off for ethanol production and feeding China’s 500 million pigs could lead to soaring global grain prices.
Whether global grain prices rise substantially or not, should pig prices continue to skyrocket in China, expect this researcher to drop everything and follow in the footsteps of Wang Chao, a 22-year-old college junior here in China who last April dropped out of school to take up pig farming and cash in on what is quickly becoming a proverbial golden trough.
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133
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LIVESTOCKS / SWINE / Re: lets see!!!
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on: February 19, 2008, 03:23:10 PM
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sir, can i join? i want to post the picture of my small piggery. but i don't know how to upload it. can anyone teach me how. thanks.
http://www.imageshack.us/ 
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134
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LIVESTOCKS / SWINE / Re: lets see!!!
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on: February 19, 2008, 10:57:29 AM
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@master mikey
i can't see your farm the pic is toooooooo small. btw is that a farm? or a chapel?
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135
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LIVESTOCKS / SWINE / Re: Hog Farm Gate Price
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on: February 19, 2008, 10:53:38 AM
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HOG PRICE for this week of Feb 18 to Feb 24 2008Bulacan- 97 to 106 , Tarlac- 98 to100 , Rizal- 96 to 98 , Laguna- 95 , Cavite- 95 to 96 , Batangas- 96 to 98 , Quezon- 93, Pangasinan- 96 to 98 ,Pampanga - 98 to 102, Nueva Ecija - 97, La Union- 92 to 96 ,Naga- 85 to 90 ,Ilocos - 90 to 95 Mindoro - 78 to 80 , Bacolod- 79 to 80, Cebu- 83 to 87 ,Leyte - 87 , Ilo ilo- 75 to 80 , Dumagete- 78 ,Dipolog- 80 ,Aklan - 78 , Ozamis- 77 Cagayan de oro- 82 , Davao- 79 to 82 ,Davao Del Sur- 79 , Gensan- 81 to 84, Zamboanga- 76 to 78, Zamboanga Sibugay - 74 to 76, Pagadian - 78, Surigao - 75 Koronadal City - 80 to 82 
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