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News: 150 days from birth is the average time you need to sell your pigs for slaughter and it is about 85 kgs on average.
 
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Author Topic: No wash pig technology  (Read 16358 times)
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mikey
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« on: December 14, 2008, 12:05:59 AM »

No-wash-pigs Technology: An Easy Way to Manage Piggeries
Keeping the piggery clean and odorless has always been a challenge for hog raisers but this is more difficult for small-scale growers who raise pigs in the backyard They need to wash their pigpens more often to keep their neighbor from complaining.

Ironically, the fetid odor of piggeries is not a problem in the Municipality of Barotac Viejo in Iloilo for hog raisers there are practicing the no-wash-pigs technology, a very easy and economical way to manage piggeries which has been initially practiced in the Integrated Farm System (IFS), a demonstration farm that the municipal government established in Barangay Vista Alegre.

In this technology which is based on earlier models, the pigpen is made of bamboo and nipa and its concrete flooring is slightly inclined to force water and waste to flow down to the drainage. The floor is also stocked with 6-inch bedding which contains equal amounts of river or beach sand, fresh rice hulls, and carbonized rice hulls or rice hull charcoal.

To prevent the inhibition of mange and mites in the rice hulls, a handful of salt should be added per square meter, but this is optional. A better option is to regularly add dried kakawate (Gliricidia sepium), neem (Azadirachta indica), and ipil-ipil (Leucaena leucocephala) leaves for these help fasten the processing of the bedding mix into organic fertilizer when it is removed from the pen at the end of the cycle.

Since the bedding mix absorbs foul odor, hog raisers don’t need to wash their pigs everyday. All they need to do is feed the pigs and spray the bedding with a probiotic solution weekly. The probiotic solution is made by dissolving two cups of concentrated indigenous microorganisms (IMO), which contains beneficial microorganisms like yeast, lactobacilli and molds, per 15 liters of water.

The bedding should be removed immediately after each cycle and allowed to age for two to three weeks before using it as an organic fertilizer. During the aging period, microorganisms in the bedding speed up the decomposition process, but the bedding will degrade faster if it is feed to earthworms.

“This technology is simple, not labor intensive, and can be adopted by house holds who want to raise pigs in small-scale. In fact, when the fishing slowed down the communities near the seashore have ventured into hog raising. They have built small pigpens in their backyard because they can manage the odor of the hogs by adopting the technology,” Mayor Raul Tupas said.

Even government employees became interested on hog raising as an additional source of income because of the no-wash-pigs technology. With the technology, “they simply feed and water their pigs in the morning before reporting in the office and attend to the pigs after office hours,” he added.

The technology is also beneficial for the pigs. Edward Jamola and Vicente Baticbatic, staff of the municipality’s hog project, said that when pigs are washed daily, they lose energy to keep their bodies warm after wetting.

The demonstration farm, on the other hand, would continue showcasing new farm technologies. “Soon, the staff of IFS will release a new technology on alternative feeding which utilizes local feed ingredients such as aerial potatoes, cassava, legumes, among others. Through this, dependence on expensive formulated commercial grower feeds would be lessened and likewise, the cost of production would be reduced,” Tupas said.

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japs
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« Reply #1 on: September 14, 2009, 04:18:23 PM »

hi mikey...tnx for sharing this one...this will be of great help to me as a backyard breeder...i will try this on my next batch...tnx again buddy...
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cousindear
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« Reply #2 on: February 03, 2010, 11:25:40 AM »

Gud day po, nice technology i want to try for the next batch of my fattening and its a big help for us a backyard farmer that have a hectic time in work always. by the way how to make a probiotic solution IMO? what is it where i can buy the chemicals?
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pig_noypi
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« Reply #3 on: February 03, 2010, 02:31:51 PM »

HOW TO MAKE
IMO (Indigenous Microoganisms)

1. Make a wooden box (9” X 12” X 3”).  You may also use one length (node to node) of bamboo as a container. Split the bamboo into  halves length wise.
   
2. Cooked a kilo of rice.  Put it in the wooden box or bamboo.
   
3. Cover the box/bamboo with clean sheet of paper and securely close it using a string.
   
4. Place the box under the bamboo leaves or forest.
   
5. Cover this with a plastic sheet to protect from rain water, insects and rodents.
   
6. Leave it for three days. Collect it and check if there are molds formed at the top of the rice.
   
7. Get the moldy rice from the container and place it in the clay jar.  Mix it with a kilo of crude sugar (Mascuvado) or Molasses.
   
8. Cover the jar with clean sheet of paper and securely close it using a string.
   
9. Place the jar in a cool or shaded place.
 
10.   Harvest the IMO after 7 days. A mud-like juice can be now used.  You may strain the concoction by allowing the mixture to flow through the net.  Do not squeeze out.

                                 
HOW TO USE
IMO (Indigenous Microoganisms)

1.Mix 2 tablespoon of IMO concoction to a liter of water

2.Spray it to the pig beddings (once a week.)
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aprilrose73
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« Reply #4 on: February 04, 2010, 08:53:39 PM »

hi pig_noypi,
       what kind of beddings?soil poba? thanks for the info.
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pig_noypi
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« Reply #5 on: February 05, 2010, 10:10:45 AM »

soil, ipa, sawdust pero mas ok daw kong sa soil
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kira
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« Reply #6 on: June 06, 2010, 01:59:18 PM »

   DO we really need to dig up the  floor(soil) up to 1m deep before putting the ricehull,CRH and river/beach sand beddings?Thank u!:)
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aleckxis
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« Reply #7 on: June 06, 2010, 04:11:05 PM »

   DO we really need to dig up the  floor(soil) up to 1m deep before putting the ricehull,CRH and river/beach sand beddings?Thank u!:)

kira.... no need to dig as 1m deep. you only need to bed the flooring made of concrete for about 6" thick made of 50-50 river sand or beach sand and rice hull. please go back to the top of this topic its very informative and i am so thankful I hope I can apply this in my small piggery when I come home early of september.
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kira
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« Reply #8 on: June 06, 2010, 08:38:14 PM »

   DO we really need to dig up the  floor(soil) up to 1m deep before putting the ricehull,CRH and river/beach sand beddings?Thank u!:)

kira.... no need to dig as 1m deep. you only need to bed the flooring made of concrete for about 6" thick made of 50-50 river sand or beach sand and rice hull. please go back to the top of this topic its very informative and i am so thankful I hope I can apply this in my small piggery when I come home early of september.


  Oh ok...Smiley I just thought that because we are planning to apply this DBS on our new piggery,no need for us to make a cement flooring.Only the walls.So ,would it just be ok if we are just goin' to put river/beach sand first as a flooring and the mixture for the beddings on top?Thanks again...Smiley
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pigro
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« Reply #9 on: June 25, 2010, 11:19:03 AM »

Kung halimbawang malayo po sa tabing dagat at ilog, ano pa ho bang ibang alternatibo na pwedeng e panghalo ho dun sa carnonized rice hull?

Tsaka po, kung halimbawang river/beach sand ang isa sa mga sangkap mo para sa iyong DBS, paano mo ito magawang pampataba later on?
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nemo
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« Reply #10 on: June 26, 2010, 09:09:12 PM »

graba, or buhangin pwede.

Yun dumi ang magiging pataba. yun sand kung kaya pa ihiwalay sa dumi pwede mo pa uli magamit para beddings .
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No pork for one week makes a man weak!!!
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r_chie88
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« Reply #11 on: July 08, 2010, 03:33:05 PM »

boss napakaganda ng topic na ito at malaking tulong sa mga katulad kong bago palang magsisimula ng ganitong business.... sana po mabigyan nyo pa kami ng more detailed procedure step by step pano gawin ito pong technology na ito... maraming samalat po
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singko
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« Reply #12 on: July 29, 2010, 10:40:02 AM »

pwede bang instead na river sand/beach sand e lupa na lang ang gamitin?
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pig_noypi
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« Reply #13 on: July 29, 2010, 05:55:47 PM »

lupa, sawdust, ipa, coco dust, corn stalk, wood chips etc............
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michael_96
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« Reply #14 on: September 15, 2010, 08:49:45 PM »

ang ginamit ko na bedding ay ung carbonized rice hull, wala po bang masamang epekto ito sa mga baboy kasi nahahaluan ang pagkain nila
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