Wildmans bring transparency to swine industry

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Chuck Wildman

(Correction: Chuck was not a national pork board member, but served as a delegate and welfare committee member)

SOUTH SOLON, Ohio — A big change is taking place at the Wildman family swine farm, Standing Oaks Enterprises, in southwestern Ohio.

Chuck Wildman and his wife, Carol, and their adult children are in the process of converting the farrowing (birthing) barns into nurseries that will soon house 4,000 head of piglets, to be purchased from Legacy Farm in Fair Oaks, Ind.

The Wildmans are the seventh and eighth generation on the family farm and have been raising swine since 1985. Chuck Wildman has served as a welfare committee member for the National Pork Board and was an outspoken member of the Ohio Livestock Care Standards swine subcommittee that helped create new care standards for raising hogs in Ohio.

The move to a feeder-based operation will replace the family’s breeding and birthing program with something more efficient — and much more transparent.

Consumer focus

In Indiana, where the pigs will now be born, Legacy Farm has partnered with a new nonprofit called Fair Oaks Pig Adventure — a consumer-based project designed to show people what goes on inside swine barns.

The project is based on the success of Fair Oaks Dairy — a tourist-friendly 30,000-cow dairy farm located about an hour south of Chicago along Interstate 65. The dairy alone draws a half-million visitors a year.

The “Fair Oaks Pig Adventure” will rely on the same concept, but with pigs. Its founders are calling it “the pig equivalent of a Disney-like adventure,” full of interactive displays involving hog barns and everything it takes to raise hogs.

Construction is under way and the public tourism areas are expected to open in early summer.

Fair Oaks Dairy — and now Fair Oaks Swine — are all tied to the greater trend in the swine and livestock industry, to provide more openness about how food is produced. And at a time when many consumers are unfamiliar with modern farming practices.

“I think that we, as a country, have gone from an agrarian to an urban society, and there’s really been a lack of knowledge or a lack of experiential knowledge of where our food comes from,” said Jon Hoek, general manager of Legacy Farm. “We want to be a leader in showcasing why agriculture has to be efficient, why agriculture uses technology and, in some cases, why family farms have to be so large.”

By the time the pigs are born and trucked to the Wildman farm in Ohio, they’ll be several hours away from Fair Oaks Pig Adventure. The Wildman farm won’t be set up for visitors — per se — but it’s not stopping the family from doing a few things along the Fair Oaks line, and trying to share more of what goes on inside the barns.

Video cameras

To do this, Chuck and his oldest son, Sam, 22, have installed four digital video cameras inside their barns, so they can watch what goes on from a computer screen or their cell phones.

The Wildmans installed the cameras in the summer of 2012, following recommendations by animal welfare experts like Temple Grandin.

It’s been a learning process so far, and one of the things the Wildmans have learned is to pick the camera location carefully. As soon as they put the cameras up, a bad storm blew them down, and there were some malfunctions related to moisture damage.

But with some adjustments, the family has found the right locations within the barns and the cameras now work. Chuck figured his cost in the project has been about $2,500 — not cheap, but worthwhile.

“That doesn’t sound uneconomical to me,” he said. “A new tire on your tractor would get you $2,500 pretty quickly.”
And more than a new tire — the Wildmans get to share more of what happens inside their barns, as recorded on a live camera.
“The name of the game is transparency,” Chuck said.

If a visitor to Fair Oaks has a question about where the hogs end up, Chuck said he would “like for the presenter there to say ‘well, let me show you’ and be able to pull up live footage of the barn, so they can see it.”

Reaching out

Sam Wildman is a senior agricultural communications student at Ohio State University. He shares his dad’s philosophy toward transparency by blogging and through Facebook and Twitter.

He manages a personal blog called Reflections from a Country Boy and is a freelance writer for swineweb.com. The videos and pictures taken on the farm give him the opportunity to reach non-farmers.

“I can take those images, I can take those videos and I can throw them right there on the blog,” he said. “It allows me to take the farm to the consumers. There’s more desire for that.”

The Wildmans are still unsure exactly how the videos will be used, but they’re exploring all options. One that’s new, is the possibility of using the live videos as a way of meeting pork quality assurance requirements. Chuck Wildman is hoping he can convince the national pork board of a video’s value for assuring quality.

Sam said the paperwork for quality assurance is often cumbersome, and if there’s video of what’s going on in the barns, it could reduce some of the time spent documenting conditions.

The videos can also be used to monitor the animals when the farmer is away from the barn, a handy tool since he can pull up the video from virtually anywhere where there is Internet.

Good for the animals

And, the videos will likely help keep the swine healthier and free of human-carried bacteria. Swine are especially susceptible to human-carried germs and a sickness can easily spread throughout the barn and cause the farm to temporarily shut down.

The Wildmans are planning an intentional shutdown once all their breeding sows are removed, to clean and sanitize the barn before the arrival of piglets.But to shut down a barn is expensive — takes several weeks — and is something to avoid.

“If I let a visitor come in and they happen to bring something with them totally unintentional, the only way I can get rid of it is to break the system. That becomes economically punitive.”

The Wildmans could have chosen to expand their sow operation, instead of converting to a nursery. But Chuck said the added benefit of transparency and efficiency they will get from Legacy Farm made that option more favorable.

“Larger operations can be so much more efficient in management and labor and the mechanics and the quality of the pigs,” Chuck said. “I save the labor and the risk and the management. It should simplify my life and, hopefully, financially put me in a better situation.”

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2 COMMENTS

  1. Chris,

    Thanks for taking time to right about the Wildmans and the Swine industry. We are fortunate to have a family such as the Wildmans who understand social networking and do an excellent job portraying our industry in such an honest/ transparent fashion

  2. “The project is based on the success of Fair Oaks Dairy — a tourist-friendly 30,000-cow dairy farm located about an hour south of Chicago along Interstate 65”. HA!!
    In case any of the rest of us smaller livestock producers are wondering why we continue to have a tougher and tougher time staying profitable in this “industry”, look no further than your friendly neighborhood super-farm. Complete with giant barns, 24 hr. survielance, manure lagoons, on-farm vets, cheap labor, and nutritionists, throw in some government subsidies to keep it all afloat and it makes a heck of a show. Sheesh, what a joke.
    We raised hogs my entire childhood, farrow to feeder and farrow to finish – hamp/duroc crosses- and the last sows left in the nineties when there wasn’t a dime to be made. Without the advantages a huge farm has (in terms of contracting giant amounts of feed, subsidies, and grants), most guys can’t afford to raise the feed it takes to run a successful confinement hog operation.
    Take warning dairymen, it’ll be you guys next. Look at the the writing on the wall, the pork business tells us everything we need to know. Fluid milk with a month long shelf life, who needs the local 100 cow dairy when you can ship it from CA all across the entire U.S. and put it on wal-mart shelves in every state? Combine this with the ethanol-inflated corn prices, high fuel costs, inflated land costs, and ridiculous fluctuations in milk prices, how do you expect to survive?
    I cringe everytime I see an article like this.

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