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Livelihood Projects

JERRY MOBILE PIGS (JMP) and PARTNERS
 Ang JERRY MOBILE PIGS (JMP) and PARTNERS ay isang

 uri ng non government livelihood project na nagbibigay ng libre na biik (piglets) sa pamilya ng OFW abroad na nakatira sa Probinsiya ng Luzon at Visayas. Ang layunin ay tutulong sa mga kababayang Pilipino na magkaroon ng maliit na kabuhayan sa pamamagitan ng pagpapa-aalaga ng 1 or 2 babaeng biik.

 Sa interesadong pamilya ng OFW's na may kulungan ng baboy sa Pilipinas (backyard piggery) ay
 magbibigay po ang JMP and Partners ng 1 or 2 babae na biik sa kanila at ito ay kanilang aalagaan hanggang sa maging inahin baboy at manganganak mga ito.Ang nag aalaga ang bibili ng feeds, vitamins at pa bakuna sa alaga niyang biik hanggang maging inahin baboy.

 Ang nag aalaga rin ang bibili ng artificial insemination o bahala na mag pakasta sa lumalanding dumalagang baboy niya. Pagka panganak ng inahing baboy ang JMP and Partners ay kukuha
 lamang po ng isang biik na babae pagkawalay sa inahin.

 Ang maging parte ng JMP and Partners ay kanyang ipapaalaga ulit sa interesadong kapitbahay ng nag aalaga o kamag anak nito na nakatira sa probinsiya at kaibigan na interesado sa pag aalaga rin ng baboy. Ang sobrang biik na anak ng inahing baboy ay mapapunta na lahat sa nag aalaga o bilhin
 ng JMP and Partners depende sa mapag usapan.

  Ganun din kung manganak uli ang inahing baboy, kukuha na naman ang JMP and Partners ng isang biik na babae pag mawalay sa inahing baboy at ang sobra ay mapapunta na naman sa nag aalaga ng inahing baboy. Itong proseso na ito ng partehan ay paulit ulit na mangyari hanggang sa 5 beses
 hanggang 7 beses na manganak ang inahing baboy.

  Ngayon, kung ayaw ng manganak ang inahing baboy sa kada-hilanang matanda na ito at wala ng kakayanan na magbuntis,ang JMP and Partners at ang nag aalaga ay magpasya ng katayin
 nalang ang baboy pagkatapos itong maging mataba muna. Ang kalahati na karne nito ay mapapunta sa JMP and Partners at ang kalahati naman ay para sa Nag aalaga nito.

 Ganun lang po kasimple ang Usapan!!! Maraming Salamat po.
 God Bless Us...


 Ang requirements:
 submit 2 (front and side view) picture

 ng backyard piggery po ninyo at ibigay ang sukat.Para sa karagdagang tanong ay makipag ugnayan lang po kayo sa Jerry Mobile Pigs and Partners...

Mga Sakit at Kaukulang Lunas

Sa Bahaging ito ay tatalakayin natin ang ibat ibang mga sakit ng mga biik, at inahing baboy. Bibigyan natin na karampatang solusyon ang ibang mga Karamdamang madalas umaatake sa mga Inahin at biik.

Mula sa panahong ito ay nag sisimula pa lamang ang mga sintomas. mga uri ng sakit. at mga dahilan ng pag kakaroon nito.

Feeding Strategy For Piglets

FEEDING STRATEGY FOR PIGLETS

Jerry Mobile Pigs and Partners
by: Jerry Sales Gumpad

March 4, 2010

Discussions:

I believe that to build a piglet feeding program one must first look at management ractices and current production levels in the system. Questions such as

1.) Is the birth to wean death loss large enough to apply a milk replacer feeding

strategy? There are several stratagies that may be used, dependent upon
production levels and economics (ie.. contract piglet pricing or retained ownership)

2.) How much variance is there in piglet wt. at weaning?

Age and weight at weaning are important factors in determining piglet nutritional

requirements. Physiologically there is a large difference in the level of development

of the digestive system in weaned piglets. A 10lb piglet is at a different development

level than a 12 lb piglet, and should be fed accordingly. An 8 lb piglet is even less

developed. Also what health challenges are present in the herd, ie E-coli, cocci, or

other pathogens. There is not one nutrition strategy that works in all production

systems, due to individual system variences.


There are also numerous new technologies available in the swine nutrition industry
today that were not available even 4-5 yrs ago. Some show huge gain and feed efficiency

improvements. A 4-6% improvement in nursury feed conversion efficiency equates

to approximatly 5% reduction in nursery product sales for a commercial feed

manufacturer.

Re: Feeding strategy for piglets

This is probably my favourite area of swine production for several reasons.
Although all areas are important, this particular area, how well the sows are

fed, what type of energy, protein and milking additives are used in the feed,

whether the feed contains products like Bio-Mos, do myco-toxins exist in the

feed, what is the oldest day the piglets can be weaned,how well were the sows

farrowed, are details of farrowing required properly...mainlly those. Right here
right now can determine how fast all the pigs get to market, how well that

mama sow returns to estrus, will determine if this operation is being managed

with profitable goals in mind, or just a job. So yea this is a great question. If

your sow is being managed properly and fed right, you should be weaning

19 day old pigs that are inform and all have a minimum weight of 15 lbs/each.

When they are weanedlike this a lot of expensive 1st stage feed is not required

and will not help growth. Growing patterns are established early. If you want

to talk to an expert in this area talk to Mark Peters of Manitoba, this is also

his favourite production area.
Re: Feeding strategy for piglets

Always a good start is a good finish……..Environment, Health and Nutrition are as the musketeers, “one for all and all for one. We need to understand the following point to have good results.

• Understand the growth potential of the pigs. See weaning age and variation of

age and weight at weaning. According with this we can make a plan of feeding

budget, health plan and management of variation for a good environment for this quality of pigs.

• Economics is the king to have a success of a production system. The programs

mentioned above have to be evaluated with cost benefit. Remember that is a

different ways to pill a potato, we need to choose the most that fit to our situation.

• Understanding what is the transition. One of the major stressors for the pig is the

sudden change from liquid diet to solid diet and all happen when the pig is placed in

a new environment and mixed where hi has to fight. The first 3 days is very

important for management. Nutrition we have to develop diets that help during this

transition. An also we need to understand the morphologic change in the intestines

that we have to manage and do not provoke health problems.

• We need to understand the pig behavior. Stock person is essential to understand

the natural behavior. We need to have a good management plan to receive pigs

during the first week (water, feed and environment).

• Nutrition. The first week after weaning is crucial in nursery management. It is

the period of adaptation of the young pig. The nutrition program that we chose is

essential to minimize the stress on the adaptation. Use adequate nutrients to

help in the digestion of a changing morphology of the intestine.

• A good record keeping system. This is very important for a continuous

improvement. If you know you can change, if you guess you will be lost.


Re: Feeding strategy for piglets
Protein Content, Feed Intake and Daily Gain Expected for

Growing and Finishing Pigs.Pig Size Protein Content of Ration (%)

Average Daily

Feed Intake (lb)

Expected

Daily Gain

Creep feed (suckling), 5 to 40 lb 22

.5

0.70

Nursery diet (weaned), 10 to 20 lb.

22

0.30

Pig Starter (weaned), 20 to 40 lb

18 - 20

1.00

0.90

Grower, 40 to 125 lb

16

4.25

1.50

Finisher, 125 to 240 lb

13 - 14

7.00

1.80

From personal experience Ive found that from creep (5lbs) to grower

(100lbs) 16% protein is sufficient since above that scour control becomes

an issue. Lets face it the best feed in the world will do no good to the

animal if it passes thru the system before it can be absorbed. This also

raises the issue what benifit are we providing the animal if we make sick

it just to give it an antidote. How do we in good conscience tell a farmer

or future farmer (child with a show pig) an ultra high protein feed will

make champions if they dont mind the added time and expense in man

hours and medications involved in caring for a sick pig.


Re: Feeding strategy for piglets

Milk replacer will never replace the sow.

Re: Feeding strategy for piglets

The piglet nutrition begins during gestation. Factors including total pigs

born, pigs born live, stillborn pigs, piglet uniformity,and piglet wt as well

as the piglet tissue composition, energy status, and immune status may

all be influenced proir to parturation through sow nutrition. Then sow
nutrition also greatly effects milk composition and the piglets preformance.

I believe we are asking an amazing task for sows to milk enough to

produce 275-300 lbs of piglet at weaning per litter. The sow may never be

replaced, but it is also hard to find those perfect sows.Numerous things

get in the way os a sow being the perfect rearing machine. There is nearly

always a place for strategic milk use. Sow deathloss with no where to

transfer piglets, sows with fevers resulting in milk composition changes

or reduced production, as well as for use with a genetically valuable

sows who may have udder problems, but still farrow a laarge number

born live. From there one must look at the economics of Helping those

sows and the return on that investment.

Re: Feeding strategy for piglets

Id like to make a comment for your consideration as regards to feeding

strategies for piglets. My comment refers to the use of rheological clays,

in paticular rheological sepiolite, in the nutrition of the very young piglet.

Weve some practical experience offering free choice a pure micronised

rheological sepiolite, without any additional product added, to newborn

piglets. They have quite an interesting behaviour tasting or mouthing it

when they are about 7d old. We estimate an intake around 5g/p/d at

beginig raising to 10g/p/d after 2 wks. Even though piglets like it, we

dont want them to over eat the product and it seems to be a good way to

get the piglets to drink water faster and this helps reducing GI disorders,

diarrhoea, competition while suckling... at the end what we gaet is a

healthier and cleaner piglet that is able to get better profit from the

prestarter feed. The product is offered in Rotecna type dishes twice

a day to minimise spoilage of the product. Some farmers also use

directly on the warm matt at around 50g/d, until piglets learn how to

eat from the dish.Water holding capacity of this rheological clay is greater than 600%

and we think that this is of physiological relevance for the nutrition of

the very young piglet. Wed like to learn about the relevance of the

water for digestion but theres very little scientific/technical information

regarding this point when piglets start eating significant amonuts of dry

feed alternatively to the maternal milk.

Re: Feeding strategy for piglets

About feeding piglets, we remove the piglets from parent on 14th day

and allow them for milking for few times only.(say 3 or 4 times in a day)

On same day we start feeding them with Peanut oil cake (which is a

byproduct in Peanut oil production). We mix enough water with peanut

oil cake, wait for about 4 hours. By this time it becomes half solid and

half liquid. With this mixture we add mineral mixture and a tonic and

then feed in small bowls. All the piglets start eating the feed. They get

chance to take mothers milk as well. Then we add high protein grains

with this as they grow more. Growth rate is ok and this has helped us

in weaning losses. Piglets are removed from the mother permanently

on 30th day.

Re: Feeding strategy for piglets


Proper gestating and lactating feed would able to produce bigger

and stronger piglets. A good start is a better finisher. However proper

piglet nutriton should be followed based on young gut nutrition and

immunity aspect. This would include proper choices of raw materials

and processes. Using other feed additives to enhance growth and

immunity is a key. Take note also the quality of water and management.

Re: Feeding strategy for piglets

The main idea for the piglet life (birth to wean) is to drink as much

as possible milk which is the best product he can have to get good starts

in life. On the other hand high milk production by sow will increase body

condition of the sow at weaning (mean she will have work a lot so she wont

be too fat and especially first farrow sow will have been trained to produce

milk at the next parity). At this is not questioning at all, YES piglet’s quality

start during gestation, by sow and feed management. This gestation

management is also the moment where the sow is getting ready for the

following farrowing and 21 or 28 days of lactation! So not too fat to farrowed

easily and not to thin to produce and support high level milk period.
As we all known (people who work in farm) water quality is always an

issue so its good to not be in the rush to have piglets at the water nipples!

This can reduce risk of diarrhea. The best practice in production still good

process of adoption and splitting piglets during the first 48 hours of their life.

For it, people must be able to recognize good milking sow of the group to

place on her all small one then to count working teats by sow to place

adequately number by sow.

We known also some “prolific” genetic that increase numbers born alive

but decrease average weight by piglet born. Here is even more important

to calibrate properly each litter to ensure also that each individual get

access to colostrums! Then high number by sow are usually pushing producer

to early wean part of each litter. Today this early wean practice is easily

done with 5 to 7 days old piglets and it work quite well by following basics

process: warm, dry, clean area warm, clean diet…different good feed are

available on the market to succeed BUT still, the producer “talent” will do

the best! As we do have several units over 30 piglets wean by sow by year,

it’s easy to understand that they do need early weaning! For large scale

herd, producer should prefer good, rustic genetic, to avoid risk of this early

wean management as it’s almost impossible to stabilize results.

So during lactation priority MUST be given to sow milk. Crape feed can

be given after 10 days essentially to get piglet ready to dry feed in nursery.

This crape feed must be given on very small quantity but very often during

the day (5 to 7 times by day) to increase freshness of the feed in the

draught. Also more often you give feed more often they will come the

feeder to play and eat some feed at the same time…basics!

Then piglet quality and growth will depend on the length of lactation.

At 21 days or 28 days old for weaning ,difficulties are not the same

in nursery! In the nursery too: feeder and water quality, producer

or employee quality, ventilation or building quality will make differences!

for the story: I had to managed different unit (5000 to 2500 sows ) then

we had 2 nursery of 8000 places each which was getting same piglets,

same feed, had same building… but huge differences in death rate and

growth… The only problem was the manager! As wean is a multiplication

of stress (cut of the milk so lost of milk heat and mother heat as well, new

building, new piglets in pen… is very important to find right tunes as soon

as possible to not lost too much time in growth. The management is the

more difficult tool in producing pigs in general and even more difficult

during the first 3-4 week of nursery.

• Lot’s of nutritionist know what good for the pig and we find huge

possibilities on the feed market today,

• We also known troubles around water quality and here too lot’s

of possibilities available on the market, depending on the situation

(PH, iron…) BUT only the producer has the final choice and the

evaluation must be done unit by unit and not

because of the neighbor choice!

Feeding program is a big chapter because is the most expensive

part of pig production expenses, so everyone always come with

the “best” formula!...but like some of you remind it, economic is essential

in the practice. By experience “on field” we are lots to agree that the

following program is working: NURSERY 3 steps = starter, first age,

second age. FINISHER 2 steps: grower, finisher. Then each unit or

nutritionist will adapt regarding genetic, building, feeding system, raw

material, part of the world…etc. I personally like the idea to reduce

as much as possible feed stage during the growing period as it’s resolving

lot’s of troubles in management so automatically in production results.

Requirements

MGA Pangunahing requirements Upang Makasali sa Programa ng Jerry Mobile Pigs

submit 2 (front and side view) picture
ng backyard piggery ninyo at ibigay ang sukat.



Para sa karagdagang tanong ay makipag ugnayan lang po kayo
sa Jerry Mobile Pigs and Partners...

Mga Teknik Sa Pag aalaga ng Inahing Baboy

 The scale of environmental devastation caused by factory farms is huge and varied. Intensive animal breeding requires ever-growing quantities of water, animal feed, energy and chemical inputs (1). The concentration of thousands of animals creates an unmanageable amount of waste. The manure that is used as organic fertilizer in smaller holdings, becomes a dangerous pollutant. In many pig factory farms for example, the waste is dumped after being mixed with water in lagoons and then sprayed on croplands. This blend contains