This robotic coop keeps chickens on the move

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The chickens on Manners Farms were happier, healthier, and tastier after a trial run of Northern Ontario’s first fully automated pasture barn this past summer.

Farming couple Zach and Chelsea Manners are the first in the North to follow the burgeoning trend toward farming automation on their 160-acre poultry farm in the heart of Temiskaming Shores’ agricultural district. But they likely will not be the last.

“It’s 100 per cent changed our routines,” said Zach. “I don’t have to get up quite so early to do chores. It doesn’t get to the point of burnout so it lets you enjoy farming.”

Before buying their Rova Barn, manufactured by the Manitoba-based company Ukkö Robotics, Zach had been tied down to a “daily grind” of feeding the birds several times a day in a “controlled feed” program to prevent the negative health effects that result from over-feeding.

“With the old system,” said Zach, “I was weighing feed every day, driving out to the pasture with the tractor, and filling the waters.”

After seeing and tentatively pricing the Rova Barn online, the Manners thought they would have to put off buying one until they managed to save enough money.

But the couple were able to acquire the technology much sooner as a result of receiving a grant through the Sustainable New Agri-Food Products and Productivity (SNAPP) program administered by the Rural Agri-Innovation Network (RAIN).

A division of the Sault Ste. Marie Innovation Centre, RAIN strives to enhance farming and food sector business growth by developing initiatives through innovative research and agricultural development projects.

SNAPP provides individual applicants like Manners Farms with up to $10,000 at 50 per cent cost-share towards the purchase of equipment or technology that will allow for enhanced productivity and efficiency through innovation.

“Had we not got the grant, we would have had to wait a year, maybe two,” Zach said. “It was a big help.”