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Purchases Must Have Purpose: 4 Contract Hog Growers Discuss Tough Decisions

Deciding where to invest your hard-earned dollars in your farming operation is not easy. In times of tight margins, purchases must have purpose.

Four contract hog growers share insight into how they determine where to put their resources, what holds them back from making big investments and what they want to invest in next on the farm. The growers include Andy Evers of Union Mills, Ind., Tony Howard of Logansport, Ind., Tiffany Nagai of Knox, Ind., and Dustin Ripberger of Lewisville, Ind.

What is the biggest determining factor when you make an investment for the farm?
Evers: If I’m going to purchase something big, I need to see a return on investment — whether equipment (shorter return) or property (may not see the return but next generation will). To me, I’m thinking about the purchases I make working for me, but also with what the next generation wants to do later on.

Howard: Deciding if we need the purchase now or if it can wait until interest rates are lower and commodity prices are higher.

Nagai: Since it’s just my husband and I with the grain operation and contract pigs, we are both busy and want to make investments that speed things up. Time is very valuable. For example, how can we save time handling manure? We had two 5,000-gallon tankers and hauled out manure in those tanks. We recently decided to invest in a drag line system. It was more money than two tanks, but in the long run, it has saved us a lot of time and fuel. What used to take us 30 days now gets done in three days. Time commitment is a huge factor for us.

Ripberger: The biggest determining factor is return on investment. When it comes to equipment, I usually look for something that we pay for custom services. If it’s a job we can handle, and the cost of investment makes sense with what we pay for the custom services, then we trust that analysis. When it comes to infrastructure, that’s a little more difficult. I usually try to take a broader approach and get a feel for the future and what will serve me the best.

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In this special episode of The Swine it Podcast Show Canada, marking World Veterinary Day, we welcome Dr. Daniel Gascho, swine production veterinarian and partner at Four Star Veterinary Service. He discusses how farrowing decisions must align with each farm's business model, why labor execution defines protocol outcomes, and how PRRS strategies should be tailored to each operation's health status and market position. Listen now on all major platforms!

"Protocols are only as strong as the labor that executes them, and that final step is what separates a plan on paper from results in the barn."

Meet the guest: Dr. Daniel Gascho / daniel-gascho-4a1bbb242 is a swine production medicine veterinarian and partner at Four Star Veterinary Service, based in Indiana. He focuses on individualized health strategies, vaccination planning, biosecurity, and practical protocol implementation across farrowing, nursery, and grow-finish systems.