Markus Schmid from Lonsee in Germany is calling a new welfare barn for pullet rearing his own. When it came to selecting the management system, the farmer from the Swabian Alb opted for a Big Dutchman bestseller: 50,000 pullets recently moved into the Natura Primus aviary and are now practising jumping and hopping.
We are proud of our customers
From family farms to commercial farms, we supply them all – anywhere in the world. For ten thousands of farmers Big Dutchman is THE supplier for poultry equipment of any kind. And it makes no difference whether the farm is raising ten thousand, twenty thousand, two hundred thousand or two million birds.
To us it is quality that matters, not only quantity. We always have a workable solution for any possible problem. And many of these have been successfully installed already.
Here you will find some concrete examples:
Lonsee: New poultry house for 50,000 birds
Pullet rearing | Farmer invests in welfare barn with Natura Primus aviary system
- flexible front grids ensure optimum accessibility and easy inspection;
- foldable partitions in the system every 2.40 metres (optionally every 1.20 metres) guarantee that moving in and out remains stress-free;
- height-adjustable perches above the trough protect against dirt;
- folding perches in front of the sections support switching from one level to the other during the day and can be folded against the system for the night so the birds roost in the system.
Most poultry producers move the days-old-chicks into the central tier so temperatures for the sensitive birds are even and high. For more freedom of movement, half of the flock is placed in the lower level after some days. A few weeks later, the birds leave the start tiers and can then move around the entire house.
Natura Primus is available in several variants: with two or three tiers, in two different widths (1600 mm and 1866 mm) and as a raised version (i.e. the entire floor area under the system is used as litter area and thus considered usable space). The top level serves as a resting zone as the pullets instinctively seek out the highest possible place at night.