Penwood Dairy bigger and better following disastrous 2019 barn fire – The Carillon

2022-08-13 04:00:52 By : Ms. Sunny Cheung

Steinbach 19° C , Variably cloudy

The  resilience  of  the  farmer  in  the  face  of  adversity  is  evident  in  the  day-to-day  operations  of  any  agricultural  enterprise,  which  has  more  than  its  shares  of  ups  and  downs.  And  for  the  Penner  family,  the  decision  to  keep  going  after  a  disastrous  dairy  barn  fire,  was  never  in  doubt.

Gilmer  Penner  and  his  sons,  Lyenol,  Emery  and  Ellory,  were  already  planning  an  expansion  of  the  Pennwood  Dairy  operation  when  an  electrical  fault  or  spontaneous  combustion  claimed  their  barn  and  800  registered  Holsteins,  February  12,  2019.

During  a  tour  of  the  brand  new  Pennwood  facility,  northeast  of  Steinbach,  Gilmer  Penner  spoke  with  pride  of  the  family  spirit  which  saw  this  splendid  new  barn  rise  from  the  ashes. SUBMITTED PHOTO MLA Kelvin Goertzen congratulates Ellory and Emery Penner on their amazing new facility during an Open House at Pennwood Dairy in June.

“Our  family  is  the  footing  and  foundation  of  the  farm,  and  that  cannot  be  burned.  Their  spirit  cannot  be  destroyed  by  fire.”

The  expansion  in  the  works  was  already  on  the  drawing  board  before  the  fire  and  permits  to  double  the  size  of  the  Pennwood  facility  were  in  place.  While  the  insurance  company  were  having  the  site  cleaned  up,  the  people  at  Penfor  and  Penner  Farm  Services  got  to  work  redrawing  those  plans.

The  Pennwood  Dairy  Rotary  project  brought  in  multiple  professionals,  including  three  structural  engineers,  and  other  professionals  to  make  recommendations  for  the  various  systems  the  building  required.  Plumbing  and  electrical;  milk  management  and  storage,  herd  management,  chemical  flow,  manure  management,  feed  systems,  compressed  air  systems,  and  boiler  systems,  all  were  part  of  the  very  involved  planning  process. WES KEATING THE CARILLON Staff takes care of milking chores in the 80-cow rotary system, milking over 800 cows in three hours, at Pennwood Dairy.

Jennefer  Waskul,  the  designer  at  Penfor,  worked  closely  with  Penfor  project  manager  Rudy  Dyck,  Penner  Farm  Services  project  manager  Dennis  Thiessen,  and  site  supervisor  Andrew  Wiebe.

Waskul’s  design  included  details  from  each  engineer,  while  also  considering  the  requirements  of  the  equipment  for  HVAC,  plumbing,  electrical  and  ventilation  systems.  During  the  design  process,  multiple  systems  were  considered,  taking  into  account  animal  welfare,  herd  management  and  efficiency,  Waskul  said.

She  spent  many  hours  with  the  Penners  in  the  boardroom  at  Penfor,  working  on  the  design,  debating  details  and  dreaming  up  ways  to  make  things  work. WES KEATING THE CARILLON Gilmer Penner in the fire suppression equipment room at the new 305,000-square-foot Pennwood Dairy barn.

“We  took  the  interior  design  seriously,  considering  human  traffic,  comfort,  and  amenities.  An  operation  this  big  requires  a  fair-sized  staff.  I  worked  on  several  options  for  locker  rooms  before  we  all  settled  on  one.”

The  most  exciting  part  of  the  project  for  the  Penfor  designer  was  the  opportunity  to  combine  the  design  of  farming  systems  with  considerable  architectural  design  details.

Creating  a  curtain  wall  system  around  the  rotary  created  a  necessity  to  think  outside  the  box,  to  develop  a  structure  that  not  only  looks  amazing,  but  is  functional  as  well. WES KEATING THE CARILLON Dean Penner joins his dad, Ellory, Uncle Lyenol and Grandpa Gilmer for a photo with the vintage 1989 truck, which is still in perfect running condition, at Pennwood Dairy.

The  Penners  are  currently  milking  over  800  Holsteins  in  a  carousel  milking  setup,  which  is  itself  is  an  engineering  marvel  and  fascinating  to  watch  in  action.  The  cows  walk  up  to  the  gate  and  onto  the  milking  platform.  Staff  take  care  of  udder  cleaning  chores  and  attaching  milkers  from  a  walkway  below,  as  the  cow  moves  on  in  the  circle.  When  it  reaches  the  starting/finishing  point  of  the  circle,  the  cow  calmly  backs  off  the  carousel  and  returns  to  the  free  stall  barn  area.

The  new  barn  has  more  than  305,000  square  feet  in  all,  covering  almost  seven  acres,  under  one  roof.  Half  of  the  huge  barn  is  completely  finished  with  all  necessary  equipment  installed.  The  other  half  is  a  shell  at  this  point,with  a  view  of  a  future  expansion  of  the  herd.

Gilmer  said  the  barn  they  built  in  2017  was  completely  destroyed  in  less  than  an  hour. The 80-cow rotary milking system is housed in an impressive rotunda at the front of the Pennwood Dairy barn.

“In  45  minutes,  there  was  nothing  left,  and  800  cows  were  gone.”

The  new  barn  has  all  the  “bells  and  whistles”,  including  the  rotary  milking  system  which  takes  80  cows  around  every  11  minutes,  and  a  fire  suppression  system,  which  can  deliver  1,000  gallons  of  water  a  minute  anywhere  in  the  facility,  should  there  be  a  problem.

While  90  percent  of  the  materials  used  in  the  new  barn  are  non-flammable,  Gilmer  explains  that  because  it  is  considered  a  commercial  building  under  the  building  code,  the  expensive  fire  suppression  system  is  mandatory.

Milk  is  picked  up  twice  a  day  from  two  8,000-litre  bulk  tanks,  as  Pennwood  fills  its  32,000-litre  quota.

And  while  the  brand  new  facility  is  bigger  and  more  modern  that  the  one  it  replaced,  the  Penner  Brothers  partnership  continues  to  hum  along,  in  the  same  way  it  has  since  Lyenol,  Emery  and  Ellory  joined  their  father  in  a  partnership,  when  Pennwood  Dairy  was  incorporated  in  1995.

When  the  boys  are  asked  to  explain  their  individual  roles  in  making  the  partnership  flourish,  their  answer  is  an  echo  of  Lyenol’s  comment.

“We  do  as  little  as  we  have  to.”

On  a  serious  note,  Ellory  explains  that  while  the  three  brothers  all  have  their  areas  of  expertise  and  departments,  so  to  speak,  they  all  pitch  in  to  help  with  field  work  and  cropping,  and  wherever  else  they  are  needed.

Emery  takes  care  of  land  work  and  cropping,  and  may  be  the  most  mechanically  inclined  and  is  the  staff  mechanic.  He  also  handles  the  books,  dealing  with  payroll  and  finance.

Ellory  has  the  feeding  department  and  also  is  involved  with  fieldwork,  trucking  and  maintenance  to  some  degree.  He  makes  sure  everything  is  kept  running,  which  is  quite  a  challenge,  when  a  huge  herd  of  registered  Holsteins  is  fed  every  day  and  part  of  the  trucking  fleet  includes  a  vintage  1989  Freightliner.

Lyenol  is  the  herdsman  and  takes  care  of  breeding  and  milking,  and  does  land  work  as  well.

And  Gilmer  is  as  retired  as  most  farmers  ever  get,  but  still  gets  into  some  lively  discussions  with  his  sons  over  day-to-day  operations,  and  certainly  had  his  say  when  they  were  planning  the  new  barn.

The  899  milking  cows  at  Pennwood  are  all  registered  Holsteins,  as  were  all  the  animals  lost  in  the  fire.  The  Penners  have  been  milking  only  registered  Holsteins  since  1968.

The  replacements,  after  the  fire,  were  mostly  brought  in  from  Ontario  and  Quebec  with  a  few  purchased  locally,  Gilmer  said.

Throughout  the  latest  building  project,  Gilmer  Penner  attended  most  meetings  and  still  takes  an  active  role  at  the  farm.

“Operating  the  forage  harvester  is  the  most  fun  thing  to  do  on  the  farm.  I’d  rather  do  that  than  take  holidays.  But  we  do  winter  in  Phoenix.”

When  Gilmer  is  asked  if  it  is  time  for  him  to  start  slowing  down,  he  says  to  ask  the  boys.  Their  reply  is  more  diplomatic  than  informative.

“Some  things  yes,  some  things  no  and  some  things  he  should.”