Day 092 - 27 Feb 95 - Page 59
1
2 MR. JUSTICE BELL: You come from Mexico. Have you played
3 football?
4 A. Yes.
5
6 Q. Because the standard goal is 24 feet 8 yards.
7 A. Yes, sorry. You are right. Then I think it is 40.
8
9 Q. That does not seem very much to me.
10 A. You are right. It is 40.
11
12 MR. MORRIS: Have a think about what the average shed would be
13 in size?
14 A. I have that information. I made a conversion from
15 pounds and square feet to kilograms per square metre.
16 I have it in my briefcase.
17
18 Q. Please go ahead.
19 A. I did not write the front, but I wrote 20,000 square
20 feet which is equal to 1800 square metres. There is
21 22 ----
22
23 Q. What is 20,000 square feet, sorry?
24
25 MR. JUSTICE BELL: 1800 square metres.
26 A. It is square metres.
27
28 MR. MORRIS: What is that, sorry?
29
30 MR. JUSTICE BELL: This is the area of the standard broiler
31 shed, is it?
32 A. Yes.
33
34 MR. MORRIS: 20,000 square feet?
35 A. Yes, which equals 1800 square metres. I estimated the
36 maximum which was 6.5 pounds times 22,000 birds. That gave
37 me a total of 65 making a conversion from pounds to
38 kilograms, 65,000 kilograms, which ended up as being 36.1
39 kilograms per square metre.
40
41 Q. That is the kind of standard, is it, that is an average for
42 an average shed? That is a typical shed?
43 A. Yes, the square feet.
44
45 Q. So the 36.1 would be a typical shed stocking density?
46 A. That was the maximum I estimated.
47
48 Q. The maximum in a typical shed?
49 A. Yes.
50
51 Q. That would be a typical maximum in a shed?
52 A. Yes.
53
54 Q. What day was that?
55 A. What day?
56
57 Q. What day in the cycle?
58 A. That was the very last day where I estimated the very
59 highest weight which was 6.5 pounds. I do not believe that
60 anybody else in the world can be as efficient, as
