Ryt-way opens to reclosable pouches for pet foods

New horizontal form/fill/seal machinery helps contract packager Ryt-way build its budding pet food business. Ryt-way's first customer is Hill's Pet Nutrition, for 1- and 2-lb stand-up pouches for dog treats.

A computer combination weighing system uses scale buckets that deliver accurate fill weights
A computer combination weighing system uses scale buckets that deliver accurate fill weights

In recent years, manufacturers have embraced the stand-up pouch for an increasing variety of products. Makers of dry pet foods, in particular, have nuzzled up to the flexible pack.

Northfield, MN-based Ryt-way Industries wanted to pounce on the purring pet food/pet treat market. "In the past, our focus has been in stand-up, reclosable zipper packaging for human food products," explains Tim Hickey, vice president of sales and marketing for the contract packager/private-label manufacturer.

"But we saw that one of the leading-edge technologies was formed, filled and sealed pouches for animal treats," he notes. "Because of that, we dedicated a facility for the production and storage of those products, totally separate from our human food operations."

That 18ꯠ sq' facility in Lakeville, MN, produces nothing but pet foods. Other Ryt-way plants in Minnesota pack products like microwave popcorn, snacks and other dry foods.

Ryt-way is so confident of its future in pet food packing that this summer it doubled the Lakeville plant's size to provide more storage space.

First North American user

At the heart of the Lakeville plant's packaging operation is an FBM (flat bag machine) 20 horizontal form/fill/seal machine made by Laudenberg Packaging Machinery in Germany. Laudenberg is represented in the U.S. by Profile Packaging (Sarasota, FL). A Profile representative says Ryt-way is the first company in North America to use the machine.

Added in mid-'97, the FBM 20 produces about 15 different SKUs, for product sizes ranging from 6 oz to 2 lb. The contract packager says the machine produces stand-up, zippered pouches up to 113/4" W x 133/4" H. Ryt-way runs the machine at 30 to 60 pouches/min, depending on bag size and product density, although the equipment is rated to function at higher speeds.

"We purchased the machine because it was exactly what we needed for some of the products we were working with," explains Tom Chlan, maintenance manager. When the Lakeville plant opened in '95, Ryt-way used it as both a warehouse and to pack pet food on two hf/f/s machines and one vertical f/f/s unit. All three machines continue to function admirably for Ryt-way, with the vf/f/s operating next to the Laudenberg. The two older hf/f/s units were relocated to a separate Ryt-way plant that packs food products.

'Stand-up' customer

According to Hickey, when the FBM 20 was purchased it was the only machine that could produce a pouch large enough for Hill's Pet Nutrition's 2-lb pet treats. Hill's was the first customer to market packs made on the Laudenberg machine. The FBM 20 produces resealable, stand-up pouches containing either 1- or 2-lb quantities of Hill's Science Diet® Treats for dogs, as well as a variety of pet foods and treats that Hill's exports. The machinery was producing export products at the time of PW's visit.

Topeka, KS-based Hill's, a maker of premium dog and cat food, markets its products through specialty retail pet stores and veterinary offices, but not through supermarkets or mass merchandisers. Its Science Diet Treats were introduced in late '93, packed in composite canisters. Several factors led Hill's to make the switch to the flexible pouch in mid-'97.

"We were in one size, a five-hundred-gram container," explains John Munchoff, group marketing director for the Hill's Science Diet line. "We knew different households had different size needs so we came out with a one- and two-pound size, as well as a four-ounce trial size that offers consumers a low-cost way to try the product." The 1- and 2-lb pouches offer resealable zippers and are filled on the FBM 20; the 4-oz pillow pack sample size is filled on the vf/f/s unit and is not resealable.

Steve Vogel, a senior packaging engineer for Hill's, adds, "We were restricted height-wise and in diameter by the canister. We were in a five-inch-diameter can already; so any larger diameter would have been hard for the consumer to grip. And all the equipment in our plant was restricted to an eight-inch canister height, so we couldn't go any taller," he points out.

Another reason for the change to the pouch, Munchoff says, "was from an image point of view. The graphics on the plastic film are far superior to what we were able to get before," he explains. "There is also more space on the pouch for graphics than there was on the canister. And there's more flexibility for stores to market the pouch because it can be sold on the shelf, on hooks, or on clip strips."

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