Posted on 12/29/2014 7:09:53 PM PST by barmag25
Its that time of year again: feeder pig time! If theres anything I love as much as raising pigs, its getting others hooked on raising pigs. Im like a drug dealer who deals exclusively in swine.
And it works because the pigs themselves are like potato chips, you cant have just one. No, literally, you cant (shouldnt) have just one. Pigs are incredibly social animals, which is why we sell them in groups of two or more. Not only does having another pig around increase their mental and emotional health, they thrive physically when there is another animal of their kind as well. Being competitive animals, they eat more, grow faster, and are generally both healthier and happier with a little friendly competition.
So what besides two or more pigs do you need to raise feeder pigs in your backyard?
Fences.
When it comes to fencing you have a few options. Hog panels are probably the simplest and cheapest if you have no existing infrastructure and plan to keep your pigs in a small to medium sized pen. Made of 4 and 5 gauge steel, panels are heavy duty enough to keep hogs in without too much extra reinforcement and can be attached to both wood fence posts and metal t-posts. They come in 16 foot lengths and for two feeder pigs a square pen made of four panels will work as long as the ground theyre on drains well. Bigger is fine as well, but smaller wont work as well. Panels usually cost between twenty and thirty dollars each. Panels come in many heights and designs. Hog panels are shorter than cattle panels and have smaller holes on the bottom to prevent escapee piglets.
For large pens, paddocks, and pastures hog panels can be prohibitively expensive. For these electric or a combination of electric and woven wire or field fencing is best. Like panels, field fencing comes in a variety of heights. For pigs the 32 and 39 inch heights is usually enough, though in some places they can be harder to find. The price difference between these and the taller, 4 foot woven wire fencing of the same design is usually incremental so choose whichever you prefer and can find easily. Because woven wire is not as sturdy as panels on its own you will either want to reinforce it with wood rails or with a strand of electric on the inside to keep the pigs from pushing through or rooting under it.
Electric fencing can also be used alone, but the pigs will need to be trained to it first. Pigs lack a reliable back-up button so when they first get shocked theyre prone to running through an electric fence if there is not anything there to visually remind them to back up instead. By running the electric first through a small corner of a hard pen or on the inside of woven wire the pigs learn what the electric wire is with the reinforcement of a visual fence. Once theyve learned to avoid the electric wire they can be moved to an electric only set-up. All of our feeder pigs come trained to electric because we use it on the inside of our woven-wire fences. Usually they can be put directly in an electric only enclosure when you get them home, but be sure you have time to monitor for accidental shocks and escapes just in case. Also note that this is not often the case with feeder pigs coming from other farms so its best to ask your farmer before you plan on an electric only pen. Wherever you use electric you want it right at snout level, this ensure that when they get shocked its usually as close to the front of their body as possible, which also helps encourage them to back up rather than run forward.
Food.
Pigs love to eat live for it, really and theyre not called hogs for nothing. In recent years raising pigs on pasture and the marketing of grass-fed meats has become quite trendy. We, ourselves, give our pigs access to pasture. Its important however, to understand that the role of pasture in a pigs diet is not the same as the role of pasture in, say, a cows diet. Where cows are built to turn forage into meat (and milk), pigs are not. Pigs are single-stomached animals who have been raised on concentrated feedstuffs for many hundreds of years. They require a protein rich diet and a heaping helping of digestible energy with a relatively little bit of fiber on the side. Pigs will enjoy and appreciate access to pasture if youre able to give it to them, but theyll still need access to a concentrated feed to make their nutritional ends meet, so to speak.
Now, understand that you can raise a pig on just about anything, but the further their diet becomes from being balanced, the more feed they require to make the same amount of meat. And this goes in both directions. People often assume that because pigs need protein, for instance, that more protein is automatically better, but thats not always the case. More protein, if unbalanced, will just be passed through the body and excreted as nitrogen. More is not always better, balanced is best. Sometimes an unbalanced diet can be had for so few pennies that the sacrifice to growth rate is offset by the savings in feed costs, but before you decide to save money by feeding an alternative diet, its a good idea to be aware that its not always the case.
When in doubt a good ground or pelletized hog ration, pre-formulated by a livestock nutritionist for a commercial feed house or your local feed mill is always a good bet. With a balanced ration, in moderate weather a pig will consume an average of 800-1000 pounds of feed to reach market weight, usually at the rate of 3-5% of their bodyweight per day.
Shelter & Bedding.
Because youre just keeping a couple of feeder pigs over the course of a few months in the summer, very basic shelter will be plenty. A shady place to get out of the sun and a dry place to get out of the rain is plenty. Shelters can be constructed of everything from free wooden shipping pallets to half-moon livestock panel hoops and tarps. Pigs appreciate bedding materials to make their sleeping quarters a little more comfortable. They will go through relatively little bedding material in the summer months. A few small square bales of straw is usually enough.
Compost.
Pigs love to eat and you know what they say about how things that go up have to come back down? Well, things that go in have to come back out. Pig manure is an excellent source of fertilizer for vegetable gardens and flower beds. Pre-plan a place to compost the manure and spent bedding so you can make good use of it the following growing season.
Health Care.
Chances are you wont have to worry about your feeder pigs health. Theyll be with you a relatively short amount of time and the grand majority of feeder pigs make it from birth to bacon without so much as a speed bump in their well-being. That said, before you bring a couple of pigs home its a good idea to find out where the nearest livestock veterinarian is located and make a note of his or her phone number. Simply having that name and number handy can be a great comfort if something does go wrong.
There are conflicting opinions about the use of routine worming products in meat animals and we realize that many hobby hog keepers are doing so to limit the use of and their exposure to chemicals and medications in the food supply. That said, we do recommend anti-parasitic treatment. Internal parasites can wreak havoc on an animals health and no one really wants to eat pork from a pig that was riddled with worms. Our feeder pigs receive two doses of ivermectin before leaving our farm to ensure they come to you as parasite free as possible. We recommend you worm them one or two more times while you have them. Ivermectin can be purchased right at your nearest feed store or Tractor Supply Company. It is the same drug that is used to treat parasites in humans, especially in third world countries where it is an ongoing problem, and the anti-parasitic drug approved for use on organic operations where their parasite protocols are not sufficient to keep parasite levels under control.
Transport.
When you pick up your feeder pigs, because theyre roughly the size of a small dog a large dog crate is often enough to get them home safely, but when it comes time to take them to market a much bigger space will be needed. If you dont own an adequate trailer or pickup truck and a way to load them, start planning early to hire someone or get help from a friend.
A Processor and A Freezer.
I know it sounds silly, but this is one aspect of hog rearing you dont want to take for granted. There are not as many processors as there once was and many are booked out many weeks and even months in advance. Find a processor and call early to make your appointment if you dont plan on processing your pigs yourself. Likewise, each pig will produce around 150 to 180 pounds of final pork products (depending on how long you grow them out), youll need more than the freezer that comes with your refrigerator to store the bounty.
BONUS: Patience and Resolve.
Dont forget that pigs are animals and strong, occasionally stubborn animals at that. For most of your experience theyll probably be a joy to interact with, but there may be occasions on which you and your pig will disagree about what needs to happen. Be patient, remain calm, and try to work smart rather than hard if you can.
I don’t want to raise pigs.
I want to eat pigs.
That is all.
Hear hear! I just want the plastic package that bacon comes in made easier to open. It really hurts my teeth ...
The plastic is a lot easier on the teeth than the package a whole pig comes in.
ping
They come runnin’ just as fast as they can,
‘cause every girl’s crazy ‘bout a sharp dressed hog
My wife raises pigs too. There is money to be made in it.
America demands Justice for the Fallen of Benghazi! |
Substitute the word “husband” for “pig” in this article, and my wife will agree with it 100%.
I see we got booted to Chat.
Who squealed?
b4l
We started raising pigs a couple years ago. It was a bit of an investment up front. Fencing, lumber for shelter, and time but it is nice to know I have about 130 lbs of pork in the back yard. Prices at the grocery store are getting rediculous.
In addition to the information contained in your post, I would think that raising pigs would have the additional benefit of rendering your property unattractive to the MooseLimbs in our midst.
It is a very vague memory as we moved from the farm when I was only four but I do remember us raising and processing pigs.
Daddy would shoot them right between the eyes with a Remington model 513. He used shorts because he didn’t want to mess up the hogs head cheese ingredients.
I remember scalding them in a huge iron pot and then the hair just came right off. Watching them butchering the pig was interesting if a little gory. I remember Mother washing out the intestines for chitlins and sausage.
The most pleasant part was when I would open the door to the smoke house and the aroma was just great. Hams hanging, loops of sausage also hanging. Cloth bags holding other parts. Sides of bacon etc. We did not have electricity out in the country and that was probably the only way to preserve the meat.
Neighbor two houses down raised pigs one summer. Absolutely delicious...although their daughter was a little upset at first when she found out where the pork chops came from - she came around when the bacon was served. :D
Remember the scene in The Wizard of Oz (on Auntie Em’s farm, before the Technicolor kicks in) where Dorothy is messing around the hog pen, loses her balance and falls in?
Recall that farmhand Bert Lehr/the ‘Cowardly Lion’ saves her, but after setting her down, starts sweating bullets.
I asked my parents why he was ‘vapor-locking’ and Mom, a farm girl, said, “Because feeding hogs will bite.”
So the way I see it, it’s eat or be eaten. Sorry Arnold!
America demands Justice for the Fallen of Benghazi! |
Mangalitsa is a breed of pig grown especially in Hungary and the Balkans known also as a curly-hair hog. It belongs to European unimproved lard-type breeds (as well as Iberian Black, Sicilian Black, and Alentejana pigs) that are descended directly from wild boar populations.
For chefs, the once-rare pig also happens to be one of the most sought-after breeds in the world. Now Winkler Wooly Pigs (winklerwoolypigs.com) has one of the largest operations in the United States
‘Fuzzy Wuzzy’ was a pig.
Fuzzy Wuzzy wore a wig.
Fuzzy Wuzzy wasn’t really fuzzy,
Was he?
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