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Thread: raising pigs without smell and on the cheap

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    montana
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    234

    Default raising pigs without smell and on the cheap

    Pigs are a naturally clean animal that will do their business in one corner of a bigger space. No smell. No stink. Brian says the only way pigs will stink is if you let them fester in one spot.

    The pig fence is stock panels held together with caribeaners.

    Brian is growing lots of stuff that the pigs will self harvest. The most important being sunchokes (jerusalem artichokes). But no matter where you move the pigs there is plenty more to eat, thus reducing the feed costs.

    Pigs love to eat blackberry roots - and are a great way to control blackberry problems.

    http://www.youtube.com/paulwheaton12#p/u/0/LXeZ7oVhAUg

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2010
    Location
    katherine NT
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    Default

    Paul,

    Smallholders have been raising pigs 'without' the stink for generations, especially small sucker pigs that do not shit too much and have decent drainage.

    My point being.... if animals are kept in reasonable conditions that allow for their habits, ie, pigs are grazers, sheep are grazers too, chickens need an outdoor area. If you do the right thing by the animals and not cage them. Most of the domestic stock we seek or need are very easy to deal with.

    Pigs dont stink.... pigfarms do, rabbit farms do, cat farms, minx farms and so do chicken farms, hospitals and dog farms... you get the point. Even people dont stink when they are compressed into nasty situations that they cannot move from...

    So bring on moveable pens, it works for most of God's lil creatures and especially... GET A PIG.
    They are just the best and remarkably responsive..

    cheers,
    mike, Katherine NT in the hot dry tropical savannah bit of Australia.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    Hunter Valley NSW
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    Default

    GET A PIG.
    They are just the best and remarkably responsive..
    I'm with you Mike now I need to convince the decision maker!!!
    Purple Pear Farm
    www.purplepearfarm.com.au
    http://www.facebook.com/PurplePearFarm
    Permaculture Education and Community Supported Agriculture
    INTENT-OBSERVATION-INTUITION

  4. #4
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    Aug 2009
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    Hunter Valley NSW
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    Default Vegetarian pigs

    It leads me to the question ....
    How can you convincingly argue for a pig in your system if you are a vegetarian??
    Purple Pear Farm
    www.purplepearfarm.com.au
    http://www.facebook.com/PurplePearFarm
    Permaculture Education and Community Supported Agriculture
    INTENT-OBSERVATION-INTUITION

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    sunshine coast QLD
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    Default

    How can you convincingly argue for a pig in your system if you are a vegetarian??
    The smell of bacon cooking. lol.
    the end of suffering comes from the living of joy!

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Aug 2010
    Location
    katherine NT
    Posts
    81

    Default

    Pigs are easy!

    I have an employee who came to me and said...."we cant some really cheap pigs''... So we borrowed a small stock trailer and went to visit this place. Anyway, this person is RSPCA accredited and has 'had pigs for years'.... I was also offered the sow?
    Sadly, I suggested this lady shoot the sow and I said this with a honesty. These 3 month old piglets were runts and could have been put in the glove box. I was also offered the 'sow' for free, to be honest i recommended the sow be shot. She had been bred early and continually which is an act of cruelty in itself. The RPSCA lady, when I suggested this became a bit introverted and said she didnt know much about 'small livestock', and gave me 2 piglets. I am not the RSPCA type or I would have taken all 8 piglets.

    This person is a remarkable volunteer with the RSPCA, my point is it does not make them experts. I only say this,
    that the RSPCA do a remarkable job, it is always altruistic, sometimes naieve, and often these guys need a hand!!!

    The RSPCA need volunteers, they also need a few 'old hands' to assist them. Assist them lots!!
    mike, Katherine NT in the hot dry tropical savannah bit of Australia.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Aug 2010
    Location
    katherine NT
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    81

    Default

    Purple,

    I support vegetarians.... I could be one... 'cept for eggs and bacon and toast'. I could be an ovo-bacon-chocolate milk sorta vegetarian. I said that in a silly way, I really like vegans.... I give them a lift to the supermarket and tell them to 'plant' stuff.
    Vegans are a special nasty product of the supermarket generation. So I encourage them to graze my front 20 acres....EEEK.. when that doesnt seem to work......... I encourage them to 'graze' at my 1700 MILE supermarket. [I live remote]

    I grow a lotta vegies... so my family dont do 'fibre or carb'... they just do 'too much'..


    End point.. I like vegetarians.... i really dont know how to 'do' vegetarian, which is my issue not theirs. BUT VEGANS THAT LOB\INTO MY SPACE AND DEMAND TO HAVE 'GRAZING RIGHTS' over my miserable supermarket aisles... well those numbskulls should get on the next 'long hydrogen carbon greyhound bus and fuck off!!'

    cheers
    mike, Katherine NT in the hot dry tropical savannah bit of Australia.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    sunshine coast QLD
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    I am not trying to convert anyone honestly. This just came up on my radar and as there are a lot of comments I thought it may interest some.
    http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2011...or-vegetarians
    the end of suffering comes from the living of joy!

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Location
    Sunshine Coast, Qld, Australia
    Posts
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    Default

    Purple - they'll dig over your garden beds much more effectively than the chooks will. Or so I'm told - have never got up close and personal with a live pig. Apparently they make nice pets. Could be good for kids to pat when they come to visit your place on their school trips or something. You could bag up and sell pig poo as a niche item. Will that be enough to convince Kate?

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jun 2010
    Location
    North Queensland
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    Default

    I had a pet pig once and she was sweet. Her mother had been killed accidentally so it was brought home. It was on a work site and she used to love to get under the table when all the men and me were sitting there and tackle our shoelaces. I think i had velcro on mine and she loved that.

    But I wouldn't have a pig. They don't make dairy food and i would never want to kill a pig (killing roosters and ducks is bad enough) and think the whole looking after them sounds difficult and you need a lot of room for them if they are to have a good life.

    Animals are a lot of responsibilty and I think people don't realise how much until they get them. Because of the costs involved many people are inclined to let animals suffer to avoid paying those costs.

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