5 weeks ago
Showing posts with label pregnant sow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pregnant sow. Show all posts
Friday, April 3, 2009
Pinky's piglets
Labels:
farm pig,
farrowing stall,
pregnant sow,
sow farrowing
Sunday, February 22, 2009
The red-and-black pig pregnancy
I talked about possibly putting red n black in a farrowing crate to see if I got better piglet survival, but realized there was a step that I could try before a farrowing crate. What I did was construct a stall out of T posts and hog panels under the roof of my hay barn. It's not heated, but does give her protection from rain. I bedded the stall with hay, and built it around a half of a supersack of food. The pigs like playing with fabric, tarps being a particular favorite, so I figured that the supersack of food would provide her with some entertainment as well as allowing her to eat as much as possible.
When a sow farrows, each piglet is the size of a 12 oz can of coke, and weighs about the same. The more piglets the sow has, the less each piglet weighs. Sometimes when you get a litter, you'll get 5 big piglets, and 7 smaller ones. The bigger ones tend to survive better. I don't know why there's a variation in size -- different mating, maybe? The boar will mount a sow several times to impregnate her.
After a sow gives birth, she delivers a large afterbirth, which she'll usually eat, so I don't have to deal with it. Just the birth alone will cause her to lose 50-75lbs of weight, both tissue and fluid. After that, as the piglets suckle on her, she'll lose another 100lbs. Talk about diet plans!
Here's big mamma, who's' the next sow that's going to give birth. She's a bigger pig in all respects, so even though she's pretty pregnant she's still got good ground clearance. Big mamma is about a foot longer and 6" taller than red n black. Both are adults.
Labels:
farm pig,
piglets,
pigs,
pregnant sow,
stall farrowing
Saturday, December 13, 2008
Tank pregnancy update
Snowing today, and very cold. My farm is only a mile or so from puget sound, a huge inland ocean, and we enjoy a marine climate most of the year. That means that it doesn't get much above 90 in the summer, or much below 40 in the winter, with some exceptions. Today is one of those exceptions. You folks in the midwest will probably laugh, but 30 degrees as a high temperature is considered extremely cold here.
She's ready to give birth. At this point, she'd be relieved. Andrea rubs her stomach and she flops right over
Once she's down, a quick squeeze of a nipple produces milk. Yep, she's ready to go.
Please rub my stomach!!
Friday, December 12, 2008
Pregnancy watch
Tank is looking pretty darned big. her belly is so big it's almost dragging on the ground. She's a pretty tall sow, usually has 10-12" of ground clearance. I'm going to rub some bag balm on her tommorow. Walking around with her belly so low means that her udders get scraped by the grass and ground, and get red and tender.
You can see the grass hits her even when it's pretty short.
The pups are growing like weeds. They've discovered that sleeping in the hay is pretty darn warm and comfortable.
Kat, their mom, is showing more promise as a herding dog. She helped me recover a chicken today that got out of the coops -- ran in front of it, cut it off, and then herded it right back to me. I'm going to look for a herding trainer around here.
Labels:
airedale puppies,
pig,
pig farm,
pig farming,
pregnant pig,
pregnant sow
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)