You're doing good by making a fence for your 🐖 if I was doing a fence mind will be tangle up and my 🐖 would have escape. Some nice little 🏠 .Great Job ,keep it up
I would recommend to get past the weeds, move the hogs to next pasture, then uproot weeds, resead the grasses and greens you want, leave till new plants are established, then return hogs. And from then on just reseed every time the hogs move. That will get on top of the weeds. I don't have pasture animals atm just degree in Agriculture and I have raised a few breeds of pigs. Still looking for my own cut of land
I am just starting the pig journey. We have one girl that is 5 years old. We just bred her a couple weeks ago to a Duroc male from Shipley. Well, ai. Our plan is to keep the 2 best girls from that litter. Then when we breed her again, keep the 2 best girls from that litter. Then we are going to keep the 2 best girls from those 4.
I have a sow that farrowed yesterday, not where I'd like her to be. Would you just shelter her in place? I can't think of a way to move her with the nine piglets she has. I can build a shelter today if thats the best route. Thanks!
If I heard you right you have 12 gilts on a paddock for 6-8 days. How big do you make the paddocks, and about how long before the pigs are back in the same paddock? Thanks for the great video!
Hello Sir, I'm finding your pastured pig systems ( What I've seen of them so far ) interesting. How many litters do your sows/gilts average? I respect your breeding management system. You reminded me of my Dad's approach to breeding Holsteins. He bred for three traits feet, legs, and udders. From 1978 until his passing in 2012. Have you considered using goats for weed control?
@@FarmBuilder I apologize for not being more clear. I meant your head's average number of litters over a sow's breeding "career". I grew up on a Dairy farm and my Dad's herd averaged six to eight lactations. The national Dairy Herd Improvement Association ( DHIA) average is les than one lactation.
thank you! Tire size really doesn't matter much but generally these are a pickup truck tire. you can cut them with a sharp box cutter or a sawzall. There's no metal in that part of the tire.
What is your current price on gilts that were just below the cutoff as keepers at weaning? Do you typically offer them as replacements or herd starters to other farmers? Same questions as to your weaned boara?
Is it better to have more space between shelters? Like around 30 feet or so. It is my understanding that the pigs do better with more space between them.
How do you get your sows to go into the furrowing shelters? Is it a natural instinct or do you have to lure them in? This is our first year with pigs and we built our shelters for our pastured pigs.
Yes, that is a big problem. They are nursing away the colostrum her piglets will need. Isolate either the prego sow or the other one with her piglets asap.
hi! great video. we just had a guinea hog farrow outside under a tree (even though we provided a port-a-hut). it is getting chilly here on the north east with some rain expected later this week. should we attempt to move the hut over her nest/piglets? they are doing okay with the cold at night but i worry about them getting cold AND wet... they are now 3 days old. any advice?
What should the average gilt weight be for her being bred? The people I’ve talked to around my way say not to free feed the gilts, ration feed them because I’m not growing them out like a feeder hog. So at 7 months old my gilts are smaller than what im used to seeing a feeder pig look like at 7 months....so am I doing something wrong or what?
the one sucky thing about pasture pigs. you can't figure out the order of pigs on the tits. the biggest doesn't mean the best genetics. it normally means most food aggressive or the one on that first tit. we wanted ours full-time pasture but what we ended up doing was like a half and half. we let them into an area very close to the house at gilts. then we figure out the order. we read a research paper that most pigs actually always feed off the same tit. most of the time. then once we figure out that for each batch from the 20 mothers. we start grading from there. what we really wish we knew was how much milk each pig was getting out of the tit. we can only really guess. being the first in the tit the most and the back tit the least. which might be the reason why people take runts. as again.. most food aggressive does not necessarily equal best genetics. anyway, we enter the data in and grade what we know. Then from there we either agree with the data or we do a gut keep the breeder moment. sometimes we see a smart pig that works in our system. one that always comes to use. feeds regular looks decent but not the greatest. if she ends up beeing a good mother as well we keep her. sometimes you get these perfect pigs that are dumb as rocks. they look pretty, they get most of their feed when you bring out the small amount of supplemental feed because they are the most food aggressive but they are lazy as hell and you never see them out there foraging and being smart about it. then you see a less pretty pig who barely eats the supplemental feed unless you bring out nuts or something really good. who is out there working it. anyways this is much longer then i thought. it's pretty late for me and i was planting trees while we have all that rain and mud here. instead of the drought we normally have in Cali. so my thoughts and everything else in this is a hot mess. anyway, good luck to you. i hope it works out :)
+Miss O.P. thanks for the comment! Selecting good breeders is always a bit speculation of the future until a proven track record is established. Even then it's a constant evaluation process. Just my personal process, I've never cared much for birth order. If its a good female piglet she gets a look, a good 200lb gilt gets a selection and a good farrowing gets a place on the farm.
I will be putting up a fence for the sows next week. I was thinking I would have to use two 15 gauge wires because there are cattle that will be around the fence on the other side and I don't want them to step in. What length of rebar should I cut the posts? Thanks, Cremona
I give a pig 3 chances because it takes 3 litters for a sow to pay for themselves. But they have to wean 8? Thats not good enough, i have gilts weaning 16 and parity 6s weaning 12 to 14. But then again i work on a commercial hog farm.
Farmbuilder, thank you for your service!! and the life you are sharing with the world! AWESOMENESS
Thank you!
Good work
Love what you’re doing Jordan!!
Justin Rhodes sent me over , just subscribed to you, love learning more
I guess the 🐖 is saying it's time for them to walk around when they left out they little 🏠 . Keep the work up! They still got me smiling
Those details were great 5 years Ago!, he has very great great ways of pasture raising pigs for today.
I came with Justin Rhodes wonderful channel
Great info, nice to see the evolution of your operation.
You're doing good by making a fence for your 🐖 if I was doing a fence mind will be tangle up and my 🐖 would have escape. Some nice little 🏠 .Great Job ,keep it up
I would recommend to get past the weeds, move the hogs to next pasture, then uproot weeds, resead the grasses and greens you want, leave till new plants are established, then return hogs. And from then on just reseed every time the hogs move. That will get on top of the weeds.
I don't have pasture animals atm just degree in Agriculture and I have raised a few breeds of pigs. Still looking for my own cut of land
if you made a tutorial on making the folding shelters and offered it to sell, I think it would be great to know and help out your venture!
勿論豚は草を食べているのは本物ですので忘れません。
Love how you refer to the pigs as 'piggies' 🤣😂🤣😂🤣 we do the same unashamedly 😂🤣😂😂😂
Excellent breakdown of how you choose your breeding females. Thank you.
New subscriber love your farming style and info.
Great video
I'm in FFA and these are a good bunch of sows shouldn't have match trouble selling some piglets
Thanks. Very informative!
thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Nice shelters.
Very nice vedio..thanks for the info
I am just starting the pig journey. We have one girl that is 5 years old. We just bred her a couple weeks ago to a Duroc male from Shipley. Well, ai. Our plan is to keep the 2 best girls from that litter. Then when we breed her again, keep the 2 best girls from that litter. Then we are going to keep the 2 best girls from those 4.
I have a sow that farrowed yesterday, not where I'd like her to be. Would you just shelter her in place? I can't think of a way to move her with the nine piglets she has. I can build a shelter today if thats the best route. Thanks!
Where are you located? If your night time temps are above 50° you should be fine in place without a shelter or tie a small tarp over the nest.
I came here with justin Rhodes too, good work
If I heard you right you have 12 gilts on a paddock for 6-8 days. How big do you make the paddocks, and about how long before the pigs are back in the same paddock? Thanks for the great video!
paddock size is generally 1/3-1/2 acre. On pasture 2-3 months rest between grazings. In the woods its 5-6 months.
Thx for the video btw!
Put a few goats in there. They will take care of the weeds.
豚は草を食べて元気よく育てていますから最高ですので実っていますので金メダルですよね。
Love the shelters! Wondering if you have an estimate on the materials cost it ran you, per shelter? We're in Maryland. Thanks!
Hey do u inject to the piglets and feed them feed for piglets
great job !!
Hello Sir,
I'm finding your pastured pig systems ( What I've seen of them so far ) interesting.
How many litters do your sows/gilts average?
I respect your breeding management system. You reminded me of my Dad's approach to breeding Holsteins. He bred for three traits feet, legs, and udders. From 1978 until his passing in 2012.
Have you considered using goats for weed control?
Two litters per year and we want 8 weaned piglets per litter.
@@FarmBuilder
I apologize for not being more clear.
I meant your head's average number of litters over a sow's breeding "career".
I grew up on a Dairy farm and my Dad's herd averaged six to eight lactations. The national Dairy Herd Improvement Association ( DHIA) average is les than one lactation.
8-10
@@FarmBuilder
Thank You
do you have a video just on the shelters? very interested in this design. I have two gilts hopefully pregnant. Thanks
爽やかな草を食べながら豚は元気ですので金メダルでしょうね。
WHAT AGE DO YOU BREED YOUR GILTS AND HOW MANY TIMES A YEAR?
200 lbs. Any particular sow is bred twice a year.
@@FarmBuilder how long does it take to get to that weight on a grass diet?
Love your video! Thanks for sharing! What size of tires do you use? What tool do you use to cut the tires on half?
thank you! Tire size really doesn't matter much but generally these are a pickup truck tire. you can cut them with a sharp box cutter or a sawzall. There's no metal in that part of the tire.
What is your current price on gilts that were just below the cutoff as keepers at weaning? Do you typically offer them as replacements or herd starters to other farmers? Same questions as to your weaned boara?
Shoot me an email. farmbuilders@gmail.com
wonderful video
Do you worm them & what do you use "
We have not needed to. Rotation with long ground rest keeps parasite loads low.
@@FarmBuilder I'm starting to think I have a good instinct.
Thank you for your videos - can you say how you cut the tire? Thank you
Is there a max size that the sow can get before she is done away with and replaced
Is it better to have more space between shelters? Like around 30 feet or so. It is my understanding that the pigs do better with more space between them.
+Steven Gunderson I haven't noticed a problem with them being close.
I like this idea.
You never did mention what breeds you started with for breeding 10:43
Would love to know the breed mix
I'm guessing there's some Yorkshire and Duroc in there and maybe some Large Black?
We started with hamps, duroc & yorks.
Looks like some Berkshire in there too
I would like a plan for your shelter
THANKS LEARN A LOT
How do you get your sows to go into the furrowing shelters? Is it a natural instinct or do you have to lure them in? This is our first year with pigs and we built our shelters for our pastured pigs.
+Paul Dischler 90% go in on their own.
Jordan what is the reason for replacing the angled back of the farrowing shelter with an iron roof. In stead of ones with a 4 x 8" sheet of plywood?
Cheaper and more durable for the long term.
Lovely pigs. Could I use part of your video in my video? I will surely note the source back here with thanks.
Sure.
Nice Video mate,
are there any cases of pre mature labor?
+Mifune Scythe we do natural breeding so hard to know when that happens. 99% of the time litters are healthy and good.
Mifune Scythe pow
Nice hogs
I've got a preg sow nursing another sow's litter, have you seen this, any probs? They are mom and daughter, mom = 4th litter. Daughter = 1st litter.
Yes, that is a big problem. They are nursing away the colostrum her piglets will need. Isolate either the prego sow or the other one with her piglets asap.
What were the problems with the Yorkshires?
Sunburn easily and have attitude.
hi! great video. we just had a guinea hog farrow outside under a tree (even though we provided a port-a-hut). it is getting chilly here on the north east with some rain expected later this week. should we attempt to move the hut over her nest/piglets? they are doing okay with the cold at night but i worry about them getting cold AND wet... they are now 3 days old. any advice?
if you can put the hut over the nest that does work, just be ready for the sow to not be to happy with the process.
Sounds like you've bred a good genetic line! How do you control inbreeding? :)
the fine line between inbreeding and line breeding. because we have 6-8 groups of sows we can prevent direct sibling breeding.
What should the average gilt weight be for her being bred? The people I’ve talked to around my way say not to free feed the gilts, ration feed them because I’m not growing them out like a feeder hog. So at 7 months old my gilts are smaller than what im used to seeing a feeder pig look like at 7 months....so am I doing something wrong or what?
We breed around 200-240 pounds. At that point the switch to rationed feed.
Do you direct sell you pigs or take them to auction
+Anthon Berger all sold either as piglets or by the cut. We never take pigs to the sale barn. That's a way to go broke.
Do you have issues with coyotes? If so, how do you manage them?
Do you have any tips on dealing with coyote and wolf pressure? They can a real problem up here.
LGDs?
What is the voltage use in the fence electric current
the one sucky thing about pasture pigs. you can't figure out the order of pigs on the tits. the biggest doesn't mean the best genetics. it normally means most food aggressive or the one on that first tit. we wanted ours full-time pasture but what we ended up doing was like a half and half. we let them into an area very close to the house at gilts. then we figure out the order. we read a research paper that most pigs actually always feed off the same tit. most of the time. then once we figure out that for each batch from the 20 mothers. we start grading from there. what we really wish we knew was how much milk each pig was getting out of the tit. we can only really guess. being the first in the tit the most and the back tit the least. which might be the reason why people take runts. as again.. most food aggressive does not necessarily equal best genetics.
anyway, we enter the data in and grade what we know. Then from there we either agree with the data or we do a gut keep the breeder moment. sometimes we see a smart pig that works in our system. one that always comes to use. feeds regular looks decent but not the greatest. if she ends up beeing a good mother as well we keep her. sometimes you get these perfect pigs that are dumb as rocks. they look pretty, they get most of their feed when you bring out the small amount of supplemental feed because they are the most food aggressive but they are lazy as hell and you never see them out there foraging and being smart about it. then you see a less pretty pig who barely eats the supplemental feed unless you bring out nuts or something really good. who is out there working it.
anyways this is much longer then i thought. it's pretty late for me and i was planting trees while we have all that rain and mud here. instead of the drought we normally have in Cali. so my thoughts and everything else in this is a hot mess. anyway, good luck to you. i hope it works out :)
+Miss O.P. thanks for the comment! Selecting good breeders is always a bit speculation of the future until a proven track record is established. Even then it's a constant evaluation process. Just my personal process, I've never cared much for birth order. If its a good female piglet she gets a look, a good 200lb gilt gets a selection and a good farrowing gets a place on the farm.
Cách chăn nuôi rất hoang dã
I have a pig in my farm which can not get pregnant is that possible in piggery?
How do you track the individuals? I do not see any ear tags or brands...
We know who is who. Having discussions now about an RFID system.
I will be putting up a fence for the sows next week. I was thinking I would have to use two 15 gauge wires because there are cattle that will be around the fence on the other side and I don't want them to step in. What length of rebar should I cut the posts?
Thanks, Cremona
+Cremona Primrose 48" works well.
How long do you keep your pigs
Do you castrate at all?
we do. Probably do its own video sometime.
Do you ring your pigs?
No, we do not.
+David Morrison no we do not.
Where are you guys located
we are in Shenandoah County, VA.
Wow
新型コロナウイルス感染拡大に負けないように頑張ろうじゃありませんかな。
Is there no case of snake attack in the pen area?
+Zosimo Iyog we don't have snakes that large where we are in the eastern usa. Anybody have experience with large snake issues?
Zosimo Iyog pasture hogs are pretty good snake deterrents. ive seen more than one of my hogs eat a snake or two
+easywaheezie we only have small snakes. Nothing bigger than a meter or two.
Pigs eat snakes. Snakes will stay away from pig odor anyway...lol
We have coyotes in the wooded area we want to run our pigs. How do you handle that?
pls use cam with image stabilizer
You should run some goat's behind the pigs they loves weeds they are browsers nor grazers
One escaped a year is still too many
You must have a way of tracking which piglet belongs to which mumma as they all tend to mingle together in the pasture.
We dont. They stay with momma the first week or two and then after that a big gaggle forms from all the litters.
@@FarmBuilder let me known sir your address.?i am very excited to see your piglets.
I give a pig 3 chances because it takes 3 litters for a sow to pay for themselves. But they have to wean 8? Thats not good enough, i have gilts weaning 16 and parity 6s weaning 12 to 14. But then again i work on a commercial hog farm.
It is different out here.
Certain problems are automatically culled asap. Other problems may get another chance on my place.
Breeding males or do you AI
Gilts are females that have never seen a boar...... wtf
I thought they were still considered gilts until they farrow their first litter.
Gilts are gilts through first parity just like heifers are heifers until they calve.