Showing posts with label pigs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pigs. Show all posts

Sunday, August 30, 2015

Winding Down the Canning Season.....

I really never stop canning.  I make soups and stews and can dried beans all year round, but the busy canning season is in the summer and it is winding down.

I canned the last of the butternut squash two weekends ago and that rounded out a very bountiful harvest! 


 God has blessed us with such a wonderful garden this year and I have no words to express my thanks.  Pretty much every weekend for the last 6 weeks or so has been devoted to canning all of that largesse!

This is the breakdown of this years bounty.....


  • 53 pints salsa  (Most of these tomatoes were bought from our Amish neighbors - 24 lbs for $8)
  • 5 pints pizza sauce
  • 31 pints sweet corn
  • 19 quarts lime pickles
  • 19 quarts dill spears
  • 2 pints dill spears
  • 29 quarts butternut squash
  • 2 quarts mixed corn and squash
  • 15 quarts tomatoes
  • 7 pints sweet relish
  • 7 pints bread and butter pickles
  • 12 pints zesty bread and butter pickles
  • 6 pints mulberry jam
  • 9 pints summer squash
  • 4 pints pickled beets
  • 22 pints green beans
  • 57 lbs of red potatoes
Next year we plan to plant a lot more summer squash and only one hill of cucumbers and one hill of butternut squash.  We should have plenty of pickles and butternut squash left over.  If not then we'll revise the plan.  

The garden has been tilled in preparation for the fall crops of kale, turnips, beets (for greens), green onions, and mustard greens.  I've found that beet greens are just about my favorite type of green, so I can't wait for those to come up!

These fellers were oh so happy to get the canning leavings and I'm oh so glad to share with them, as it makes for such delicious pork!  They are getting all the leftovers from canning as well as lots of surplus eggs and milk and as you can see it they are doing well!


In front here is the big gilt, or Peggy Sue as we call her.  She is a BEAUTIFUL hog and I would keep her for breeding, but she'll serve us much better in the freezer.


The little red spotted gilt is Rita Rose.  I actually bought her to use as a breeding sow, but she isn't maturing near as nice as I'd like to see her, so she will go into the freezer as well.  The barrow is in the middle.  He's not as nice as Peggy Sue either, but will make delicious meat nonetheless!


So that's whats going on around here.  Things are good, summer is quickly fading into fall and we are so happy and blessed!

Till next time,

God Bless,




Monday, February 4, 2013

Lets Make a Piggy Potholder!

First off, let me apologize for the quality of these pictures.  My camera is in the glovebox of the car (for reasons I'll reveal very soon) and I took these with The Youngun's ipod, so they aren't the greatest in the world! 
K....now that's out the way!  Moving on........

See this dirty little piggy??


My momma made this little piggy potholder years ago and it's my most favorite one.  This one and one that has a fried egg appliqued on it, but I digress.......Anyway, this little piggy looks so dirty cuz I've caught it on fire more than once on my grill, and I use it all the time cuz did I mention it's my most favoritest hotpad??

Anywho, today after work I decided to construct a new piggy hotpad and this is how it went. 

First.....raid your stash bag and find a piece of fabric that you can double and have the same size as your little piggy......as well as a piece of quilt batting......then trace the outline of said piggy and all his accoutrements.....


Then using a plain zigzag stitch or a pretty, fancy stitch from your friend Steve, you sew all around the outline of the piggy.....


Then cut carefully around the outside edge of the zigzag stitch that you outlined the piggy in.....


Then you want to sew around that same outline stitch again, to make sure it's nice and strong.  

Next you stitch all the little accoutrement lines that make a pig a pig, like the eye and the ears and such.
Then you sew on a pretty little button for an eye....and wall-la...you have a nice little piggy potholder!!


The dark one I made first.........and The Youngun claimed it for her hope chest.  So I raided the stash again and found this fabric, which I used to make another for me!

Now I've got two piggy potholders to match the two little piggys in my backyard!!!



The white gilt is Rebecca of Lardy-brook Farm, and the Hamp gilt is Queen Genevieve of Baconia...

They are gonna fill my freezer up later this year, the yummy little girls!

K.........go sew somethin'....


till next time..........God Bless........




Monday, November 21, 2011

Did I Forget Something........or Another Episode of Confessions of a Goodwife

If you aren't new to my blog you may be asking yourself a question.  You may be sitting there sayin', "GOODWIFE!! What about your birthday pigs??  What about Ed Earl and Lu Lu?!?  How can you possibly leave out such an important detail about the past few months?!?  Then again, perhaps you are sittin' there at your computer sayin', "Edearlwhosis?  Lulawhatshername?  What the carp are you talkin' about lady?? 

To those of you who are swine minded and are just achin' to know what happened to my dear Ed Earl and Luanne, I'm going to tell you, but first let me share a couple pics of my dear hoggies.....


My dear Ed Earl.....

Pretty Lu Lu......

K, so if you've caught up on what's going on you know we made a major move.  I couldn't take my piggies with me.  Pigs are an acquired taste and you must truly understand swine to love them.  Most folks don't, so asking The Aunt and Uncle to let me keep my porcine cuties over at their place was out of the question.  I was faced with a decision.  I could sell them.............. or eat them........my belly won (as it usually does).

It's true.......you know you are a hardcore homesteadin' goodwife when you can eat your beloved birthday swine with nary a qualm.  I did have trouble sayin' good by to Ed Earl, but having the meat from two HUGE hogs in our freezer has really saved us in our present situation.  We eat pork and that's about it.  Oh yeah, and if you are wondering if there truly is a difference in heirloom pork, the answer is a resounding YES!  I've never eaten a juicier pork chop in my life.  The Man is a pork steak eater because chops are usually dry.  Not so with Ed Earl's fine flesh.  Juicy, tender, moist, and just plain yummy!

So there you have it.  Now you can stop agonizing over the detail I forgot in my tale......

Til next time...........

God Bless...............


Friday, April 1, 2011

Wanna Feed The Pigs With Me??


Click below (even if you can't see the box) to watch a video of Pig Feeding Time!


You never doubt if you are needed when you have critters!  They are always happy to see you and give you some love, never mind that it's because you feed them, we'll just gloss over that part!


As you can see we are still in love with our Gloucestershire Old Spot hogs! 


They are growing like weeds and still as loving as ever. Luanne isn't near as much of a cuddle bug at Ed Earl, but I think that is probably because she is half Poland China and Ed Earl is full G.O.S......


Have a great weekend and don't forget to visit the other Farm Friend Friday Blogs!




God Bless...........





Wednesday, March 2, 2011

What's Wrong With This Picture?

Yesterday afternoon I was standing at the sink washin' up some dishes.  My window looks out over the backyard, barns, and pastures.  This is what I noticed......

Does anybody see anything amiss in this picture?


How bout this one?  Anything at all??


Or this one?  Anybody?
That isn't a Tamworth, or a Duroc, or even a Red Wattle sharing Ed Earl and Luanne's pen......


The Youngun and I began casting about for clues.........we didn't find many.....just this track...


No hair, no smashed fence, no other evidence of tampering.......


After getting things back this way......


The Youngun and I began doin' this......
She's putting insulators on the posts so I can run hotwire.....


For this particular project we had to use three different types of insulator.
This is a nail on.......


This is a regular snap on, in long length.......


And this is what we call a reverse, or backward insulator.  It fits on the backside of the post.  In our case, we have insulators on the top outside of the pig pen, for keeping horses and goats out, and insulators along the bottom inside of the pig pen for keeping pigs in!


Now nobody is gonna bust in or out.  Hopefully this will encourage ever'body to stay where they belong!  Why in the world Champ would feel the need to go visit the pigs is beyond me, but nobody ever said he was the sharpest spade in the barn!

After getting all that done, I caught Ed Earl and Luanne in a romantic moment.  They are so in love!  Click the picture if you want to see it bigger! 




God Bless................



Friday, February 25, 2011

Spring Dreamin'........and the Conclusion of Pig Week........

Even though this is what I saw out my bedroom window this morning.........


And my back door.............


I can't stop myself from Spring Dreamin'............it'll be here soon ya know!

Soon we'll be doin' this.........


And this.............


Soon we'll be seeing this...........


And this................


Soon the girls will be doin' this..........


And then I'll have a mess of these to play with..........


As well as these to play with........


Giving me lots of this to play with........


Soon I'll be heading to the post office to pick up these.........


And then in about 5 months, I'll have these again...........


Ok, ok, that's enough dreamin' of spring!  It can't get here fast enough!  We've got some plans for the upper garden, and if my blueberry bushes are still alive I'm gonna move them.  I may order a cherry tree and a couple apple trees to join the peach trees, but I may wait another year on those.  My chicks will be here the beginning of May, and the gal I'm buying ducks from just sent me an email, the eggs are going in the incubator today!  Star is due to kid mid May and Tulip 3 weeks later!  I'm ready baby! 

I also have to once again praise God in His infinite Wisdom in keeping us here on our place.........what were we thinking to entertain ideas of selling??

K.......on to the conclusion of Pig Week here at Goodwife Farm.  I know I've been singing the praises of the Old Spot hog and I'm still in love with them.  How could you not love this face?


That said........pigs can be dangerous critters.  As my hero Mama Harper said once......."Tell 'em I went to spit and the hogs ate me!"  She said that for a reason, and lets just say if you ever have the need to murder your neighbor, feeding the body to the hogs is a good way to dispose of the evidence! 

Pigs can and do kill people every year, but so do stud horses, rogue goats, rams, dogs, heck even a goose or rooster can mess you up if you aren't careful, just ask me, I know!  My point is, as with all large animals, you must show them respect, as well as let them know at all times you are in charge.  Dominance is the word of the day when dealing with any livestock.  Does that mean bullying or mean-ness?  Of course not, it just means that you, as Head Boss Goat 'round your place must keep everybody else in check and in their place!  Don't send your 5 year old out to feed the hogs (or anybody else with the exception of possibly the chickens, but remember that rogue rooster) 'cuz you're just too darned tired to do it!

On that note, I'll leave you with one last picture of my very happy pig........and say Ah Dew for now!




God Bless...................




Thursday, February 24, 2011

Pure Bred Critters.........Line Bred, or In Bred, It's All the Same Thing.........

This is a topic that's been swirlin' round in my little pea brain for a few weeks now.  It's finally reached the percolation stage and I gotta get it down so it will go away!  Once again, these are my opinions and mine alone.  What you decide to do with your animals is your business and blahdeblahblah......

In any purebred animal, be it horse, goat, dog, cat, pig, chicken, whatever, if you go back far enough you will find a rather spectacular amount of line breeding.  In animals we call it line breeding as opposed to in breeding, but it means the same thing.

Take the dog for instance.  If you have a pure bred dog, at one time in it's ancestry it was just your basic garden variety cur.  Folks picked out dogs with traits they liked and they bred them together.  Then they bred fathers to daughters, mothers to sons, grandparents to grandchildren and so on to "fix" the genes.  Then they would start to outcross a little bit to see if the genes would pass on true, all the while crossing back on the original stock to re-"fix" the genes.  This is true of every single purebred critter out there.  Of course this is a very simplistic view of things, and if you want to know more you can do the research and get into it a bit deeper.  I just want to say again, if you go back far enough in your purebred animals pedigree you WILL find a rather spectacular amount of line breeding.  It's just the way it is.  You cannot create a new breed without it. 

Now that that's out of the way, here comes the important part that you HAVE to listen to......

When you line breed, you are not only concentrating the desirable characteristics, you are also concentrating the un-desirable ones.  You must ONLY breed the best.  When you are building up a herd, you have to cull and cull hard.  Take my Kinders for instance.  Kinders are a sort of rare as well as new breed of goat.  If I go back 6 generations (sometimes less) my Kinders are related to almost every other Kinder out there.  This isn't a bad thing, and only becomes a real problem when people breed just to be breeding and don't worry about quality.  For instance, if Tulip were to throw a kid with a split teat, or a double teat, even if it were a buck kid, I wouldn't sell (to the general public) ANY kids from that breeding.  Nada, none, zilch.  The kids would go to the meat sale or would be butchered here at home with no exception and I wouldn't repeat the breeding.  Next breeding I would use a different buck and if she again threw a kid with a split teat, or an extra teat, I would once again butcher all the kids and I would know that the defect was in Tulip's lineage.  I would keep Tulip, because she is an excellent milker, but I would NEVER sell kids, they would all go to meat.  It would be unethical for me to sell kids from a goat that I know possesses a defective gene. 

Star is Tulip's daughter as well as her half sister.  Star is the product of Tulip being bred back to her father, and Star is an amazing goat.  She has a gorgeous udder and no problems.  She also throws beautiful correct kids.  Through the careful breeding program of my friend Rhonda, this line breeding produced an excellent animal, because she only breeds animals that are completely correct!  Now say you've got a goat that is a gallon a day milker, but her attachments aren't the greatest.  Should you line breed this goat?  Well it depends.  Does her father's mother have nice attachment, really nice attachment?  If she does, then you could try breeding her back to her father to see if that would improve the attachment on her doelings.  If her father's mother doesn't have good attachment then you wouldn't want to even try it, because you would be concentrating the gene that caused the poor attachment. 

Another note about line breeding is that you should take care to breed vertically (up and down the pedigree, ie mother to son, father to daughter, grandfather to great granddaughter) as opposed to horizontally (side to side in the pedigree, ie brother to sister, half brother to half sister).  You run much less risk of problems when you do things this way.  Although breeding half siblings can do wonderful things, it is also a really quick way to bring any genetic problems to the forefront.

I should also say, that when you are developing a new line or bringing back a line from the brink of extinction, you sometimes must breed imperfect animals and deal with the consequences.  You still want to pick the best of what you've got and breed them together.  This is called "breeding up" and it's a long road to perfection.  You are much better off if you can find and buy, or breed to, extremely correct animals, but sometimes this just isn't possible.

Of course in a well established breed such as Nubians or Alpines in goats, or Labs or Boxers in dogs, or Quarter Horses or Hereford cattle you have a broad enough gene pool that you shouldn't have to mess with any of this.  But in Heritage animals this is a big deal, and that's what's got me thinking......

In 2009 the Gloucestershire Old Spot breed of hog had less than 1000 animals in Great Britain and fewer than 200 breeding animals in the US.  It is that way or worse with a great deal of heritage animals.  If an animal's numbers are allowed to fall to that few, you MUST line breed.  There is no way around it because there simply aren't enough animals to cross breed them out without losing the "fixed" genes that make the breed what it is.  If you are responsible with your breeding program, this doesn't have to be a problem, but you have to cull, cull, cull.  You have to be prepared to eat lots of your culls, which is why this is less of a problem in livestock, than it is in dogs or cats!  Unless you want to eat bbq'd Fido and that's your business.......... 

 That said, Ed Earl isn't registered.  One of his litter mates was born without a tail, so his breeder didn't want to register him in case that popped back up in later generations.  Should he have even sold Ed Earl to me? As long as I breed responsibly and am aware of the possibilities of this defect cropping up, it shouldn't be a problem. If problems continue to arise the breeding should be re-evaluated.  As for my boar being not registered, I could care less.  I'm not much for playing with others, and don't particularly like the politics that oftentimes come with breed registries.  Most breed registries (with the exception of rabbits) don't guarantee good animals.  Most registries, if the parents are registered, well then the offspring can be registered and it doesn't matter a whit the quality of the animal.  It is in the hands of the breeder, and their choice to register the offspring or not.  The breeder of Ed Earl is a good example.  He was correct in not registering Ed Earl since he came from a litter with a cosmetic defect.  A note about registered rabbits;  Rabbits can only be registered after being examined and passed by a registrar, therefore a subpar animal is not going to be registered, no matter it's parentage. 

Should I breed Ed Earl?  Well there's that question again.  Here's the thing..........I am breeding solely to get pork for my table.  I have NO intention of selling Ed Earl's offspring as breeding stock.  Every boar piglet will be castrated before leaving here and buyers of the gilts will know about the tail issue and that they are buying FEEDER pigs,  not breeding stock.

One thing is for sure and certain, Ed Earl shouldn't be line bred, because the defect that caused the no tail in his brother could be masking an even deeper problem, or it could be nothing.  I won't know until I've bred him and even then I may not know because I'll only be breeding him to one sow and genes cross differently in different animals.  It isn't near the problem for someone like me, who is breeding solely for meat, as it would be for someone who was breeding to sell breeding stock to others.  But again, when you have heritage animals with a limited gene pool you sometimes must do things you wouldn't do in a more optimal situation, but you still have to be honest and ethical in all you do.  You should be honest and ethical in every aspect of your life, but that's not the topic for today.....hehehe!

I didn't get Old Spot pigs because I want to become a famous breeder and save the breed.  I don't have the land, nor the money for that.  What I want is to produce my own meat for my own freezer and sell the surplus, probably at the livestock auction.  In that case, having a pig with the genetic codes to produce tail-less pigs is pretty much a non issue, but I will still be very careful in my breeding, even though I'm just breeding for the table. 

In closing I'd just like to say that line breeding is a very good tool in the hands of a responsible breeder..............

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Pig Week Continues.......What Does a Happy Pig Look Like?

Watch this video to find out..........



If you are wondering about the panel laying on the ground in this video, it is there to prevent my piggies from rooting in that area.  The creek runs through there, and we laid the panel down and wired it to the fence so they won't excavate in the creek bed right there and get it deep enough to get out.......


Ed Earl is a slave to belly rubs........while he was exploring his new home, he'd come over to one of us once in awhile to get a nice scratch........

Watch this video to see if Ed Earl prefers belly rubs or eating best.......WARNING.........this video depicts the innate viciousness of the Old Spot Hog.....don't say I didn't warn you.....



If you want to raise pigs, get an Old Spot!  ♥



God Bless................