jaholbrook wrote:I may have missed this in one of your awesome posts but have you ever tried or considered "really" raising the pigs i.e. having breeding stock rather than buying young pigs from another source and growing them to market wieght?
I used to do that. Ever since I was a kid, I wanted to have a sow herd and sell feeder pigs (the size I buy now). Feeding out pigs was always the least attractive part of the business. I was up to 85 sows (mothers), selling a load of feeder pigs every two months, to a friend of mine from high school. We had a pretty good thing going, him & his dad would buy everything I could sell them. We had a handshake agreement that when the price was high, I'd give them a break, when it was low, they'd give me a little extra.
It was nice never having to sell on the open market, hoping your pigs weren't selling on a day when only a couple buyers showed up, and you'd take a beating.
Anyhow, I just got burned out. With sows, you have to be around twice a day,
every day, for feeding. You have to have a regular schedule for breeding, weaning, vacinating. When I started, my dad was like a hired hand. He'd help when I needed it. As he started getting older, I didn't want him getting pushed around by sows all the time, but he wasn't going to stop helping. I was right at the point where I needed a real hired man, but had to get just a little bigger to justify it.
I finally took a big step back and decided it was time to give it up. It's one of the hardest decisions I ever had to make. I kept all my equipment, thinking I'd get back in someday.
A year later, the bottom fell out of the hog market. I mean clear out. Feeder pigs that were never below $30 were bringing $2 or $3. It wiped out all the small producers. It had a domino effect, when the little guys dissappeared, the collection points, where you could sell less than a semi load of hogs anytime, went away too. When the dust settled, there was just never going to be little operations again. I sold off the equipment and figured I was done forever.
Then we bought this place. The barns were in great shape and didn't need much modification for pigs. A friend from High School had managed to survive the crash by paring down his herd and selling show pigs to 4H & FFA kids. It carried him through and he built back up, to the point where he feeds out enough that he can deliver directly to the processing plant. He sells me all the pigs I want, since it's a small number.
Pigs are social animals, they do best when they have company. One sow will produce 20+ pigs per year. So if I had a pair of sows, that's 40 pigs per year we need to find customers for. We aren't there yet. If we get to that point, we will consider putting in sows. The old milking parlor in the barn isn't good for much, but every time I walk in there, I picture pens with sows and nursing pigs.
Then there's being tied down, twice a day, every day. Feeding out pigs on a self feeder and waterer, we are able to get a way for a day, and finding somebody to just check them once or twice a day to make sure everything is OK, isn't to tough, if it's just for a weekend. When we sell the finished hogs, the barn is empty and we can go away if we want, for as long as we want. You can't jump in and out with sows, once you have them, you're commited.
I discoverd sows also come with a hook. When you are doing chores, you start thinking, if I'm going to feed two sows everyday, I might as well feed 10, I'm already out here and it won't take that much longer........ pretty soon, there are barns being built and equipment being bought, bankers start calling you by your first name........
It's kind of like;
since I'm already taking my kids to school, why don't I just drive the school bus......
Raising livestock seems to be a genetic disorder, it's why some farmers raise livestock and others have absolutely no desire to have anything to do with critters. There's no other explaination.
Now, if you aren't more confused than ever, about why I don't raise my own pigs.........
Tim