– is a Virgin No More.
And understandably very proud of himself.
And he was a perfect gentleman and at no time did Poppy or I feel threatened. Yesterday morning I saw that she was ready so I opened the gates. He just walked up, ignoring his breakfast, said Hullo (by nosing her in the side) and then mounted her. He did this three times. After a while she ran away so I locked her back into her pen. All was easy. All was calm. I was alone (chickens and dogs and cows not withstanding) – so, all was as it should be, slow, gentle, no drama.
In the evening I let her out and they did it again. No screaming, no biting, no fights or anything. In fact while he was breeding her I was scratching Poppy on the head telling her she was a very patient girl and we must be kind to virgin boars. She stood well, quite happy, eyes glazed and dreamy, he is shorter than her so she made accommodations for that and they did very well together. So I left them together to enjoy their evening.
I have read many, many pieces about how the breeding of pigs by a boar ( horrors) is noisy and violent and dangerous. And Charlotte came home cut on the face and changed forever and we all remember Sheila getting into a terrible fight with a boar.
I think that the breeders who have the most success are patient. Just patient. And when the girl runs away they open the gate and let her out. When they have read the signs rightly and she stands for the boar they let nature take its course. Artificial Insemination is a good option but not sustainable for me, and my wee farm has to sustain itself without buying semen in a plastic bag from the outside. (Though keep in mind that we will sell or swap boars every few years). So I bought a boar. Also I think I am lucky to have a gentle, well bred boar who was well treated right from the beginning – this has resulted in a confident, kind animal. 
Last night I drove over to the West Barn in the dark.
With the dogs left on the back of the truck and with my Iphone light tucked into my jacket pocket, so I could walk without holding a torch, I softly crept into the big barn. The cows were sleeping. Poppy and Manu were sleeping, separately, but it is early days in their relationship, the chickens were sleeping. All was peaceful.
Poppy and Manu will be together for the next three months now. To keep each other warm in the winter AND if she has not caught this month he should be able to breed her next month. Being a virgin he is only just working out HOW to do this. But personally I think she is bred and more than happy.
So let’s count three months, three weeks and three days from yesterday (114 days). When will Poppy’s first due date be? I need to do the maths.
I am well pleased.
I hope you have a lovely day.
love celi







55 responses to “Manu the Virgin Boar”
Ohh what good news! You have done so well, well done and give yourself a well deserved pat on the back. Have a lovely calm day.
I’m sure that you and the farmy played a big part in the success. Manu has been loved and cared for and they’ve had a few days of smelling each other through the gate of a nice warm barn. You had me ROFL, once again, with your description 🙂
Jubilation on the porcine success. Fingers crossed that it takes. Patience is an essetial virtue. I love the picture of the hens-in-a-row.
love,
Viv on her lonesome – family and husband departed. Sally’s lot missed their ferry at Zeebrugge and had to drive back to Calais and thus the length of England overnight instead of a nice sleep in a cabin and a much shorter distance to drive from Hull to Newcastle. I told them the ferry time was local time but D insisted it was GMT. Men are so pigheaded.
What a sweet, funny post. I love this story. All de-virgin-ations should be so sweet and tranquil.
I had a older boar that I bought, he was a tough boar, good with girls but scared me, he did not stay, I got a weaner sized boar and raised him up myself, and he was a delight, excellent temperament, I cried when he was sent to camp, he was so food with the females, I am so glad they got on so well..
not foo, good with female, trying to write quiet for hubby who is sleeping in til 8 today..
April 25?. Lovely. Perhaps some more girls piggies to have lovely flower names like Daffodil or Tulip.
Or Petunia or Jonquil or Rose. What a lovely idea, the Farmy garden of porcine beauty!
One will have to be named ANZAC if they come on April 25th 🙂
If it’s a wee boar, he can be called Zac for short! Or perhaps the girls can be called after flowers, and the boys can all get Maori names.
You are all hilarious – naming all the progeny before we are even sure they are conceived. And sorry there will be no names – every piglet will be sold or leave the farm one way or the other and I cannot keep any gilts until it is time for Manu to leave. So no piglet names for a while.. c
We can have fun playing, even though we know they’re not staying…
Lovely post today and so glad Manu and Poppy are getting along. I just checked the “Days from Date Calculator” and 114 days from Jan 2 will be April 25.
Yes ! i have that in my diary now as a possibility.. c
Bravo Manu, you have performed heroically, and if Poppy didn’t chase you away, you must be passably good at your job already! Please may we have more photos of Manu’s lovely face with his interesting eyes? He may become the patriarch of a fabulous Hereford line of gentle boars and energetic, naughty sows!
I was hoping to stalk them with the camera today but once again the clouds are lowering and we have very little light – I will see.. c
Yay! Great news! I wasn’t sure if you would leave them together now, but I am so glad that they had a gentle courtship. Breeding can be a headache for many different kinds of animals, and patience and calmness always wins :*)
They are still together this morning and quite calm so I think we are out of the woods in that department.. c
Never heard before such a touching love story about a Virgin Boar and his girl!
Now he’s changed into a MAN… (I’m afraid that does not work in English). – Glad that everything went so well… And – btw – congratulations to you and your decision to get Manu for the Farmy! It was kind of a risk but the outcome is so very well now. It’s kind of a deep faith that you’ve got, Celi. Happy for all of us counting together: Three months, three weeks, three days…
Love that last three photographs very very much. What a wide horizon you have.
Good morning irmi, we do have the most beautiful horizon! c
A few of those chooks seem to be saying “are they done, can we look now?” 🙂 Ok, we have the date now, we can start speculating on how many. Well done Celi, those piglets are going to be happy and calm piggies too. Laura
Thats right – with a good breeding we can get quite a few piglets – though eight is my ideal! c
No crazy 70s disco music, then. Oh, well. 😉
Oops – my mistake!
What a terrific start to the new year. A possible whole new family to add to the farm. I’m delighted it went so well and gentle. Terrific shot of the sun creeping up in the early morning. Have a gentle Sunday.
This whole family will be for sale so lets hope I can find a market for them!
I doubt you will have any difficulty finding a new home for each of them. Happy pigs are hard to find.
Yes I well remember that nasty boar who hurt Sheila but this time things have gone well, it is good when a plan comes out right..O make that sometime in mid april
It will be a very piggie month if all goes well!
So happy all went well with the breeding! And no doubt they will be the closest of pigs, especially as the weather stays cold. Yes, getting Manu was a brilliant idea! Doing A.I. ourselves, after watching a Youtube video, with our two girls the first year was something else! We were fortunate that it worked with one and we got a lovely litter of piglets. But after that, we got Jethro, our wonderful boar, and raised him from a piglet to be a sweet, gentle giant. xo
Yes Jethro has been an inspiration to us all! c