SIX WARM PIGLETS

If you were hanging out in the Kitchen’s Garden Lounge of Comments yesterday you would have read that a piglet was lost in that first cold night.  I found him dead on Poppy’s side of their quarters.  Being the Lady Pig Farmer is not always easy. All our focus these first few days is keeping the babies safe and well fed. This task feels mutually exclusive at times.

Although this does not happen often in my set up it does happen. The sows are very, very big and prone to rolling over without warning then they find it hard to move very fast when a piglet gets stuck beneath them. They are pretty nonchalant about their piglets. They wade through them. When they are ready to lie down they will often wait until the babies are away from them. But it looks to me like Poppy is a bit lazy this time around. She is not being as careful.  But pigs are not people and the words lazy and careful do not apply.  Nature has her way.  I think us people just get IN the way.

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For the first few days the sow is very tired and sleeps much of the time, this gives the babies time to get their feet. Then they are like street urchins playing chicken with a Bus in traffic.  By now they have learnt to be quicker on their feet if they want to survive.

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We lost one of Mollys this time last year too. Another big piglet. A combination of too much straw, too cold, and with Poppy – me shifting her bed and giving her more straw for warmth.  I knew the straw was a risk. And I have now been taught by these mother pigs that it is a risk I cannot take again.

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Poppy will just have to deal with it. She still has straw and shavings but not as much. I went out late at night and cleaned around the perimeter again, there are gullies and tiny safety corridors around the outside of the pen as escapes for piglets – if she fills these in, making big beds for herself, (which she did the other night with all that extra material) they can get trapped. And last night was the last of the really cold nights,  I hope.  She is a very big sow now.

All went well last night though – we still have six fat and warm babies sleeping in their creep nest.  I ran out and checked at 5.30am so I could give you a report.

With this nice sun I will open Poppy’s door when I go outside – the fresh air will be cold but everything goes better with the door open.

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Sheila (below) is more than happy to be out of it.  She never had babies and never much liked boars. So she has never had to go through this. She has been doing her housework getting this part of the field ready for seeding.  Happy in her work.

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Beautiful calves. With all this attention on Poppy and her piglets, I have not paid a lot of attention to the calves. And they really are a friendly bunch.

I did get a lot of the winter dug out of the chook house yesterday, though. When I am feeling out of sorts I like some good hard work. And shovelling winter chicken shit is good hard work.

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The West Barn is a bit of a feed-lot as we wait for the grass to grow. I hate it but it is the season. I need the fields to feed them for the whole summer so we have to let the forage grow.

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They tend to mill around their hay feeder most of the day. And it was sunny yesterday with the Northerly still blowing.  With a little sun this is the best seat in the house as far as best seats go at the tail end of this long winter. Nice and sheltered. Yesterday, the cows, they stood, still and absorbent, their heads poised, wide-asleep. with cold backs and sun warm fronts waiting for spring. Or something. No cow is terribly sure what.

And so to work. Maybe I can get that chook house finished today.

It is still quiet on the farm. Next week I will be bringing in a small herd of pigs to grow on. (They are baby show pigs that do not have the right markings).  And the following week the chicks and ducklings come.  THEN the work begins.

So for the moment I am making the most of this little hiatus.

I hope you have a lovely day.

celi

WEATHER: A little more sun and a little elevation in temperatures. It is a bit like a weight loss programme: if we shed the cold weight slowly maybe it will STAY SHED!

Sunday 04/08 0% / 0 in
A mix of clouds and sun during the morning will give way to cloudy skies this afternoon. High 42F/5C. Winds light and variable.

Sunday Night 04/08 60% / < 1 in
Variably cloudy with snow showers. Low near 30F/-1C. Winds light and variable. Chance of snow 60%. Snow accumulations less than one inch.

Sun
6:24 am 7:25 pm

Moon
Waning Gibbous, 48% visible 2:19 am 12:11 pm

60 responses to “SIX WARM PIGLETS”

  1. How do you manage to keep going like you? Are you a female of Hercules…?He had the strength and stamina to keep going through thick and thin ..which is what you are doing..day after day..l do so admire your spirit and determination… I am pleased that piglets are fine..one loss is sad but you still have 6 porky pies running around. Have a great day Miss C and may the sun shine forever on your halo

  2. The remaining piglets are beautifully alert, plump and glossy. Being Molly must be rather difficult in confined quarters, like a large ocean liner trying to manoeuvre around a flotilla of small tugs. I feel as if it’s not that she’s uncaring, it’s just that they’re not ‘people’ to her – yet. I’m with you on the therapeutic value of shit-shovelling, of whatever variety. Plus, it keeps you warm!

  3. I feel you on the hard work when things aren’t the best. I don’t have a chook house but when necessary, I have yard that is not yet garden or a compost pile to turn. A few hours with a shovel makes most things feel a little better.

  4. Poor little thing, though I’m reminded that pigs have large litters because of a high infant mortality rate and you do very well on that score.
    They look so big already!

    • It is true and when the sows are crated they lose just as many. The crate is more for convenience. Injections, farrowing interventions, piglet maintanence, space retraints. The sow will still lie on her babies if they don’t move out of the way.

  5. It’s hard when an animal does not survive! I know we always think, “What else could we have done.” But with the Poppy and the babies, I can’t imagine what more could be done. And especially after they had all survived several days. The triplet baby goats are doing fine. Two of the three are still quite small, but they all are eating. Mostly they have been sleeping piled up in the straw. After three nights in the shower stall, and their days outside, we figured they could take the cold. Our other mama goat had one big kid yesterday, and she fared the night temps of around freezing well, thank goodness!!!

    • WONDERFUL – I am pleased. I am trying to find a proper pattern for the lamb blankets I made out of old sweatshirts. Basically they are like a rectangle of fabric with four slits cut into them, forming a smaller rectangle (if you connected the dots) . The coat will drape like a horse blanket. You put both left side feet through the two slits on that side and slide the fabric up and over and down and then do the same on the other side, bending the legs and stretching the fabric slightly so the holes end up (losely) in the armpits. When I have a sec I will see if i can find them on this blog from back in the day. I find I cannot describe this. c

      • So I should look for child sweatshirts at the thrift shops, right? Two of the three triplets are quite small. And one of the two got hypothermia and had to be brought back to life. She is still moving super slowly, not running and jumping like the other two, or the one born yesterday. My John says it will just take a little longer for her to catch up with the others. After tonight’s last cold night, all should be well with temps in the 60s tomorrow, thank goodness!

      • Thank you for this Celi!!! Do I cut through both layers of the sweatshirt and then sew the shoulders together? Do I need to stitch around the whole thing to make it one warm layer, and then cut the leg holes in it? Sorry for all the questions! I do want to make at least two ASAP. I’m still worried about the baby that got hypothermia and I had to bottle feed for two days. She just stands there looking around. The two others, even the smaller one like her are running, jumping and kicking. Today it will be warmer so I will watch her and hope she begins to move more. I’m not sure what else I can do. Any suggestions??? Thanks so much Celi!!!

        • Get a coat on her today. The sweatshirt is just fabric any warm breathable fabric will do. No stitching needed. cut out a big square . Drape it over her- back – feel for her hips – make marks for the armholes. Cut where your marks are and put it on her. It will drape a bit on the inside of her legs leaving the belly open to pee.

  6. Mama mja you certainly do not need to go work out at a health club….your farmy is it’s own health club! Cheers!

  7. I am sorry for the one that’s lost. Another pigette to depict with a halo… Maybe I missed something, but where do the other show pigs, ducks and chicks come from? Did you purchase them or are you raising them for someone else? I understand the part about cleaning your demons away. For me it’s dishes and “eliminating” “stuff” as loudly as possible. For another friend of mine the best medicine is floor-washing. The sisterhood of scrubbing away the Mean Reds. (Ref. Holly Golightly, Breakfast at Tiffany’s.)

    • Oh woops – that was bad writing in the early morning. The ducklings and chicks are coming the usual route – in the mail! The extra pigs (they are about 60 pounds he says): I am buying from a friend of mine who raises Herefords for FFA and 4H kids who buy them and show them and make enough money to pay their college tuition (if they win and if they can sell them). The ones who are not pretty enough for the show route will come to me for fattening. 90% of the show route pigs also end up in the abbatoir after the fairs so my lot will just be taking a different path. c

  8. Oh, Ceci! That photo of Poppy nose-to-nose with her baby is priceless! I swear she is smiling at it! Thanks for the delight in my day – does my heart good!

  9. Yay, 6 warm, lively and growing piggies. Babies Reilly are tiny in comparison to Poppy. Looking forward to the me arrivals. Laura

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