Pigs
Guinea Hog
A small hog, with a long history of use on subsistence farms in the South. This is first and foremost a utility hog - it typifies the hog that was bred to be useful.
Guinea hogs were used around homesteads, to keep the area around the house free of snakes, rodents, weeds, and to clean the gardens out in the fall. They are good foragers in the woods, and were often allowed to roam in the woods to fatten on acorns.
They are not a contemporary market pig - they produce more fatty bacon than the markets want now, and they produce excellent hams and pork loin or chops. They are an excellent lard hog, so they are a top choice for a small farm that needs to produce lard in limited space.
Guineas tend a little more toward feral behaviors than many domestic pigs, so the boars are fairly aggressive in defending breeding rights, and it is not wise to keep more than one. The sows require ample space to be territorial when they have young. Weaner hogs being raised for fall butchering need space to forage, and do not do well in close confinement. They do best when their food is spread out, so it does not cause them to fight over space at a trough or feeder.
They are an active animal, and they are rooters and hunters. This means that if you need gardens cleared, stumps rooted out, invasive weeds erradicated, or other piggy tasks accomplished, Guineas are well suited to the job.
For small farm and homestead use, where lard is an asset, and where a pig that behaves like a pig is needed, this breed is a great choice.
- Type - lard, utility
- Size - small
- Production Capacity - good producers of lard and meat, not as prolific as some breeds
- Special Features - a fairly small breed that has been used in developing miniature pigs
- Best for Farms - Great when you need a lard pig, or if you need a pig to do utilitarian work on your farm
- Eggs, Milk, Meat Features - tender, juicy meat, and good lard - meat cures well
- Other Products - some market for Guineas, depending on size, as pet pigs
- Historic or Contemporary Significance - Long history as a self-sufficient homestead hog in the South
- Housing and Space Requirement - housing need not be large, since they are a small pig, but they need room to forage, and boars and sows with litters need individual space
- Regional Adaptations - well adapted to a range of conditions
- Feed Requirement - Guineas do best when they have a significant meat protein content in their diet - they were bred to consume small pest animals
- Other Considerations - Size of Guineas varies widely, so you'll want to see parent stock before purchasing breeders.
A NOTE ABOUT PIGS:
Pigs are omnivores. They eat anything people do, and quite a few things people don't eat. They do best on a diet of leftovers. All the stuff that a farm or homestead produces, that isn't usable by other animals or at the table. All the stuff that normally goes in the garbage can or compost heap because you don't have anything better to do with it.
Pigs thrive on:
- Garden scraps - tops, roots, bug eaten lettuce, overblown squash or cukes, the comfrey or Jerusalem Artichokes that have taken over, the vines at the end of the season, the weeds (give them time to grow large enough to be worth tossing to the pigs), the potatoes with wireworms or the half-eaten sweet potatoes, or any infested plants WITH the bugs.
- Orchard windfalls and vineyard excess - they'll eat anything that hits the ground, wormy apples, split prunes, bird pecked cherries, soggy strawberries, excess blackberry vines, the cuttings from grape vines and fig trees, and just about anything else that comes from the orchard (rabbits love these things too). A single 5 gallon bucket of windfall apples from a small orchard every other day, fed to nine pigs, over the course of about 2 months, made a difference of about 25 lbs per pig compared to the year before with the same feeding schedule minus the apples.
- Kitchen scraps - anything leftover or trimmed off. Freezer burned food, including meats, old food storage that needs tossed, cereal or grain products that have been infested with weevils, etc. And of course, that dish you made that just didn't turn out tasting like anything that the family wanted to finish, but which you put in the fridge anyway because you did not want to waste it...
- Butchering Scraps - yeah, pigs eat meat, and no, it does not make them more violent to do so. It only affects them negatively if you let them kill the animals themselves (they will if they get the chance), so go ahead and give them any butcher scraps, feathers, fur, and all.
- Dairy excess - whey, skim milk, sour milk, and anything that is on the edge where it is not fresh enough that you feel comfortable using it, but which is not outright moldy or spoiled.
- A number of other food sources, including rodents, snakes, and various forms of vermin, if they are on pasture, or given space to roam where those things are a problem, and pigs are the traditional stump extractor, they'll go after the tender roots and the bugs that live under the stump, and uproot the thing in the process (of course, they can do this with trees too, so some discretion is required on your part in deciding where to pen them). We do not recommend industrial waste. But whatever food sources you have a surplus of on the farm, and whatever needs consumed, the pig will happily convert.
Pigs generally forage well, and are prime opportunists, so they'll tend to spot and take advantage of any available food source. Those breeds that are less self-sufficient at hunting their own food will quickly sharpen up when given the opportunity to forage. Pigs can go feral very quickly if they are let run without care.
Pigs may be bred to produce lean meat with very little body fat, or they may be bred to produce more fatty meat and a lot of lard fat. Some pigs cross over - generally if you keep them lean they'll have little body fat for lard, but if you feed them up, they'll pad up nicely and give you a nice rendering of lard to get you through the year.
Lard has been very devalued by many people, but is especially helpful for homesteads since it is one form of healthy fat that you can produce for yourself. Given the choice, I'll go for the lard hog over the bacon hog, or a crossover if I cannot get a good lard hog. Lard is useful for cooking, and for making soaps and cosmetics. What is not of use in commercial pork production is of high value for the homestead or small farm, so depending on your needs, the breed of pig and their purpose may be very important.
Lard is the reason pig breeding has changed over the last 100 years, and the reason many older breeds are endangered. Historically pigs were valued for lard production as well as meat production. In more recent history, the trend has moved to leaner and leaner pork, and lard has been bred out of many breeds.
Most people who buy a weaner pig or two in the spring, to fatten for fall butchering, do not pay attention to the breed. They just find someone who is selling pigs, assume all pigs are the same, and drop their cash on the least expensive squealers. They'd be happier with the meat if they know the breed, and know the type of pig they are getting. This is especially important for people who WANT a lard hog, or who prefer a more tender and juicy meat.
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