WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Pleasant Talk About Fruits, Flowers and Farming cover

Pleasant Talk About Fruits, Flowers and Farming

Chapter 103: KEEPING YOUNG PIGS IN WINTER.
Open in WeRead

About This Book

A series of conversational essays and addresses mixes hands-on horticultural instruction with reflections on rural life, seasonal farm tasks, and domestic economy. Topics include fruit and flower cultivation, pruning, seed saving, plowing, manure theory, animal care, and crop management, alongside practical recipes, seed lists, and work calendars. The pieces pair technical tips with observations on beauty, health, and civic responsibility, encouraging readers to improve breeds and yields, beautify homesteads, and practice careful stewardship of land and gardens.

KEEPING YOUNG PIGS IN WINTER.

There is both negligence, and mistake, in the way of wintering pigs. I am not talking to those whose manner of keeping stock is, to let stock take care of themselves; but to farmers who mean to be careful. Hogs should be sorted. The little ones will, otherwise, be cheated at the trough, and overlaid and smothered in the sleeping-heap. There should not be too many in one inclosure; especially young pigs should not sleep in crowds; for, although they sleep warmer, they will suffer on that very account. Lying in piles, they get sweaty; the skin is much more sensitive to the cold, and coming out in the morning reaking and smoking, the keen air pierces them. In this way, young pigs die off through the winter by being too warm at night. If you have the land-shark and alligator breed, however, you should crowd these together, for the more they die off the better for the farmer.