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Does anybody raise pure bred Landrace pigs here on the North Coast? Thanks for any help!Call Richard at 425-422-4866. Be prepared he like to talk....and is proud of his pigs. That being said mine are excellent breeders, and the uncut boars bred in the morning and butchered the same day ant had wonderful flavor. Price was only a little higher than average around here.
If you can't find landrace you could try Tamworth, I'm going to pick a few up and cross with large blackHere's a decent FB group might help you https://www.facebook.com/groups/1747495112143603/I did a search and pulled this post up from that FB group linkQuoteDoes anybody raise pure bred Landrace pigs here on the North Coast? Thanks for any help!Call Richard at 425-422-4866. Be prepared he like to talk....and is proud of his pigs. That being said mine are excellent breeders, and the uncut boars bred in the morning and butchered the same day ant had wonderful flavor. Price was only a little higher than average around here.
Well we ended up getting Berkshire/Duroc piglets. Way far from a Landrace but they were just to nice looking of pigs to not get them. Plus the fact piglets aren't just available anytime anywhere close by either. I'm sure they'll finish out fine. We bought six of the burly buggers so we expanded the pen a bit to 96 by 64.
Quote from: Southpole on April 21, 2016, 08:23:38 AMWell we ended up getting Berkshire/Duroc piglets. Way far from a Landrace but they were just to nice looking of pigs to not get them. Plus the fact piglets aren't just available anytime anywhere close by either. I'm sure they'll finish out fine. We bought six of the burly buggers so we expanded the pen a bit to 96 by 64.Holy pig feed.
I'd divide that paddock up into 4 squares, plant stuff and mob one square at a time. Lot of unused area there could you expand even further?Over a few years the additional planted forage would help save on feed bill some, and you could advertise "pasture raised"