Summer Grazing
First of all, let me say outdoor Piggy activities are good for your pig, it not only relieves boredome but also there are nutritive benefits found in the soil they need. Behavior and attitude problems can simply come from your pig being bored. Pig are natural foragers and have a vast curiosity about them, so outside activities are great, even grazing times, but here with the summer months ahead, here are a few points to ponder on.
1. Make sure if you leave your piggy outside while you are at work or just long periods of time without supervision, make sure they are secure, have plenty of shade and also have an adequate supply of water also set in a shady area. Pigs love water, so maybe a nice kiddie pool for them to take a dip and cool off. (NOTE) : Leaving a harness on an unattended pig has proven to be disastrous situation to some. So it is not a good Idea!
2. Grazing as most of us know may put a few extra unwanted pounds on your pig thru the summer grazing months, so you should cut back on pellets and snacks. Use your visual judgment as a means to keep your pig at a healthy weight and adjust accordingly. Pigs that have never been allowed to graze have to be introduced slowly to grazing, too much and them not use to it can cause bloating, gas and discomfort for your piggy.
3.Make sure there are no toxic plants in the grazing area that may pose harm to your pig. You can find a list of toxic plants on my facebook page called creekside farm tiny oinkers pig education page. It’s always a good idea for all piggy owners to keep activated charcoal on hand incase they get into something they shouldn’t have. It could save their life til you can get them seen by the vet.
4. Although pigs get good benefits from grazing, they also pickup common worms, so a good worming program is a must to keep them healthy, at least twice a year and if they graze alot, up to three times a year.
5. Pigs do Sunburn. Especially those of lighter colors. Shade and sunblock your piggies if left out for long periods. Sunburn has been linked to cause an onset of dippity pig syndrome which can be very painful for your pig. You can find articles here on the site and in pig education on this syndrome.
6. Although pigs do not get infested with ticks and fleas like a dog or cat because of their thick skin, their underbellies are quite tender and subject to bug bites just like us. I use Avon’s skin-so-soft bath oil on Tater when he is outside, I have found that ticks, fleas, knats and mosquito’s don’t like it very much. Never use pesticide sprays or deet on your pigs, pigs have a very sensitive upper respiratory system.
7. Well I hope I have covered most of the biggies here, so, me and Tater are wishing you Happy Summer Grazing and fun outdoors with your piggies.
copyright: Creekside Farm Tiny Oinkers (posted with permission)
http://creeksidefarmtinyoinkers.com/summer-grazing-points-to-ponder/
April 28, 2014 By Vickie Craig
1. Make sure if you leave your piggy outside while you are at work or just long periods of time without supervision, make sure they are secure, have plenty of shade and also have an adequate supply of water also set in a shady area. Pigs love water, so maybe a nice kiddie pool for them to take a dip and cool off. (NOTE) : Leaving a harness on an unattended pig has proven to be disastrous situation to some. So it is not a good Idea!
2. Grazing as most of us know may put a few extra unwanted pounds on your pig thru the summer grazing months, so you should cut back on pellets and snacks. Use your visual judgment as a means to keep your pig at a healthy weight and adjust accordingly. Pigs that have never been allowed to graze have to be introduced slowly to grazing, too much and them not use to it can cause bloating, gas and discomfort for your piggy.
3.Make sure there are no toxic plants in the grazing area that may pose harm to your pig. You can find a list of toxic plants on my facebook page called creekside farm tiny oinkers pig education page. It’s always a good idea for all piggy owners to keep activated charcoal on hand incase they get into something they shouldn’t have. It could save their life til you can get them seen by the vet.
4. Although pigs get good benefits from grazing, they also pickup common worms, so a good worming program is a must to keep them healthy, at least twice a year and if they graze alot, up to three times a year.
5. Pigs do Sunburn. Especially those of lighter colors. Shade and sunblock your piggies if left out for long periods. Sunburn has been linked to cause an onset of dippity pig syndrome which can be very painful for your pig. You can find articles here on the site and in pig education on this syndrome.
6. Although pigs do not get infested with ticks and fleas like a dog or cat because of their thick skin, their underbellies are quite tender and subject to bug bites just like us. I use Avon’s skin-so-soft bath oil on Tater when he is outside, I have found that ticks, fleas, knats and mosquito’s don’t like it very much. Never use pesticide sprays or deet on your pigs, pigs have a very sensitive upper respiratory system.
7. Well I hope I have covered most of the biggies here, so, me and Tater are wishing you Happy Summer Grazing and fun outdoors with your piggies.
copyright: Creekside Farm Tiny Oinkers (posted with permission)
http://creeksidefarmtinyoinkers.com/summer-grazing-points-to-ponder/
April 28, 2014 By Vickie Craig
This article was written by Department of Agronomy from the University of Missouri
John C. Rea
Department of Animal Sciences
Use of good pasture containing alfalfa, ladino clover, and grass can lower pig feed costs, increase mobility and overall enrichment of pigs. Pasture was formerly an absolute essential for a successful swine operation. In recent years, growing of hogs in confinement has become a reality because of vastly improved rations and means of disease and parasite control. But it is still possible to use large amounts of forage with the pigs.
Sows and gilts on legume pastures require much less supplemental protein and only about one-half as much grain as those in dry lots. An acre of good pasture should carry 8 to 10 sows. Forages selected for swine should be succulent and capable of high production, very palatable, high in protein and vitamins, and produce over a reasonably long growth period.
Pastures make possible a good swine sanitation and disease control program. After swine have grazed pasture for one season, use the pasture for cattle or harvest hay from it for two years before using it for pigs again.
A pig's physical make-up does not lend itself to using great quantities of pasture or roughage like sheep and cattle. But a 400-pound sow can handle relatively large amounts. Good forage can also provide quality protein and certain vitamins and can reduce total feed requirements.
Research reports on feed savings for pigs on pasture vary considerably, depending on type of pasture, age of hogs, and management systems. Data indicate this will amount to 3 to 10 percent of the grain and as much as one-third of the protein needed for growing and finishing hogs. Pastures are recommended for the breeding herd especially. They provide exercise and nutrients needed for sows.
The following points should be considered in making a decision between confinement and pasture production.
Advantages of pasture in swine production
The legumes as a group have a higher protein, calcium and carotene content than grasses. They can furnish an adequate supply of most vitamins with the exception of vitamins D and B12. Alfalfa, ladino, sweet clover, red clover and lespedeza are legumes that may be used for swine pasture. Alfalfa and ladino are probably the best of the group and where possible should furnish the basis of any perennial forage mixture for swine. Ladino clover will not produce as much forage per acre as will alfalfa, but it is somewhat superior in nutritive value. Where adapted, the use of the two together has increased yields and improved the nutritive value.
Annual lespedeza may also be used during the summer months with approximately the same results as alfalfa. However it must be faulted for its lower yield per acre, its shorter grazing season, and its need to reseed in the fall.
Perennial grasses such as orchardgrass, endophyte-free tall fescue, timothy and bromegrass, while not as high in quality as the legumes, should be used in mixtures with them. Mixtures of grass-legume have performed as well as legumes alone and have the advantages of increasing total yields, providing a superior sod, and reducing the risk of losing the legumes through heaving and stress kill.
Temporary pastures
Sudan grass, sorghum-Sudan crosses and small grains may also be used as hog pastures. But rape is the best annual crop in Missouri for swine. It contains around 28 percent protein on a dry matter basis, compared with 30 percent for alfalfa, and an acre will handle about 20 shoats.
Feeding recommendations on pasture
Gestating sows will usually maintain their body weight on excellent ladino-clover pasture with no additional feed. General recommendations on average to excellent pasture would be to provide around 2 pounds of grain daily for sows and 3 pounds for gilts on pasture, plus free-choice access to minerals and iodized salt during the first two-thirds of gestation. During lactation, 2 to 3 pounds of 15 percent protein ration per 100 pounds body weight is recommended. Growing-finishing hogs in most cases should be full-fed with around 20 growing-fattening pigs to the acre.
Herd management on pasture
It is important to have adequate water and shade for hogs on pasture. Studies show extremely high temperatures have an adverse effect on breeding herds, so it is important to provide adequate shade for them.
Pigs of widely varying weights should not be run together. Avoid having a range of weights that exceeds 20 percent above or below the average in the herd.
Rape
Rape is neither a grass nor a legume but belongs to the same plant family as cabbage.
Fertilizing
Rape requires a soil high in available calcium and responds to high levels of nitrogen. Fertilize with phosphate, potash and lime as for alfalfa and with nitrogen as for corn.
Seeding
Rape may be seeded with spring oats as early as February or early March. Use a seeding rate of 5 to 6 pounds per acre. When the oats are drilled, the rape may be seeded through the grass seeding attachment or may be broadcast after the oats are seeded. Use a cultipacker or harrow to cover the seed very lightly. Dwarf Essex is the best variety and seed is available.
Pasturing
Do not begin to pasture until rape has reached a height of 9 to 10 inches. With early seedings this should occur about 6 to 8 weeks after seeding.
Rape sometimes causes white hogs to sun scald. It is caused by the pigs grazing when the rape is wet and then getting exposed to hot sunshine. However, this is usually not serious if treated with crude oil or carbolated petroleum, nor is its occurrence very frequent.
Silage, either corn silage or high quality alfalfa-grass silage, is a practical way of using more forage in a hog program. However, it must be emphasized that the nutritional requirements of bred sows is very exacting and supplementation of the silage is essential. Both corn and alfalfa-grass silage must be supplemented with protein and energy, but if done properly, silage feeding may improve litter size and pig livability and save up to 25 percent in feed costs.
A swine producer would not build a silo just to feed brood sows, but if silage is available for cattle, using it for sows will produce excellent results
Source: http://extension.missouri.edu/p/G2360
John C. Rea
Department of Animal Sciences
Use of good pasture containing alfalfa, ladino clover, and grass can lower pig feed costs, increase mobility and overall enrichment of pigs. Pasture was formerly an absolute essential for a successful swine operation. In recent years, growing of hogs in confinement has become a reality because of vastly improved rations and means of disease and parasite control. But it is still possible to use large amounts of forage with the pigs.
Sows and gilts on legume pastures require much less supplemental protein and only about one-half as much grain as those in dry lots. An acre of good pasture should carry 8 to 10 sows. Forages selected for swine should be succulent and capable of high production, very palatable, high in protein and vitamins, and produce over a reasonably long growth period.
Pastures make possible a good swine sanitation and disease control program. After swine have grazed pasture for one season, use the pasture for cattle or harvest hay from it for two years before using it for pigs again.
A pig's physical make-up does not lend itself to using great quantities of pasture or roughage like sheep and cattle. But a 400-pound sow can handle relatively large amounts. Good forage can also provide quality protein and certain vitamins and can reduce total feed requirements.
Research reports on feed savings for pigs on pasture vary considerably, depending on type of pasture, age of hogs, and management systems. Data indicate this will amount to 3 to 10 percent of the grain and as much as one-third of the protein needed for growing and finishing hogs. Pastures are recommended for the breeding herd especially. They provide exercise and nutrients needed for sows.
The following points should be considered in making a decision between confinement and pasture production.
Advantages of pasture in swine production
- Lower feed costs on good pasture.
- Provides exercise and nutrients needed by breeding sows.
- Lower capital investment per production unit.
- Good use of land not suitable for cropping.
- Better isolation and disease control.
- Decreases waste management problems.
- Decreased cannibalism.
- More labor required for handling, feeding and watering.
- Possibly greater problems with internal parasites.
- More labor in farrowing.
- Possible decrease of crop land.
- May require slightly longer for hogs to reach market.
- Lack of environmental control in extreme weather.
The legumes as a group have a higher protein, calcium and carotene content than grasses. They can furnish an adequate supply of most vitamins with the exception of vitamins D and B12. Alfalfa, ladino, sweet clover, red clover and lespedeza are legumes that may be used for swine pasture. Alfalfa and ladino are probably the best of the group and where possible should furnish the basis of any perennial forage mixture for swine. Ladino clover will not produce as much forage per acre as will alfalfa, but it is somewhat superior in nutritive value. Where adapted, the use of the two together has increased yields and improved the nutritive value.
Annual lespedeza may also be used during the summer months with approximately the same results as alfalfa. However it must be faulted for its lower yield per acre, its shorter grazing season, and its need to reseed in the fall.
Perennial grasses such as orchardgrass, endophyte-free tall fescue, timothy and bromegrass, while not as high in quality as the legumes, should be used in mixtures with them. Mixtures of grass-legume have performed as well as legumes alone and have the advantages of increasing total yields, providing a superior sod, and reducing the risk of losing the legumes through heaving and stress kill.
Temporary pastures
Sudan grass, sorghum-Sudan crosses and small grains may also be used as hog pastures. But rape is the best annual crop in Missouri for swine. It contains around 28 percent protein on a dry matter basis, compared with 30 percent for alfalfa, and an acre will handle about 20 shoats.
Feeding recommendations on pasture
Gestating sows will usually maintain their body weight on excellent ladino-clover pasture with no additional feed. General recommendations on average to excellent pasture would be to provide around 2 pounds of grain daily for sows and 3 pounds for gilts on pasture, plus free-choice access to minerals and iodized salt during the first two-thirds of gestation. During lactation, 2 to 3 pounds of 15 percent protein ration per 100 pounds body weight is recommended. Growing-finishing hogs in most cases should be full-fed with around 20 growing-fattening pigs to the acre.
Herd management on pasture
It is important to have adequate water and shade for hogs on pasture. Studies show extremely high temperatures have an adverse effect on breeding herds, so it is important to provide adequate shade for them.
Pigs of widely varying weights should not be run together. Avoid having a range of weights that exceeds 20 percent above or below the average in the herd.
Rape
Rape is neither a grass nor a legume but belongs to the same plant family as cabbage.
Fertilizing
Rape requires a soil high in available calcium and responds to high levels of nitrogen. Fertilize with phosphate, potash and lime as for alfalfa and with nitrogen as for corn.
Seeding
Rape may be seeded with spring oats as early as February or early March. Use a seeding rate of 5 to 6 pounds per acre. When the oats are drilled, the rape may be seeded through the grass seeding attachment or may be broadcast after the oats are seeded. Use a cultipacker or harrow to cover the seed very lightly. Dwarf Essex is the best variety and seed is available.
Pasturing
Do not begin to pasture until rape has reached a height of 9 to 10 inches. With early seedings this should occur about 6 to 8 weeks after seeding.
Rape sometimes causes white hogs to sun scald. It is caused by the pigs grazing when the rape is wet and then getting exposed to hot sunshine. However, this is usually not serious if treated with crude oil or carbolated petroleum, nor is its occurrence very frequent.
Silage, either corn silage or high quality alfalfa-grass silage, is a practical way of using more forage in a hog program. However, it must be emphasized that the nutritional requirements of bred sows is very exacting and supplementation of the silage is essential. Both corn and alfalfa-grass silage must be supplemented with protein and energy, but if done properly, silage feeding may improve litter size and pig livability and save up to 25 percent in feed costs.
A swine producer would not build a silo just to feed brood sows, but if silage is available for cattle, using it for sows will produce excellent results
Source: http://extension.missouri.edu/p/G2360