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ABOUT HOG RAISING
Hobby Farms
|July/August 2025
Before you bring home the bacon, learn about what it takes to get started in the pig farming.

Of all the farm animals out there, pigs may be the most misunderstood. Phrases such as “sweating like a pig,” referring to someone as being “useless as teats on a boar hog” and calling someone a “dirty pig” are examples of this disconnect. (Pigs don’t sweat, the number of teats on a male pig are an indicator of the mothering ability of its female offspring and pigs are relatively tidy animals!) Starting a hog-raising business, you might find information out there that’s equally as off-base. From common terminology to simple husbandry and selecting your stock to raise pigs for meat, there’s a lot to understand before you venture into the hog-raising business.

The basics of pig farming can be made clearer when you understand some of the terminology used among hog farmers. As you read this article and do your research, keep in mind these terms:
PIG, HOG or SWINE: used interchangeably, meaning any member of the porcine family.
PIGLET: an unweaned baby pig
RUNT: a small, weak piglet
BOAR: an uncastrated male pig
BARROW: a castrated male pig
FARROWING: giving birth
GILT: a female pig that has not farrowed
SOW: a female pig that has farrowed
SUCKLING PIG: a piglet processed for tender meat
FEEDER PIG: a pig sold to be finished for meat
GROWER: a pig being raised for meat
FINISHER: a pig nearing processing weight
HERD: a group of domesticated pigs
SOUNDER: a group of wild pigs
PRODUCTION SYSTEMS
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