Part #1 of my story starts like this.
I grew up in central ND in a small rural country town type setting but not on an actual farm. So that type of living and growing up around animals besides small family pets, was something I didn't know much about. I think I was 14 when I was old enough to get my driver license and that is when I was able to get a job after school out on a local farm. The farmer ran a 100 head of cows and had just enough land to grow hay and grain for them, not a very big operation. This was my first real hands on experience with working around farm equipment and animals but no hogs. I did this all through HS at the same farm until I graduated and then I was old enough 18 to go out and get a real job.
When I was 22 I bought my own property in a town that was 12 miles down the road from where I grew up. It was an old town that had died out over the years and had a population of 8 people left at the time and this is where I opened my repair business and was able to have enough room to start raising my own feeder pigs. I would buy 5 or 6 weaner pigs from a local guy who raised a few hogs for his family and these were the ones he didn't keep back for himself to butcher.
So for me at this time all I knew about pigs was how to raise them from spring to fall for butchering, throw the feed and water to them for 6-8 months and it was time. I also learned how to slaughter my own hog during this time because I knew the importance of doing it right and I raised feeder pigs for years like this.
Long story short, this all stopped when I went to AK to live and work for a few years. The two things I missed most from home back in ND was my wood stove and fresh Pork. So when I returned back to ND and fired things back up again, I wasn't set up anymore to raise feeder pigs and I had to find and buy hogs that were butcher ready. That wasn't an easy thing because no one was raising any pigs in the area because of no money in it. Anyone that still tried to raise pigs couldn't afford to feed them properly so they basically were feed screenings ( junk feed ) from the elevator and not good ground Barley.
So late November, I bought two hogs from a guy sight unseen and was told they were butcher ready hogs and he delivered them to my place when I was gone. The guy called me and told me he just left my place and dropped the trailer with the two hogs there and said not to worry about the trailer he was in no hurry to get it right back. He then told me about the fun time he had loading them by himself and that was the reason he was late and wasn't able to meet me on time earlier that morning.
So after hearing that story I knew I had to let the hogs stand a day or two and give them lots of fresh water, because of how they were just handled. I didn't think much about it until I arrived back home and was able to look things over for myself. These were not feeder pigs that were raised to the point of butchering, these were two old Sows! I am guessing the one was 375-400 and the other one looked Horrible! She looked like she was locked up and starved, I am not joking. I could see the back bone and ribs, it was bad and I wasn't very happy when I called the guy to ask what was going on. Anyway I won't get into that.
The second Sow looked so bad I didn't want to take a pic of her for fear someone would think I was responsible for the way she looked. I am thinking to myself, now what? I am basically stuck with them and have to deal with it. One was ok to butcher and the other not, I wasn't going to butcher the second hog and stick her in my freezer the way she looked. I had no place to keep her because the ground was froze and I couldn't drive steel in the ground to build a pen to keep her and feed her.
Since I was going to let the Hogs stand a few day and settle down before I butchered them I went and found some bedding and feed for them while I thought more about this. I wasn't very happy about the situation and I knew there was no way I was going to butcher the second pig the way she look.
Ok day four now and I have a game plan! LOL I will butcher the first hog and makeshift a small pen to keep and feed the second hog for a month and then decide if she is ok to butcher, so that's what I did. I couldn't pound any posts in the ground and I knew from having pigs before I needed something solid to hold her with protection from the outside elements if the weather turned bad. It was November and the start of winter with knowing January and February were our colds months ahead.
So I decided about the only real place I could keep her was in a old steel heater shed that I had beside my shop that I wasn't using. I would also be able to attach a wire cattle panel to the front of it so she had a little room to move around, because the heater shed only had enough room inside for her to turn around and that was it. This was the best I could do on such short notice.
The pics below are of day four when I butcher the first Hog, I placed Pork Chop in the front of the trailer at this time until I had her new pen ready in a few days.
Part #2 to my story will follow soon with more pics.