Community
Hogs and Exotics Gun or bow, you can stretch your season and fill the freezer with wild hogs and an assortment of exotics.

Facts about Pigs

Thread Tools
 
Old 11-17-2005 | 12:16 PM
  #1  
Rebel Hog's Avatar
Thread Starter
Dominant Buck
 
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 26,323
Likes: 0
From: WC FL
Default Facts about Pigs




Pigs, Pork, Swine
"No man should be allowed to be President who does not understand hogs."
- President Harry Truman
[align=center]




[ul][*]
Swine were among the first of all animals to be domesticated
—around 6,000 years ago. The Chinese were the first to raise wild pigs for food.
[*]
The Spanish explorer Hernando DeSoto brought the first swine
to the New World in 1539.
[*]
A pig's squeal can range from 110-115 decibels. Compare that to the Concorde jet, which is usually under 112 decibels.[*][align=left]
In 2003, Oklahoma's swine industry was the state's fourth largest agricultural enterprise.
[/align][*]
Female swine are called sows. Sows give birth to litters of pigs twice a year. Each litter usually has eight to 12 baby pigs. Giving birth to baby pigs is called farrowing.[*]
Baby pigs appear very greedy when they are competing for food from their mothers. For this reason the words “pig” and “hog” have come to be associated with greedy behavior.[*]
Pigs are weaned when they are two to four weeks old. They are called “nursery pigs” until they reach 50 pounds and “growing/finishing pigs” from then until they reach about 240 pounds. After that they are called hogs. Hogs are usually taken to market when they weigh 240-280 pounds.[*]
In the past hogs were fed table scraps and had a reputation for eating just about anything. The meat from hogs fed that way was very high in fat. The hogs would eat corn, grass, clover or even table scraps that would have otherwise have become garbage. The word “hogwash,” meaning something that is worthless, came from this practice.[*]
In some areas hogs would be turned out to find their own food. Hogs would roam freely, eating what they could find— acorns from the ground or roots, which they dug from the ground with their snouts. On Manhattan Island, New York, the hogs rampaged through grain fields until farmers were forced to build a wall to keep them out. The street running along this wall became Wall Street.[*]
Today’s swine producers are more careful about what they feed their animals. Modern hogs eat corn, wheat and soybean meal. Vitamins and minerals are added to increase growth and improve health.[*]
Today’s hogs weigh more, but because producers plan their diets carefully,
they grow more efficiently and yield more lean meat than ever.
[*]
Pork provides protein, B-vitamins and thiamin to our diets. Pork has three times as much thiamin as any other food. Thiamin changes carbohydrates into energy and promotes a healthy appetite.[*][align=left]
Insulin and about 40 other medicines are made from pigs.
[/align][*]
Pigs are not dirty. They can't sweat, so they roll in the mud to keep cool.[*]
Pig heart valves have been used to replace damaged human heart valves.[*]
Pig fat can be used in weed killers, chalk, cosmetics, floor wax, crayons and antifreeze.[*]
A pig can run a seven-minute mile.[*]
Hogs do not overeat. They eat until they are full. [*]
Hogs are smart animals. They learn to push a lever in the barnyard to get a drink of water or a dish of food. They have been taught to tumble, race, pull carts, dance and hunt. [*]
Pigs are brave. One pig named Priscilla saved a boy from drowning. She is in the Pet Hall of Fame. [*]
The family name for hogs is Swine. The mother is a sow, and the father is a boar. Babies are called pigs.[*]
Sows are great mothers. There are usually eight or nine baby pigs to a litter. Sometimes a mother sow may accidentally lie down on one of her pigs. To help prevent this the farmer uses a special stall that provides a place beside the sow for the baby pigs to go when the mother is getting up and lying down. [*]
Hogs come in different colors. Small Yorkshire hogs are snowy white. Duroc-Jersey hogs are brick red. Spotted Poland China hogs are black except for a white belt of color around the shoulder.[*]
Colonists in Pennsylvania developed the practice of "finishing" hogs on corn (feeding them nothing but corn in the few weeks before butchering them). This practice improved the quality of the pork and laid the foundation for the modern pork industry.[*]
In the colonial US, hogs were driven to market in large droves over trails that later became routes used by the railroads.[*]
Hog raising became an important commercial enterprise during the 1800s when the Midwest farm regions were settled. The new Erie Canal system gave farmers a way to get their hogs to the cities back east. Farmers started calling their hogs “Mortgage Lifters” because the profits from their sales helped pay for the new homesteads.[*]
Soldier pigs have gone to war. They have served as mine sniffers in battlefields. [*]
The heaviest hog in history, Big Bill, weighed 2,552 pounds.[*]
Pigs are curious and like to keep busy. Some farmers entertain their pigs with beach balls and old tires. Pigs also enjoy listening to music. [*]
Early American pigs traveled west in crates hung from covered wagon axles.[*]
People around the world eat more pork than any other meat. In the US it ranks behind beef and poultry.[*]
Pigs weigh about 2 1/2 pounds at birth.[*]
When fully grown, boars (male hogs) may weigh more than 500 pounds, and sows (female hogs) may weigh from 300-500 pounds.[*]
Most hogs are sold when they are 6-7 months old and weigh about 210-250 pounds. If hogs are kept longer they are usually used for breeding.[*]
Hogs have small eyes and poor eyesight.[*]
Hogs have a total of 34-44 teeth.[*]
The hog's snout is very sensitive to touch. Some producers put rings in hogs' noses to keep them from rooting, or digging up the earth, with their snouts. In the wild hogs feed themselves by digging for roots to eat. This can cause a lot of damage on a farm.[*]
Hogs have four toes on each foot. Each toe ends in a hoof.[*]
Hogs' bodies are stout, strong and covered with coarse, bristly hair.[*]
Wild hogs are strong and fierce and live in forests and jungles in many parts of the world. Razorbacks (wild hogs with sharp, narrow backs) live in the Southeastern US and the West Indies.[*]
The ancient Chinese were so reluctant to be separated from fresh pork that the departed were sometimes accompanied to the grave with their herd of hogs[*]
During the War of 1812, a New York pork packer named Uncle Sam Wilson shipped a boatload of several hundred barrels of pork to U.S. troops. Each barrel was stamped "U.S." on the docks, and it was quickly said that the "U.S." stood for "Uncle Sam," whose large shipment seemed to be enough to feed the entire army. This is how "Uncle Sam" came to represent the U.S. Government.[*]
The saying "living high on the hog" started among enlisted men in the U.S. Army, who received shoulder and leg cuts of pork while officers received the top loin cuts. So "living high on the hog" came to mean living well.[*]
What's the origin of the saying "a pig in the poke?" It was a common trick in 17th century England of trying to give away a cat to an unsuspecting "shopper" for a suckling pig (a young pig). When he opened the poke (sack), he "let the cat out of the bag," and the trick was revealed.[*]
The phrase "pork barrel" politics?" is derived from the pre-Civil War practice of distributing salt pork to the slaves from huge barrels. By the 1870's, congressmen were referring to regularly dipping into the "pork barrel" to obtaining funds for popular projects in their home districts.[*]
The highest known price ever paid for a hog was $56,000 - paid for a crossbred hog named "Bud," on March 5, 1985.[*]
Hogs are a source of nearly 40 drugs and pharmaceuticals on the market.[*]Pigs are found on every continent but Antartica. [/ul]
Swine Products
pork chops
pork roast
bacon
ham

sausages
hot dogs
medicines
heart valves
insulin
chalk
weed killers
fertilizer
cosmetics
floor wax
crayons
antifreeze
glass
china
adhesives
plastics
shoes,
paint
chewing gum.
[/align]
Rebel Hog is offline  
Reply
Old 11-17-2005 | 12:24 PM
  #2  
burniegoeasily's Avatar
Dominant Buck
 
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 26,274
Likes: 0
From: land of the Lilliputians, In the state of insanity
Default RE: Facts about Pigs

Interesting. I was just wondering about this fact
"Hogs have small eyes and poor eyesight."

Ive always thought that buthave never had itjustified.

burniegoeasily is offline  
Reply
Old 11-26-2005 | 05:48 PM
  #3  
dog1's Avatar
Typical Buck
 
Joined: Nov 2003
Posts: 882
Likes: 0
From: Georgia
Default RE: Facts about Pigs

Rebel Hog,

I do believe you have covered the hog quiet well, however let me add a couple more. I believe a group of hogsis called a sounder. Also, I have noticed on several occasions, when two boars fight, they will most likely run at each other then hit broad side, head to tail, then raking upward with their tusk trying to cut the others ham area. Also, in preparing for the fight they will pull up palmettos, small trees and bushes, paw the ground like a raging bull, and I have seen them actually foaming at the mouth like a mad dog. A fight is a sight to behold, and from a very safe position I might add.

Just two cents worth, bet wecould go on and on with some tales.
dog1
dog1 is offline  
Reply
Old 11-26-2005 | 05:58 PM
  #4  
Rebel Hog's Avatar
Thread Starter
Dominant Buck
 
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 26,323
Likes: 0
From: WC FL
Default RE: Facts about Pigs

ORIGINAL: dog1

Rebel Hog,

I do believe you have covered the hog quiet well, however let me add a couple more. I believe a group of hogsis called a sounder.
dog1


In a typical sounder there are two or three sows and their offspring.
Most of the time the boars will block the blows from thier agressors with thier
shields.


Rebel Hog is offline  
Reply
Old 11-28-2005 | 02:00 PM
  #5  
 
Joined: Nov 2003
Posts: 528
Likes: 0
From: Georgetown, Texas
Default RE: Facts about Pigs

Well . .Burnie. . .I also did some looking and I guess the guy that claimed his pigs could tell him from others at 100 yards was pulling my leg or the pig new him be some other means, smell noise etc. that gave him up.A bunch of interesting facts. I may change my lease at the end of the year to get a place with no Damn goats and that does have ferrals hogsrunning again.
Georgetownboys is offline  
Reply
Old 12-01-2005 | 03:17 AM
  #6  
Nontypical Buck
 
Joined: Nov 2005
Posts: 1,636
Likes: 0
From: Bandera, Texas
Default RE: Facts about Pigs

dang, the hog is really under estimated.... i think i will get me one instead of a "turkey" dog! Looks like be easier to train!
JLmoore1956 is offline  
Reply
Old 12-01-2005 | 11:26 AM
  #7  
The Rev's Avatar
Boone & Crockett
 
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 12,563
Likes: 0
From: Burleson Texas
Default RE: Facts about Pigs

Thanks for the Tid Bid Reb.... but then again you have a lot of time on your hands... Come down to Texas and I'll show you around. Seems you have relatives all around me.
The Rev is offline  
Reply
Old 12-02-2005 | 05:47 AM
  #8  
 
Joined: Dec 2005
Posts: 30
Likes: 0
Default RE: Facts about Pigs

I have alsoben toldthat if you turned a domestic pig loose in the wild it would start toreturn to its wild side in 2 weeks. Include the long hair and tusks also.If domestic pigs escaped and ended up in the wild with 3 or 4 pairs, the population could explode anywhere in the united states. Is this true any facts on this?
Jim Beam is offline  
Reply
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
comndr45
Bowhunting
25
12-24-2003 07:30 AM
TNDeerSlayer
Whitetail Deer Hunting
3
12-23-2002 09:03 AM

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off



Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service -

Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.