Beekissed
Mountain Sage
How many folks on here go for a natural or more old-fashioned way of raising their animals? I know I've read quite a bit in Countryside mag about different ways to do so and also Joel Salatin.
I've read about raising pigs in a big pasture and woodlot, with all the sows, boars and piglets all together and how they get along. The article described all the sows raising their litters together and how they would lay in a circle with the babies in the middle...sort of like a daycare. They also told about the boars and how they just cull the ones that are aggressive towards the piglets, and towards each other, until they have a good herd of pigs living communally. They described this as how pigs live together in the wild and how much more feed efficient, healthy and productive these "herds" were, compared to the old way they used to raise their pigs.
I also love to read about, and I've tried this once, when folks double up, like Joel Salatin, and maximize their space. I used to have rabbit cages suspended above my chickens in the coop. This made for a good arrangement when it came to the deep litter method, as well as feed waste. If any rabbit food dropped, it was eaten by the hens, and all the manure was worked into a deep layer of wood chips. All that ammonia smell created by the rabbits disappeared with the industrious scratching and turning of the bedding. I had both a cold and a hot manure constantly being churned into this bedding, which turned out to be the best compost I've ever used.
Anybody else maximize on their space by layering two sets of animals? Anyone using a more natural method of raising livestock...like rotating chickens on pasture after beef, or having rabbits in tractors~ like Joel Salatin? All grass fed beef? Crossing a milk cow with a beef bull to maximize her efficiency for your homestead? Dairy and wool from sheep? Do you let your chickens go through their natural cycle in the winter, so as to prolong their egg laying lifecycle? Do you hatch your own chicks with your broodies, cull judiciously and replenish your flock naturally? Do you lean towards natural feed sources or commercial mixes?
Do you use your pets for work animals in any capacity, like hunting, livestock guarding, pest control, etc?
I always like to hear from people who have tried methods to maximize the potential of their animals by using more natural methods, instead of commercial methods.
Instead of rat poison, using a cat. Instead of locking hens up in Fort Knox, using a LGD. Instead of a feed lot, finishing on grass. Instead of just using for dairy, finding a dual purpose. Instead of pens, pasture. Using different types of grasses in pasture, for more fuel per acre for livestock. I love the idea of a dual purpose animal, barn, coop, pasture, cellar, energy source, etc. I think that is the soul of self-sufficiency and just good ol' country common sense.
I've read about raising pigs in a big pasture and woodlot, with all the sows, boars and piglets all together and how they get along. The article described all the sows raising their litters together and how they would lay in a circle with the babies in the middle...sort of like a daycare. They also told about the boars and how they just cull the ones that are aggressive towards the piglets, and towards each other, until they have a good herd of pigs living communally. They described this as how pigs live together in the wild and how much more feed efficient, healthy and productive these "herds" were, compared to the old way they used to raise their pigs.
I also love to read about, and I've tried this once, when folks double up, like Joel Salatin, and maximize their space. I used to have rabbit cages suspended above my chickens in the coop. This made for a good arrangement when it came to the deep litter method, as well as feed waste. If any rabbit food dropped, it was eaten by the hens, and all the manure was worked into a deep layer of wood chips. All that ammonia smell created by the rabbits disappeared with the industrious scratching and turning of the bedding. I had both a cold and a hot manure constantly being churned into this bedding, which turned out to be the best compost I've ever used.
Anybody else maximize on their space by layering two sets of animals? Anyone using a more natural method of raising livestock...like rotating chickens on pasture after beef, or having rabbits in tractors~ like Joel Salatin? All grass fed beef? Crossing a milk cow with a beef bull to maximize her efficiency for your homestead? Dairy and wool from sheep? Do you let your chickens go through their natural cycle in the winter, so as to prolong their egg laying lifecycle? Do you hatch your own chicks with your broodies, cull judiciously and replenish your flock naturally? Do you lean towards natural feed sources or commercial mixes?
Do you use your pets for work animals in any capacity, like hunting, livestock guarding, pest control, etc?
I always like to hear from people who have tried methods to maximize the potential of their animals by using more natural methods, instead of commercial methods.
Instead of rat poison, using a cat. Instead of locking hens up in Fort Knox, using a LGD. Instead of a feed lot, finishing on grass. Instead of just using for dairy, finding a dual purpose. Instead of pens, pasture. Using different types of grasses in pasture, for more fuel per acre for livestock. I love the idea of a dual purpose animal, barn, coop, pasture, cellar, energy source, etc. I think that is the soul of self-sufficiency and just good ol' country common sense.