blueriver
Super Member
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2007
- Messages
- 5,012
- Location
- S.E.Oklahoma
- Tractor
- JD 5520 Montana 4340 Farmall Super A Montana 5720C
I also raise Hampshire Bluebutts Yorkshire and Landrace .. Recently added Red Wattles
I absolutely hate buying something that somebody doesn't need.
Brandi, in the late 40s my Dad worked for Auto Electric, a chain of auto parts stores. When my first hog and I took 2 blue ribbons and the showmanship ribbon, the owner of Auto Electric was going to be out of town so he told his bookkeeper (didn't have accountants in those days:laughingto go to the auction and buy my hog. The bookkeeper (who was also a close friend of Dad's) asked how high he could bid. The boss said, "I don't care if you have to go to 50 cents a pound." Of course in those days 50 cents a pound for a live animal was ridiculous. So the bookkeeper did bid up to 50 cents, but the owner of the local Ford dealership, Sam P. Hale, bid 51 cents and bought the hog. Dad's boss later asked the bookkeeper what he had to pay for that hog, and when he found out he hadn't bought it because the bid went over 50 cents, he wasn't mad, but said, "I meant for you to buy it for whatever you had to pay. I just said 50 cents because I didn't expect it to go that high." But anyway, I got $153 for that hog and turned around and bought a good registered brood sow for $50 and went into the hog raising business.
My youngest brother raised rabbits when he was in the FFA in high school, but I never raised any myself until the Fall of 1995, when I bought a buck and 3 does (New Zealand Whites). And it wasn't long until I had 15 cages and raised over 300 of them.:laughing: I had grown up eating wild cottontails, swamp rabbits, and jack rabbits, but hadn't eaten any rabbit for many years until then. But I sure ate a bunch of those I raised. I don't understand why every grocery store in the country doesn't have them among the meats they sell.
Bird,
Remember what hogs were fed in the old days
Maybe that's the taste difference FG was talking about..
WOOT Last one Jim!!!! Good luck for the last trip to the "Buffet":thumbsup:
Most of the schools here in Wise and Parker counties are starting late, but warm temps now through tonight, so roads should clear of remaining ice patches.
I don't remember what was in the "mash" that we mixed with milk and/or water for slop. But then corn was a popular feed, and in my own case, I bought "day old" bread from the local bakery. I'm not sure right now, but I think I paid 3 cents a loaf or package, but maybe it was 4 cents. I bought 100 loaves at a time. It was the stuff they'd picked up from the grocery stores; didn't have thrift shops back then. And since it was the same price for a loaf of bread, a cake, a package of donuts, or a pie, the hogs didn't get everything I bought.:laughing:
But there was never any antibiotics or any other drugs or vaccinations.