Nothing leaves the
farm. That was one of Pap’s
maxims. Pap, the father, grandfather and
mentor to a new generation of farmers, worked his family’s farm here in
Jefferson County from the 1930's until the present decade. He was a dairyman, maintaining a herd of
prize-winning Jerseys, so of course milk left the farm, but not much else. Pap's words meant nothing leaves the farm if it can be put to use. The cow manure stayed to fertilize the hay
fields, the hay stayed to feed the livestock. Anything that could be composted was. Anything that could be reused went into the
shed until it was needed. It was a
closed loop system, just as it had been in his own grandfather’s time.
Here at Green Gate Farm we strive for a closed loop
sustainable system. Like the traditional
farms of a century ago, our aim is to raise different kinds of livestock and a
variety of crops. The resulting
diversity of products we can grow provides some insurance that if there is a
problem in one area, there are other areas that are still productive.
These various uses of the farm’s land – some for gardens,
some for pasturing chickens, some for pasturing pigs, some for hay, and some
just resting – are key to maintaining
the health and vitality of the soil itself.
The soil benefits from the activity of animals on pasture. The shallow
scratching of chickens searching for insects and the deeper rooting of pigs
help open the soil. Closing the loop, the
manure the pastured animals deposit each day puts back into the field many of
the nutrients which had been consumed. (See link below to January 2014 posting on manure.)
This year we’ve put a lot of energy, both creative and
physical, into having more pigs in ‘the loop.’
Thus far, the pigs we’ve raised at Green Gate Farm have
fallen into every category – purebred, purebred heritage breed, and
crossbred. A couple came to us half
grown and were ‘finished’ here on pasture.
The rest have arrived as weanlings or shoats and have been entirely
pasture raised. Each of them taught us a
little more about what kind of pig works best on our pastures.
The attributes we are looking for in pigs are most
pronounced in the older heritage breeds.
Some breeds, like the Poland China and Red Wattle, are well suited to
living outdoors all year. Some, like the
Tamworth and Ossabaw Island, are eager and effective foragers. We particularly like the Gloucestershire Old
Spot, a very handsome old English pig which combines all these traits. And the Old Spot is an even-tempered pig,
quite comfortable with a lot of human interaction.
The biggest part of incorporating more pigs into the loop
is to begin a breeding program, and we want a Gloucestershire Old Spot to be
the cornerstone of that enterprise. Breeding the animals here means we would be able supply our own young pigs to raise, and we would be helping to preserve the genetics of a breed which is on the 'critical' list of endangered heritage livestock breeds.
Gregor at three weeks
So Lars tracked down a fine young weanling boar and named him Gregor, for Gregor
Mendel, the father of modern genetics. This little guy will grow to 500 or 600
pounds and will become, it is to be hoped, the founder of a porcine dynasty here
at Green Gate Farm. It will be a while before Gregor's progeny are the pigs you'll find in our pastures, but those future pigs, born here and raised here, will carry forward the great genes of a heritage breed, and will help Green Gate Farm keep closing up that sustainable loop.
January posting: http://greengatefarmtable.blogspot.com/2014/01/manure.html
For information on heritage livestock breeds visit: http://www.livestockconservancy.org/