it keeps them from digging holes and getting out.they dig with there nose.
Some farmers put rings (called choat rings if I spelled that right) in their pigs noses to stop them from rooting in the dirt. The rings are C shaped when open and sharpened at both ends, they are applied with a specalized tool that clamps the ring closed onto the edge of the hogs nose and the result is that it is painful if they try to root at the ground. Rooting in the dirt can potenially lead to parasights and the passing on of disease .
Farmers traditionally use the word "suey" when calling to their pigs because it is believed to be an adaptation of the Chinese word "shui" meaning water. Pigs are thought to have originated from Asia, where they were often fed scraps of food soaked in water. The sound of "suey" may have become associated with mealtime for pigs over time.
And over here is the pigs' sty.
only if guinea pigs are considered ''critters''
the obvious reasons! eating! knawing! what we use ours for!
Some farmers put rings (called choat rings if I spelled that right) in their pigs noses to stop them from rooting in the dirt. The rings are C shaped when open and sharpened at both ends, they are applied with a specalized tool that clamps the ring closed onto the edge of the hogs nose and the result is that it is painful if they try to root at the ground. Rooting in the dirt can potenially lead to parasights and the passing on of disease .
Farmers traditionally use the word "suey" when calling to their pigs because it is believed to be an adaptation of the Chinese word "shui" meaning water. Pigs are thought to have originated from Asia, where they were often fed scraps of food soaked in water. The sound of "suey" may have become associated with mealtime for pigs over time.
Very little, It isn't good for your digestion and that is what farmers use to fatten their pigs,
All pigs, wild or domestic, use their snouts to dig into the soil for edible roots. Some farmers will keep pigs on a field for a few months to allow the pigs time to uproot and eat weed roots, and to loosen the soil, and manure the ground. Then they may move the pigs to another field.
The same way humans do its just that they die quicker due to the fact farmers use them for food, and also because of their bodyweight.
Farmers didn't use them
my cousin lives in Texas and they use alot of pigs down there and they use alot of pigs in Mexico to
they ate the pigs on chrismas
And over here is the pigs' sty.
Brazilian farmers use many of the same machines that farmers in the United States and Europe use. These farmers use machines like tractors, threshers, hay balers, and plows.
pigs use quadrupedal locomotion.
Meat.