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The next few photos are of the pig slaughtering process, with commentary, to help others who want to raise their own meat or understand a process that has mostly been forgotten in modern times.
You can find more of my articles about raising pigs, butchering pigs, and making bacon here:



Our pigs have lived happy lives in the paddock above for the past few months. They have been able to express their pig-ness, and have enjoyed a diet of acorns, whey, scraps, and local gmo-free grains. Their natural behaviour is to search for roots in the ground with their snouts, turning over some of the soil in a gentle way, and also manuring it. They feed the soil life and prepare the ground for new plants to grow.
By choosing on-farm slaughter, the life of these pigs is ended in an instant while they are doing their favourite activity (eating). There is no “one bad day” of being transported to the abattoir, these pigs get to live their entire lives naturally on our homestead.
Butchering pigs on a homestead can be done either by a mobile butcher, or by anyone with the right tools and skills. It’s possible to not do the scalding process and to skin the pig instead, but skinning a pig is far trickier than skinning other animals, so if you have the setup to get water onto your pig at the right scalding temperature, by all means, go for it!
The equipment you’ll need to butcher your pigs will depend on whether you are scalding them or skinning them.
If you’re planning to scald, you’ll need to have everything ready before the shot is fired. Proper scalding depends on the insides of the pig still being warm.
For hygiene and taste reasons, even if you’re not scalding, it’s important to make this stage of the pig butchering process as quick as possible.
If you want to scald your pigs, you’ll need a way to provide water at just the right temperature. A bathtub is excellent for immersing the pig in this water, or use a 55 gallon drum, or you can pour water over the pig bit by bit and focus on removing the hair from one part at a time.
Pigs raised for bacon like the ones in these photos can be quite large. You’ll need some way of lifting them up off the ground (although in a pinch, you can find alternatives, it is far easier on the back and more hygeinic to have a way to hang the pig up during this process.)
If you have a tractor with a front end loader, this is a simple solution to this dilemma. If you don’t have a tractor, having some kind of pulley system will serve you well. We haven’t gotten this far with our homestead butchering setup, so the equipment you’ll see below is what our local mobile butcher uses.
If you don’t have any of this set up for lifting a large pig, raising your pigs to a bit smaller than the ones in these photos will make the pig butchering process easier for you.
You’ll need some kind of saw to cut down the spine of your pigs. A bone saw can be used, or you can just use a typical wood-cutting saw from the hardware shop, or a cordless electrical reciprocal saw.
You’ll also need a boning knife around 6″ (15cm) in size.











For the next stages of butchering pigs, which my friend and I were able to do with no butchering experience, see my post about how to cut up a pig without a saw.
Kate Downham has been growing, preserving, and cooking real food since 2007. She is the author of four books on homestead skills: A Year in an Off-Grid Kitchen, Natural Small Batch Cheesemaking, Backyard Dairy Goats, and Sourdough Without Fail.
Off-grid with her family of nine in the Tasmanian forest, Kate milks her own goats, makes all their cheese, mills all her own grain, and bakes fresh sourdough bread daily.






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