I know that during the Industrial revolution many families would keep a pig in their backyard is this a viable option? - probally not in mine as it is rented and we are not allowed pets, mind you says nothing on the contract about livestock.

From DEFRA:bwaymark wrote:I think you can feed your pig scraps if you eat it yourself, but if you sell the meat you have to go through all the milled food malarky.... anyone know for sure? (I may be wrong....)
It is illegal to feed catering waste or animal by-product to any farmed animal or any other ruminant animal, pig or poultry. The term “catering wasteâ€Â
Poultry, rabbits, pigs, sheep and goats can be slaughtered outwith slaughterhouses by their owner for personal consumption, provided that Article 3 of the "EU COUNCIL DIRECTIVE 93/119/EC of 22 December 1993 on the protection of animals at the time of slaughter or killing" is complied with.Chickpea wrote:you're not allowed to slaughter them yourself,
It's not a legal requirement to keep two pigs, but it probably should be a moral requirement. Pigs are very social animals and do much better with another pig for company, especially if their owner is away for much of the day.I don't think you're allowed to keep a single pig anymore. I read that it is considered cruelty, and you must keep at least 2 so they don't get lonely. Perhaps they didn't used to get lonely because next door also had a pig in the backyard. But that last might might be bs anyway.
It gets worse.... so we are not allowed to compost now???Can I still compost at home?
Yes, provided you do not keep pigs or ruminants on the premises. If you are only composting your own kitchen scraps on your own compost heap, you are not affected by the rules. If you keep poultry, you may compost your kitchen scraps at home, but you must do so in an enclosed container.
What if I keep pigs or ruminants, can I still compost?
No. Contaminated catering waste is thought to have been the cause both of the foot-and-mouth disease outbreak in 2001, and the Classical swine fever outbreak in 2000. It is very important that livestock susceptible to diseases that can be transmitted through infected meat are kept away from catering waste. If you keep ruminants or pigs, even as pets, you must not compost on the premises. This includes composting your own kitchen scraps. Your kitchen waste can of course still be composted on an approved site elsewhere.
I’m not a farmer, I just have a pet pig. Can I compost?
No. Pet animals are just as susceptible to diseases as farmed animals, and must not be allowed access to catering waste. If you keep a pet pig or any pet ruminant you must not compost on the premises. This does not of course prevent you from sending your kitchen waste for composting on an approved site elsewhere. If you keep poultry and you wish to compost at home, you must do so in an enclosed container.
Shirlz2005 wrote:It gets worse.... so we are not allowed to compost now???