So she could farrow up to the 3rd week of Sept at the latest.
Her existing three wont be ready to kill till 10 months old anyway as we are old and slow here. Mid Sept is 5.5 months ! Why do we "definitely [size=78%]need to get fencing in place to separate the 3 from her, they cannot stay with her ". This is what I was asking in the first place. TBH I'm pretty confident [/size]that when she is ready to farrow she will chase her 3 off to one of the other arcs and get on with it. My concern is more what the 3 older ones may do to the litter (assuming they get anywhere near as I've seen the sow in action protecting her babies).So to cut to the chase, is separation essential and if so, why?Thanks
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Three TW/SB will be HUGE at ten months but if you've done it before then so be it.
Your fencing sounds inadequate full stop

and you need to get something done about it, As princess piggy says it depends on the space they have, yes she may send off the other girls when she farrows and look for a quiet corner but they might interfere and put the new very small babies at risk, they may also attack them seeing them as rivals for their mums attentions after as you say "only babies"! its up to you. I think you've pretty much dedided to leave them all together to get on with it you just want us to tell you its ok to do it, personally i don't think it is and you'll suffer losses or injuries, IMHO if you can't do a job properly you shouldn't be doing it.
My pigs are all in sociable groups boys in one/girls in another = no accidents in well fenced paddocks, its makes life easier feeding, cleaning up and monitoring them.
As i said it your descision. Doing something now will save a lot of heartache later, the sow will still be able to see her girls thro the fencing and they'll still be able to see and hear her, it just will allow her some quality time to herself before farrowing to get settled, choose her and make her nest and a safe environment for her to farrow.
best of luck
mandy

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