One of the oldest and purest British bacon breeds, the ginger-red Tamworth is a hardy, athletic forager prized for lean meat and exceptional pasture and woodland thriftiness. Its active, intelligent nature makes it a classic outdoor and silvopasture pig.
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From the minimum an animal needs to be kept humanely, up to the ideal setup. Bigger is almost always better — minimums are floors, not targets.
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Minimum
Pen + wallow + 3-sided shelter
≥ 50 sq ft per pig in pen, hog-rated fencing
A bare-minimum pen with ≥ 50 sq ft per pig, a wallow for thermoregulation, a 3-sided shelter, and hog-rated fencing (woven wire or hot wire). Pigs are herd animals — solo housing is poor welfare, keep at least a pair.
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Recommended
Rotated paddock with shelter
1/8–1/4 acre per pig, rotated
Rotated paddocks of 1/8–1/4 acre per pig with a wallow, a barn or sturdy shelter, sturdy fencing, and a farrowing crate option for sows. Rotation prevents parasite build-up and gives fresh rooting ground.
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Ideal
Managed pasture + woodland
Multi-acre rotation, woodland + wallow, herd of 4+
Managed pasture rotation with access to woodland for natural rooting, a wallow, shade, and a herd of 4+ for social structure. Heritage breeds in this setup preserve genetic diversity and express the full pig behavioural repertoire.
Life & growth stages
How this animal changes through its life — each stage often has its own care, diet and space needs.
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Newborn
Newborn mammals are nursed on their mother's milk. Many are born helpless — blind, deaf, and sparsely furred (altricial, as in dogs, cats, and rodents) — while others stand and follow within hours (precocial, as in hoofed livestock).
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Juvenile
After weaning, juveniles grow quickly and become increasingly active, playful, and independent. Adult coat, proportions, and (in many species) the permanent teeth come in as they approach full size.
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Adult
Adults reach full body size and sexual maturity, with the species' mature coat and build. Sexual dimorphism — differences in size, mane, horns, or markings — is pronounced in some mammals and subtle in others.
Senior
Senior animals show aging signs such as graying fur, reduced activity, and a greater need for veterinary monitoring of joints, teeth, and organ function. Lifespan and the onset of old age vary widely by species and size.
Habitat & enclosure
A pasture-and-woodland breed best kept on **outdoor range with a draft-free, dry shelter (ark or three-sided hut)**. Allow generous acreage — Tamworths are energetic rooters that work woodland and rough ground well. Use **strong perimeter fencing** (electric or stock fence): they are excellent escape artists and determined rooters. Provide a **wallow** in summer; the reddish skin sunburns less than white pigs but shade and mud cooling are still essential. Bedding of straw in the shelter for cold months — the breed is cold-hardy but needs a windbreak.
Diet
Omnivorous. A balanced **commercial pig grower/finisher ration** supplemented heavily by foraging — Tamworths convert pasture, roots, acorns, and woodland mast efficiently and are traditionally finished on this. Provide constant **fresh water** and a wallow. Avoid overfeeding energy-dense feed: the breed is naturally lean and excess grain only adds cost. In many regions feeding meat/uncooked food scraps to pigs is **illegal** (swill-feeding bans) — follow local law.
Behavior & temperament
**Purpose: bacon/meat (traditional bacon breed), heritage pork, and conservation grazing.** Temperament is active, alert, intelligent, and curious — friendlier breeds exist, but well-handled Tamworths are manageable. They are strong-willed and athletic (capable of jumping and running), so confident, consistent handling is needed. Excellent mothers with good maternal instincts and moderate litter sizes (typically 6-10 piglets).
Health
A genuinely **hardy, robust breed with few inherited disorders** — one of its main selling points. The long snout and athletic build avoid the breathing and joint problems seen in extreme commercial types. Main practical concerns are **management-related**: rooting damage, fencing escapes, and the usual pig parasites (internal worms, mange/lice) requiring routine deworming and monitoring. Sunburn is possible on pale underparts; provide shade and wallows.
Tips, DIY & hacks
Invest in **robust electric or stock fencing from day one** — Tamworths test boundaries more than placid breeds. Use their rooting positively for **silvopasture and land clearing/ground prep**, rotating paddocks to prevent over-poaching. A nose ring is sometimes used to limit rooting but reduces the breed's foraging benefit and has welfare trade-offs — rotational grazing is preferable. Handle piglets early and use food rewards to build calm handling. Provide a wallow before hot weather, not after pigs are already heat-stressed.