1 Common myths and misconceptions
2 The different ages (including teenage)
- Important biological facts
- The formative 'School Weeks' (3 weeks - ca. 4 months)
- The Teenage Months (ca. 4-14 months)
- The Adult Years (ca. 15 months - ca. 4-5 years)
- The Golden Age (ca. 4-5 years until end of life)
3 What do boars need? (List of boar dos and don'ts)
- Space, space and more space!
- Respecting the hierarchy
- The 'one for each boar' rule
- 'Boarsonalising' a new cage or extension (scent-marking)
- Tips for exercise indoors and outdoors runs; emergency housing
- Boars and sows in the same room
4 Companionship and ways to get safely bonded boars
- Pairs, trios or quartets?
- How to best achieve a stable pair?
- Introducing boars at home
5 Neutered boars
6 Boar care and health issues
7 Conclusion
Boars are truly delightful and there are many owners who prefer them to sows, but they have sadly got such a bad press; not because of what they are but because they are far too often failed on all levels and repeatedly by sheer human ignorance and end up condemned to a single life or at the worst being euthanized for being aggressive.
1 Common myths and misconceptions
The key to any happy boar bond is mutual liking and character compatibility as well as plenty of space.
- With that in mind, boars of all ages can be bonded and re-bonded at any stage of their lives.
An increasing number of good standard rescues offer dating sessions with rescue boars under expert supervision to allow your single, fallen-out or bereaved boars to have a say in who they get on with before they come home with a new friend.
This can take the form of speed dating to test for acceptance or residential dating where your piggy is meeting up to three rescue boars over the course of several days. Any successful bond is then tested for its stability before your boar comes home with a fully bonded new mate; the resulting bond is stable as any sow bond. This method also allows to bond boars of all ages. But because it is very time consuming, there not all that many rescues that can offer this service and those that do, often have waiting lists.
- Boars don’t have to be litter brothers or need to be related; in fact, a larger age gap between a sub-adult and an adult boar is often an advantage as the hierarchy is not in question.
- Thankfully it is another very much debunked urban myth that all boars fight!
If boars fight, it is usually the result of them being kept in too small a cage where they cannot get away from each other, as they would normally.
In fact, more boars than not make it to a hormonally much more settled adulthood together than not, and the odds increase massively if you take their needs in mind, and work with them instead against them.
- Boars have a stronger smell than sows, but it can be kept in check to a good deal by regular bum washes (see the last chapter for boar care), daily poo patrol and twice weekly cleaning. You will need to air the house if the testosterone exhaust is running on full speed.
However, there is no such thing as a smell-free furry pet, and it is also worth keeping in mind that a lot of the testosterone and allergens are coming with the pee, which means that neutering is not removing all testosterone.
You will also have to live with the fact that hay and hay dust have a bad habit of getting literally everywhere…
- You can find a closer look why our modern pet keeping system is failing boars on several levels and what you can do about in this link here: Boars: Where Does The Bad Press Actually Come From?
2 The different ages (including teenage)
- Important biological facts
- The formative 'School Weeks' (3 weeks - ca. 4 months)
- The Teenage Months (ca. 4-14 months)
- The Adult Years (ca. 15 months - ca. 4-5 years)
- The Golden Age (ca. 4-5 years until end of life)
3 What do boars need? (List of boar dos and don'ts)
- Space, space and more space!
- Respecting the hierarchy
- The 'one for each boar' rule
- 'Boarsonalising' a new cage or extension (scent-marking)
- Tips for exercise indoors and outdoors runs; emergency housing
- Boars and sows in the same room
4 Companionship and ways to get safely bonded boars
- Pairs, trios or quartets?
- How to best achieve a stable pair?
- Introducing boars at home
5 Neutered boars
6 Boar care and health issues
7 Conclusion
Boars are truly delightful and there are many owners who prefer them to sows, but they have sadly got such a bad press; not because of what they are but because they are far too often failed on all levels and repeatedly by sheer human ignorance and end up condemned to a single life or at the worst being euthanized for being aggressive.
1 Common myths and misconceptions
The key to any happy boar bond is mutual liking and character compatibility as well as plenty of space.
- With that in mind, boars of all ages can be bonded and re-bonded at any stage of their lives.
An increasing number of good standard rescues offer dating sessions with rescue boars under expert supervision to allow your single, fallen-out or bereaved boars to have a say in who they get on with before they come home with a new friend.
This can take the form of speed dating to test for acceptance or residential dating where your piggy is meeting up to three rescue boars over the course of several days. Any successful bond is then tested for its stability before your boar comes home with a fully bonded new mate; the resulting bond is stable as any sow bond. This method also allows to bond boars of all ages. But because it is very time consuming, there not all that many rescues that can offer this service and those that do, often have waiting lists.
- Boars don’t have to be litter brothers or need to be related; in fact, a larger age gap between a sub-adult and an adult boar is often an advantage as the hierarchy is not in question.
- Thankfully it is another very much debunked urban myth that all boars fight!
If boars fight, it is usually the result of them being kept in too small a cage where they cannot get away from each other, as they would normally.
In fact, more boars than not make it to a hormonally much more settled adulthood together than not, and the odds increase massively if you take their needs in mind, and work with them instead against them.
- Boars have a stronger smell than sows, but it can be kept in check to a good deal by regular bum washes (see the last chapter for boar care), daily poo patrol and twice weekly cleaning. You will need to air the house if the testosterone exhaust is running on full speed.
However, there is no such thing as a smell-free furry pet, and it is also worth keeping in mind that a lot of the testosterone and allergens are coming with the pee, which means that neutering is not removing all testosterone.
You will also have to live with the fact that hay and hay dust have a bad habit of getting literally everywhere…
- You can find a closer look why our modern pet keeping system is failing boars on several levels and what you can do about in this link here: Boars: Where Does The Bad Press Actually Come From?