
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
A CHAMPAGNE PRODUCER’S ORGANIC EXPERIMENT WITH DWARF PIGS PROVES BETTER THAN SHEEP OR GEESE A New Zealand breed of pig has been successfully put to work on a champagne vineyard to keep weeds
and grass down. The dwarf pigs, called Kunekune, have a light brown coat, relatively large heads and weak neck muscles. Jean-Etienne Bonnaire, of Bonnaire Champagne, who has been
experimenting with two pigs since December, said: “Having the weak neck is important because it stops them looking up and seeing the grape stems and thinking they might be tasty to eat.
“What they are really good at is turning over the soil and going for the roots of weeds and grass, the parts that are hard to get at any other way.” He has been so impressed that he has
bought another six pigs to go with the first two. READ MORE: CHAMPAGNE BOTTLES IN FRANCE MAY SOON BE WRAPPED IN ECO-FRIENDLY PAPER BETTER THAN SHEEP OR GEESE Kunekune pigs were first
trialled on vineyards in Bordeaux after unsuccessful attempts to use sheep. Grape growers found that sheep were good for keeping grass down, but sometimes left weeds and never pulled up
roots. Geese have also been used to keep grass short, but have the bad habit of nibbling the vines as well. THEY TAKE PLEASURE IN DIGGING UP ROOTS Mr Bonnaire said he will move his pigs to a
separate field once buds on the vines start to grow, to prevent damage, but for winter work they have proved ideal. “Champagne soil is chalky clay and if you have tractors going up and
down, especially when it is wet, it compacts. “This is not good for the soil microbes or for the vines,” he explained. “I was a bit sceptical at first but when the pigs got going, I was
convinced. They just dug down after the roots and seemed to take great pleasure when they got one up.” PIGS MOVED AROUND AFTER A WEEK OF WEEDING Bonnaire Champagne is in the process of
securing bio organic certification, something Mr Bonnaire said has made him keen to try new ways of doing things. READ MORE: WHAT IS THE FUTURE OF ORGANIC WINE IN FRANCE AND DO CONSUMERS
CARE? He envisages further benefits of using pigs, including cutting the risk of vine diseases because the animals eat the fallen leaves, so reducing the number of mildew pathogens surviving
over winter. “They also leave a bit of dung, which helps to nourish the soil,” he said. Electric fences keep the pigs in the areas that need working on, and it usually takes just over a
week before they are moved on to a new parcel in the vineyard. RELATED ARTICLES REMOTE FRENCH VILLAGE REINVIGORATED BY WOMEN FARMERS AND BASQUE PIGS CALF BORN WITH SIX FEET UNDERGOES
SUCCESSFUL OP IN SOUTHERN FRANCE URBAN MYTH OR TRUE: IS IT ILLEGAL TO CALL A PIG NAPOLEON IN FRANCE?