Down on the Ten Thousand Pig Farm
August 21, 2009 1:43pm
Pig tails
While filming at TPFF, the crew came across a group of pigs being loaded onto a truck for transport. “Very brutal” is how Jian Yi describes it. Some of the pigs stumbled over a gap between the ramp and truck bed, or their legs fell into the empty space. They were hit with sticks until they stood; several collapsed again when they got into the truck. Some of the pigs already loaded pressed their noses to the metal slats. Others lay down, half closing their eyes. One surprising fact about these pigs: they all had tails. In U.S. factory farms it’s standard practice to clip off piglets’ tails.
The loading process was something the crew had never seen before, and it disturbed them a good deal. Another unsettling scene the crew documented at TTFP was the injecting of pigs with medicines to prevent illness, another standard practice—and, as in the U.S., entirely legal in China. The government has, however, outlawed dosing of farm animals with hormones or other substances that make grow larger or influence the leanness of the meat.
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Coming next, the crew’s final stop: southern China’s Guangdong province. Often called the “world’s factory” Guangdong is not only a huge manufacturing hub, it’s also a center of large-scale pig production.


