Page:Notes on New Zealand (1892).pdf/129

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NOTES ON NEW ZEALAND.
119

are well-known Berkshire breeders, and their stock is often imported to various parts of Australia for the purpose of improving the breed there.

Pigs always command a good price in New Zealand, and as bacon is dearer than mutton they are valuable stock for the farmer to keep. On grain farms they are the consumers of all the "thirds" of wheat, oats, etc., which, otherwise, would be useless. If the Berkshire be kept and good stock obtained at first by a breeder situated in the back districts, he can generally ask his own price for his young pigs, say 10s. for a "weaner barrow" for