[Goanet] Pigs...in the village

2006-06-12 Thread domnic fernandes
's premiere mailing list, estb. 1994!" 
Sent :  Monday, June 12, 2006 3:05 AM
To :goanet@goanet.org
Subject :   Re: [Goanet] Pigs... in the village

Very interesting post Fred .. I can clearly see signs of progress in 
Goa.


Not long ago, when I was growing up in Goa, people in my village would 
beckon
their pigs with the old fashioned verbal calls ... "Ghe yo  Ghe yo " 
at

feed time. Does anybody remember that?

In today's world, Goa is progressing technologically - and the pigs say, 
they

aren't going to be outdone either! Did you know that even the pigs are
displaying signs of progress?

Well, now-a-days, the locals in many parts of Goa, use a bell instead of the
verbal calls. So when the bell rings  the pigs scoot back to their homes 


knowing very well, that its time for food !!!

Now, if everybody in the villages use similar bells ... that would create a
helluva confusion among the pigs socializing with other pigs belonging to
different families. The pigs, probably would have to gain some intelligence 
to

distinguish one bell from the other ...

But think of the good side  this would create more jobs ... lets call 
them
"pig trainers", to train the pigs to recognize the pitch of each family's 
bell

 and as usual ... there won't be any Goan takers for these jobs  its
going to be the non-Goans !

As demand for pork picks up ... think of all the additional skills that 
would be

needed ... such as castrating male pigs - even the Goa University would be
tempted to start a 'Diploma in Castrating Pigs' ... you get the point .
don't you?

Jim F.
New York.

-- Original message --
From: "Frederick Noronha" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

When you talk to others from a diverse background, you often get
another perspective into how things work. A villager, my neighbour
Magdeline, today mentioned that all her pigs had died recently. Was
this, I wondered, a kind of disease that had hit the region without it
getting the attention deserved?

Anyway, she said she was keen to restart keeping pigs. And she
insightfully pointed to the growing number of people staying in
rooms-on-hire in the region. Obviously, the pig in the Goa of the past
helped to maintain local sanitation. While many still don't have
toilets ('sulabh sauchalayas' don't cover all), the pigs have been
vanishing.

Incidentally, the Government of Goa has a Government Piggery Farm at
Curti (Ponda). They're officially promising to sell piglings for
breeding purposes -- at the rate of Rs 40 per kg of live weight
subject to revision, at the farm premises.

Those interested in procuring piglings are asked -- in a thick


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Re: [Goanet] Pigs... in the village

2006-06-12 Thread Jim Fernandes
Very interesting post Fred .. I can clearly see signs of progress in Goa.

Not long ago, when I was growing up in Goa, people in my village would beckon 
their pigs with the old fashioned verbal calls ... "Ghe yo  Ghe yo " at 
feed time. Does anybody remember that?

In today's world, Goa is progressing technologically - and the pigs say, they 
aren't going to be outdone either! Did you know that even the pigs are 
displaying signs of progress?

Well, now-a-days, the locals in many parts of Goa, use a bell instead of the 
verbal calls. So when the bell rings  the pigs scoot back to their homes 
... knowing very well, that its time for food !!!

Now, if everybody in the villages use similar bells ... that would create a 
helluva confusion among the pigs socializing with other pigs belonging to 
different families. The pigs, probably would have to gain some intelligence to 
distinguish one bell from the other ...

But think of the good side  this would create more jobs ... lets call them 
"pig trainers", to train the pigs to recognize the pitch of each family's bell 
... and as usual ... there won't be any Goan takers for these jobs  its 
going to be the non-Goans !

As demand for pork picks up ... think of all the additional skills that would 
be needed ... such as castrating male pigs - even the Goa University would be 
tempted to start a 'Diploma in Castrating Pigs' ... you get the point . 
don't you?

Jim F.
New York.

 -- Original message --
From: "Frederick Noronha" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> When you talk to others from a diverse background, you often get
> another perspective into how things work. A villager, my neighbour
> Magdeline, today mentioned that all her pigs had died recently. Was
> this, I wondered, a kind of disease that had hit the region without it
> getting the attention deserved?
> 
> Anyway, she said she was keen to restart keeping pigs. And she
> insightfully pointed to the growing number of people staying in
> rooms-on-hire in the region. Obviously, the pig in the Goa of the past
> helped to maintain local sanitation. While many still don't have
> toilets ('sulabh sauchalayas' don't cover all), the pigs have been
> vanishing.
> 
> Incidentally, the Government of Goa has a Government Piggery Farm at
> Curti (Ponda). They're officially promising to sell piglings for
> breeding purposes -- at the rate of Rs 40 per kg of live weight
> subject to revision, at the farm premises.
> 
> Those interested in procuring piglings are asked -- in a thick
...
...
...


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[Goanet] Pigs... in the village

2006-06-11 Thread Frederick Noronha

When you talk to others from a diverse background, you often get
another perspective into how things work. A villager, my neighbour
Magdeline, today mentioned that all her pigs had died recently. Was
this, I wondered, a kind of disease that had hit the region without it
getting the attention deserved?

Anyway, she said she was keen to restart keeping pigs. And she
insightfully pointed to the growing number of people staying in
rooms-on-hire in the region. Obviously, the pig in the Goa of the past
helped to maintain local sanitation. While many still don't have
toilets ('sulabh sauchalayas' don't cover all), the pigs have been
vanishing.

Incidentally, the Government of Goa has a Government Piggery Farm at
Curti (Ponda). They're officially promising to sell piglings for
breeding purposes -- at the rate of Rs 40 per kg of live weight
subject to revision, at the farm premises.

Those interested in procuring piglings are asked -- in a thick
185-page book titled 'Welfare Schemes for the People of Goa' -- to
contact the "nearest Government Veterinary doctor". I wonder how many
people know of this possibility of take advantage of the scheme. -- FN
--
--
Frederick 'FN' Noronha   | Yahoomessenger: fredericknoronha
http://fn.goa-india.org | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Independent Journalist   | +91(832)2409490 Cell 9822122436
--
Photographs from Goa: http://www.flickr.com/photos/fn-goa/

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