
Vale of Berkeley, Gloucestershire · c. 1790
Sus scrofa domesticus — GOS
Gloucestershire Old Spots
The Orchard Pig
The old men in Berkeley Vale would tell you the spots were bruises from falling apples — which is nonsense, of course, but the kind of nonsense that carries a truth inside it. These pigs lived under the cider trees. They ate the windfalls. They cleaned the orchard floor while the orchard fed them. A symbiosis so old it became mythology. When the orchards were grubbed out for arable after the war, the pigs nearly went with them. By the 1970s you could count the registered sows on two hands. What saved them was stubbornness — a particular kind of farmer who couldn't see the point of a pig that couldn't root outside, and refused to switch. Today there are 424 registered breeding females in the UK, which sounds like recovery until you learn there were 636 four years ago. The language is still endangered. But it's still being spoken.






