Gascon
The Gascon pig, often called porc gascon, is a traditional black pig from Gascony and the Pyrenean foothills of southwest France. It has black skin and bristles, a sturdy frame, and strong legs suited to outdoor grazing, wooded slopes, and slower-growing regional pork systems. The breed declined sharply when lean, fast-finishing white pigs came to dominate production, but it survived through local conservation work and programs linked with Noir de Bigorre meat and ham.
Gascon pigs are usually managed with more space and a longer finishing period than commercial hybrids. Pasture, woodland, cereals, and seasonal feeds can all be part of their system, but they still need fencing, water, wallows, and dry shelter. Their meat is valued for flavor and fat quality, so over-lean feeding defeats much of the reason for keeping them. Breeding programs often track ancestry closely, and buyers should expect regional standards and slower production rather than cheap, fast pork.
Colors: Belted, Black, Black and White, Blonde, Brown, Cream, Ginger, Ginger and Black, Pied, Red, Red and Black, Sandy, Solid Black, Solid White, Spotted, Swallow Belly, White