David Wong is vegan, but he admits to occasionally tasting pork from the roughly 1,000 hogs he raises on his piggery in Waianae.
A bout with cancer transformed the way Wong thinks about the industrial farming that supplies most of the meat found in Hawaii鈥檚 grocery stores.
鈥淭he bottom line from what I learned is you are what you eat and what it eats,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he point is commercial pork is loaded with antibiotics, vaccines, hormones, growth promoters. That鈥檚 how you can get the pig to grow so fast and so lean.鈥
Wong doesn鈥檛 use artificial growth hormones, vaccines or antibiotics on his pigs and he hopes the all-natural approach will convince buyers to pay extra for the product. The success of his 6-year-old pig farm depends on the discerning taste of the high-end chefs he sells to, who he believes can taste quality of meat the way a sommelier sips wine.
鈥淵ou鈥檝e got to be able to prove the concept,鈥 said Wong. 鈥淭en years down the road or 15 years down the road are we going to be a success? We don鈥檛 know.鈥
Island pig farmers face the same challenges as many other local agricultural pursuits: their production costs are much higher than those of Big Ag competitors on the mainland.
Waianae pig farmer Elliot Telles sells his 250- to 320-pound pigs for $1.80 per pound, or $3.50 per pound for suckling pigs. He says mainland farmers sell their pork for as little as 15 cents per pound.聽
To survive, local pork farmers target buyers who are willing to pay extra for a fresher product and for knowing which farm the pig comes from.
Farmers develop relationships with high-end chefs and ensure their pork has a reputation for quality. They can also depend on customers from immigrant or Native Hawaiian communities who prefer to buy whole pigs straight from the farm and slaughter them themselves on-site. Especially during holidays, many pig farmers can鈥檛 keep up with the demand.
鈥淚n some ways pork is unique because it is a critical part of the culture. You can鈥檛 have a baby without a luau,” said Halina Zaleski, a swine specialist and professor at the University of Hawaii’s College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources. “Getting pork chops from Safeway聽is just not the same, and the other (local) industries don鈥檛 have that.鈥
Pig farms were once scattered throughout Oahu, producing an ingredient central to the cuisine of Native Hawaiian and immigrant communities.
鈥淭he pig is the centerpiece of all the celebration and all the rights of passage for most Hawaiian families, Filipino families, Japanese families,鈥 said George Kahumoku, a Grammy Award-winning slack key musician who spent 40 years running a Hawaii Island hog farm.
As land use on the island shifted from agricultural to urban or residential, pig farmers found themselves pushed toward the Leeward Coast. Many farms disappeared along the way.
The , taken every five years, shows the number of pig farms dropped 70 percent over the last four decades. In 1978, Hawaii had 399 pig farms compared to just 131 in 2012.
Data for 2017 is not yet available. But people who work with pig farmers say they鈥檝e seen an uptick in the number of farms in the last few years.
鈥淭en years ago everybody was wringing their hands saying, 鈥極h our farmers are getting old, old, and as farmers retire our production is going to go down.’ That鈥檚 all changed,鈥 Zaleski said.聽
Culture And Tradition Prompt Pork Comeback
Four and a half years ago a family friend gave David Souza鈥檚 father two sows and a boar 鈥 the kind of gift you might get if you live or work on the back roads of Waianae, where farms still dot the landscape.
The Souzas come from a long line of Hawaii farmers, but Souza turned his head as his father nursed the litter until it grew to 30 pigs. Souza鈥檚 composting business, Island Topsoil, kept him so busy he had no time to help with the new enterprise. When his father became sick and unable to tend to the animals, Souza sold them.
鈥淲hen I saw the money, I was like, 鈥極h gosh, maybe Dad is onto something,鈥欌 Souza said.
Today, he oversees a farm of about 700 pigs. Souza and the four employees he hired to run the piggery attend mainland conferences to learn about the latest in pig farming technology and market trends.
Especially around Mother鈥檚 Day and New Year’s, he can鈥檛 keep up with the demand from local families who want suckling pigs to put on a spit or older sows to put in an imu, an underground oven that鈥檚 the centerpiece of Hawaiian luaus.
If a Tongan or Samoan chief visits the island, Souza said, families assigned to cook for the occasion buy as many as 30 pigs at a time.
Selecting a pig and slaughtering it on the farm is part of a tradition for many immigrant communities, an experience that Costco can鈥檛 offer.
鈥淭hey like the experience, they grew up with that,鈥 said Lorra Naholowaa, who works on Souza鈥檚 farm. 鈥淣ow they鈥檙e here in Hawaii and they don鈥檛 have the yards to raise the pigs, it鈥檚 different. When they come they bring their whole family, it鈥檚 a whole experience.
Competition Is Tough
Souza wants to sell his meat in supermarkets but so far only two of his pigs are processed at the local slaughterhouse per week and sent to , a local grocery store. Like other Oahu pig farmers, Souza finds himself constrained by a global price war.
Even on the U.S. mainland, small pig farmers can鈥檛 compete with industrial farms; the number of pig farms in the U.S. dropped from 1991 to 2009 as the industry shifted to a few large scale operations, mainly in the Midwest, according to the USDA. In the same period, USDA shows pork production in the U.S. increased 44 percent.
Souza took a trip to Chinatown a few weeks ago to try to sell his pork but a vendor immediately turned him away and told him he was wasting his time.
鈥淵ou cannot walk into Chinatown and ask for fresh, local pork,鈥 Souza said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 price driven. A lot of people say buy local, fresh, but to be honest that word has little meaning these days because everything is price driven.鈥
At 8 a.m. on a recent Friday wholesale buyers flooded the red-carpeted floor of the Blaisdell Convention Center for the Made In Hawaii Festival, a trade show for locally made products. Stacy Sugai鈥檚 booth was tucked in the back, but the smell of bacon drew customers. Suga flipped sizzling slices of Portuguese sausages she was cooking on a portable stove.
The sausages cost twice as much as imported brands that line grocery store shelves because the pork in Sugai’s product comes from pigs raised on her Waianae piggery, . Instead of cutting costs, Sugai hopes the taste difference and local branding will convince customers to pay more.
鈥淲e鈥檙e not even trying to go head to head with the mainland guys because we can鈥檛,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hat we鈥檙e trying to market toward is the whole local grower movement 鈥 It鈥檚 more of the notion of wanting to know where your food comes from.鈥
Sugai鈥檚 business partner, Patsy Oshiro, spent the last two decades watching as the pig farm run by her ex-husband’s family gradually went out of business. The customers they depended on, mostly immigrants from the Philippines who worked on sugarcane plantations聽who bought whole pigs straight from the farm, faded along with the industry that brought them to Hawaii.
Rather than abandon an ostensibly dying industry, Oshiro and Sugai joined forces with the goal of bringing local pork back to grocery stores in Hawaii.
Most old-timers in the industry say people aren鈥檛 willing to pay for local pork, Sugai said. She and Oshiro want to prove them wrong.
For now, 2 Lady Farmers survives by selling to high-end chefs. Their meat can also be found at a few grocery stores.
The success of a small farmer 鈥渁ll comes from carving a niche and branding yourself as a higher value product for your consumers,鈥 said Erin Borror, an economist with the聽.
Meat producers in Japan have had notable success despite cheaper options imported from the U.S. flooding grocery stores, Borror said, because people pay top dollar for Kobe beef or Kurobuta pork.
Sugai and Oshiro are also working on diversifying the products they sell. Rather than just selling raw meat, 2 Lady Farmers teamed up with , a local snack company, to make jerky.聽
‘Their Tradition Is What Keeps Us Fueled’
At least one Oahu hog farmer doesn鈥檛 worry about market trends or the price of pork on the stock market. A faded sign along a Waianae Valley back road that reads 鈥淛ay鈥檚 Hog Farm鈥 is the only advertising Elliot Telles does to promote his pig farm. And business is good.
Filipino families drive from Ewa, Waipahu and Kalihi to buy a 250- to 320-pound pig at Jay鈥檚. Customers slaughter the pig on the farm and 鈥渦se every little bit of the animal,鈥 Telles said, not just for special occasions but for everyday consumption.
His customer base is similar to those who bought pork at Oshiro’s now-closed farm. That base hasn’t disappeared entirely.
Telles’ customers want fresh meat and use parts of the animal 鈥 the blood, for example 鈥 that they can鈥檛 find at grocery stores.
Word of mouth brings so much business to Telles’ farm he sometimes runs out of pigs and must turn customers away. 聽
鈥淭heir tradition is what keeps us fueled,鈥 Telles said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 see any chance of that slowing down.鈥
His loyal customer base shields Telles from market forces. He doesn鈥檛 have to worry about importing much feed 鈥 his customers prefer the fatty meat of pigs raised on food scraps as opposed to the leaner meat of grain-fed pigs.
Business actually got better during the Great Recession, Telles said, because people ate out less and depended more on home-cooked meals.
Telles only brings pigs to the grocery stores or markets in Chinatown聽on the rare occasions when he has a surplus, and he usually loses money on the sale. That experience has taught him not to tailor his business to new buyers.
鈥淚鈥檇 rather truly support these people who have been with us for all these years instead of trying to satisfy the meat-packer-type market,鈥 he said.
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