Well it's been too long since I've read about your adventures. So I'm it's been fun catching up. Some of these responses are late in coming.
Fall is the only time I ever raised pigs. They grow when it's cooler and the cold keeps the parasites, flies, etc. down. I just strung a big tarp over some round hay bales and they would bury up in them at night. An big automatic feeder and a water faucet that didn't freeze made it pretty easy after my friend finally got the electric fence to work. Until then the girls ran all over the place including under the house that they end up plowing a couple of feet deep. (?) Why I'll never know. They would also sneak up to people and nibble them on the back of their knees. They sent more than one salesman, Jehovah Witnesses, visitors running screaming to their car.
As far as pork ground into burgers, yum, yum, yum! Beef has got so expensive we rarely have it so it's always pork roast around here. I miss having pigs but spring is upon us and so it will be a few months before I even entertain the thought of getting a pig or two. Lucky you.
Not so lucky with the refrigerator. Isn't that the way it always is, you get a big mess of something and that's when it goes out. Worse yet when you are away for a few days.
We thought our freezer had broke down a few months ago and then I remembered we had an electrician in. So I used and extension cord and sure enough it was the outlet. He came back and fixed the problem and no trouble since.
If y'all move down to Tennessee it's going to be a huge difference. Culture alone will be mind boggling. When I travel up north I think people generally are standoffish. They seem almost offended if you strike up a conversation. Of course maybe they just are trying to figure out my accent, lol. You will probably find people friendly and everyone waves. My sons once ask me why I'm always waving while driving and I didn't realize I was because it's just what we do. Any way it was good reading about you last couple of months.