…or How We Became Unsuspecting Pig Parents
By Jennie Staub
By Jennie Staub
Last Tuesday started out normal enough. Little did we know how far from normal the
next few days would become. My husband, Jay, and I woke up, fed dogs, cats, and
chickens, drove to work, and decided to have lunch at one of our favorite
restaurants where our friend Julie happens to work as a server. As always, we asked to be seated in her
section. When she saw us, she
immediately rushed over and without preamble asked if we had purchased our new
farm yet. We’ve been on the hunt for a
new place with more acreage and more privacy and had told Julie a few weeks
prior about a place we’d found further out in the country with eight acres and
how, if we bought it, we planned to add to our menagerie of cats, dogs, and
chickens with maybe some pigs and goats.
When we told Julie no, we didn’t have a new place yet, she sighed
heavily and said how much she had hoped we did because she was going to ask a
huge favor of us. And here’s where the
story gets really interesting, really fast.
Julie told us that her brother had been given a pot belly
pig by a friend who, in turn, had gotten her from another friend who works at a
local animal shelter. When her brother
mentioned to this friend in casual conversation that he was thinking of getting
a pig to raise, his friend took him to mean a pig as a pet (we assume) and knew
that a pot belly pig had been turned in at the shelter by some folks who said
she wandered into their yard. Since
coming to the shelter no one had come to claim her so away she went to Julie’s
brother.
The only thing wrong with this
picture is what Julie’s brother meant was he wanted to get a pig to raise for
food and he had no intention of keeping a pig as a pet. Some of his less enlightened friends (think
Beverly Hillbillies-type folks) heard him mention that he needed to find a new
home for the pig because he did not want to keep a pig for a pet. Seeing a flashing neon sign saying “FREE PORK”,
they offered to take the pig off his hands, have her carved into pork chops and
bacon, and both sides would stock their freezers.
Needless to say, Julie and her husband,
Jerry, were appalled and beside themselves when they heard this but were in no
position to take her since their neighborhood was not zoned for pet pigs. They had been going to her brother’s house
for the past week to feed and care for the pig, which they came to adore and had
named Petunia, all the while trying in vain to find someone, anyone, willing to
adopt her and NOT slaughter her.
I think Julie viewed us as Petunia’s last hope. She was practically in tears telling us how
the very next day her brother’s backwoods buds were coming to take Petunia away
and straight to the butcher. We agreed
with her that these people were unconscionable to take and kill a pig that had
never been anything other than someone’s pet.
Feeling awful, but not knowing what else to do, we left it at that,
finished our lunch, and went on our way.
But I couldn’t stop thinking about that poor little girl and how I could
possibly help save her from what seemed an almost inevitable fate.
On the way back to work, I thought of my sister who lives
about 60 miles west of us and is very plugged in to the north Alabama animal
rescue community. I contacted her, told
her the story, and she began working her contacts.Very soon she contacted me
with good news. It turned out one of her
good friends, Amber, who is actively involved in rescue and fostering had her
own pot belly pig, coincidentally also named Petunia, and was willing to foster
our Petunia and try to find her a home…..but there was a catch. We had to get the pig to her, some 60 miles
away. Neither Jay nor I could afford to take
time off work. Julie was scheduled to
work also; however, Jerry had the time and a truck but not the financial
means. Julie doesn’t make a lot at her waitress
job and Jerry is currently unemployed. I
gladly offered to give them gas money if they could deliver Petunia and they jumped
at the offer. It all seemed to be coming
together and we both agreed we would sleep soundly that night knowing Petunia
had a safe place to go.
The following morning, Wednesday, Jerry went to his
brother-in-law’s house and got Petunia in his truck to make the long trip to
drop Petunia off with Amber at the veterinarian office where she works. Amber would get her home from there. All seemed to going well and I breathed a
sigh of relief that Petunia was safe from the butcher and would be well cared
for until a home could be found. The
original plan was that Amber would keep our Petunia with her Petunia in her
backyard, and work on finding her a forever home. By this time in the process, I was already sold
on adopting Petunia myself IF (and it was a big if) I could figure out a place
to keep her. My dear husband, on the
other hand, was blissfully unaware of my decision. We have two acres at our current residence
but none of it is fenced except for a portion of the backyard where the dogs stay
and three adjoining garden plots which are set up with welded wire fence. We have been using them as extra roaming space
for our flock of chickens. I decided we
could retrofit one area to be fit for a pig and estimated that we could have
her back with us in a week or two. Well,
you know what they say about the best laid plans….
I awoke the next morning, Thursday, to an urgent text
message from Amber that said she was terribly sorry but didn’t think this was
going to work out after all and needed me to come get the pig. It turned out that our Petunia was a good 70
pounds heavier and several inches taller and wider than her Petunia and she was
afraid to leave them alone unsupervised, plus our Petunia had charged at her
dogs upon seeing them. To make matters
even worse, Petunia had bitten Amber’s foot the previous evening in her
anxiousness to get to the food that she was bringing her. Amber was just afraid she was going to be too
much to handle. My heart sank. What were we going to do now? By this time, I had sold Jay on the idea of
having a pet pig (surprisingly easier than I expected) and we had a quick
brainstorming session. We decided we
could get something put together by Saturday. We asked Amber if she could
possibly keep Petunia until we could make it over Saturday afternoon to pick
her up. She had a 10x10 chain-link
kennel that she sometimes used for rescued dogs and she could put Petunia in
there for a couple of days. Now the
clock was ticking louder and we really had to get to work.
Friday afternoon we both left work after lunch and ran to
our local feed store to purchase a truckload of straw bales and a large molded
plastic dog house similar to the one Amber said Petunia was already sleeping in
at her house. The fenced area I wanted
to put her in had been our garden this past summer and still had all of the
tomato cages, the remains of the plants that had just recently died off, and snaking
through it all a long half-buried soaker hose.
All of that had to be torn down or pulled up, and the plants dug up and
removed, specifically the tomato plants, because I know they are poisonous to
many animals. We worked HARD for several
hours and finally had a double stacked row of straw bales along the fence Petunia
would share with the main chicken run, effectively blocking her view just in
case she decided to try and “play” with the chickens. We had a large pallet we had kept to use as a
foundation for a new dog house but hadn’t yet so we brought that out, put her
house on top, and then stacked straw bales around it for insulation. The last bales we stacked one tall along the
opposite end of the pen where the fence is shared with one of the older garden
plots that the chickens are allowed into each day to scratch and explore.
We knew from Amber’s description, and a few pictures she
sent me, that our little Petunia was not so little after all. She was a big girl weighing in at perhaps
100-120 pounds and just a little shorter than knee high. Amber had also tried putting a makeshift
harness on Petunia the day she got her and Petunia freaked out, telling Amber
that no one had ever harness or leash trained her. Our original idea of leading her out on a
leash, picking her up and placing her into the bed of the truck went flying out
the window. After reading about ramps on
the Pigs 4 Ever website, I told Jay that’s what we needed – a nice sturdy ramp
with little cross sections of wood tacked on so she could get traction and not
slip…AND it was a job I was assigning to him.
He nodded his head and assumed the mantle of patient long suffering he
wears whenever I decide we need to adopt a new pet and he is tasked to help. Soon after, the sound of his table saw could
be heard whining away in the garage and soon there emerged a very nice ramp.
Amber worked until noon on Saturday so we planned to leave
our house in the late morning. This
would give us plenty of time to stop at Tractor Supply on the way to pick up
pig chow, suitable food and water bowls, then on to Amber’s house to load
Petunia and get back home with plenty of daylight left to get her settled in. One of our three dogs sleeps in an XL wire
crate each night so we borrowed it to transport Petunia and put lots of nice
fresh straw in the bottom so she would feel more secure and her hooves wouldn’t
slide. We loaded up the rapidly made but
surprisingly sturdy ramp in the truck bed alongside the kennel and headed west.
For those of you who have pet pigs, I’m sure I’m not telling
you anything new when I say wrangling a pig the size of Petunia and getting her
to go where she doesn’t want to go and to do what she doesn’t want to do is no
small feat indeed, but when that pig doesn’t know you and has recently been shaken
up from being shuttled from one place to another and another, it’s practically
impossible. We were woefully unprepared
for just how difficult it would be getting her out the small fenced area where
she had been sequestered, along approximately 15 feet of fence line, around the
corner, and through the gate where we had backed the truck and lowered the
ramp. I believe it took us at least
seven attempts (maybe more), and several handfuls of dog food as an enticement,
just to get her to the gate. Once we got
Petunia to the open gate, Jay got behind her and partially closed the gate so
she couldn’t back up, and then it was up to all three of us, with more dog food
dropped up the ramp, to push, pull, and bribe her all the way up the ramp and
into the kennel. Jay and I had just
experienced our first, but I’m sure not last, up close and personal encounter
with a creature whose personality traits had spawned the word “pigheaded”. We caught our breath, thanked Amber again for
being so gracious to take Petunia in,then we headed back home.
Once we arrived home, it was surprisingly easy to get her
into her new pen. We backed the truck as
close to the gate as we could and lowered the ramp. With Jay using a blunt wooden garden stake to
gently encourage from behind and me waving a bowl of her new pig chow under her
nose, it only took just two tries to get her to make the trip back down the
ramp. She made a beeline for the southwest
corner of her new pen, squatted and pee’d a gallon. With that accomplished, she leisurely explored
all four sides of her pen, sniffing and grunting her apparent approval. She inspected
her house by walking in, burying her nose in the straw, and coming back out with
straw draped over her head. Seemingly
satisfied with her new digs, she settled in to eat her dinner. I stayed out with her for a while to let her
get used to me and eventually she stood still for me to scratch her back. She bowed her back and the next thing I knew she
flopped down on her side for a belly rub, grunting happily. At that point I
knew I could tell Julie that the saga of Petunia was going to have a happy
ending.
It’s been only a week since she came to us and already she
has grunted and squealed her way into our hearts. Cold weather arrived here today, a bit
earlier than expected, and next week is forecast to be even colder. We will be building her a lean-to this
weekend so she will have a better place to stay warm and dry that is much
larger than just her little house in the midst of the straw bales. Her new Busy Ball is on order and should arrive
tomorrow. Next up is a harness and leash
so we can begin that training process. I
look forward to the day when we are comfortable enough to allow her to roam and
graze outside her pen and she can finally know that she has nothing to fear
ever again.