Ham-dicap Racing
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Andrew Glazer
FAIRGROUNDS -- They lined up at the starting gate and waited for
the pistol to pop. Race fans leaned forward, holding their tickets,
cheering.
“And they’re off,” the announcer called.
Right out of the gate, they were snout and snout. Fans cheered more,
calling out the names of their favorite pigs.
“Go Hammy Sowsa!” yelled one young race fan in the back of the
bleachers who flailed his arms, urging the 35-pound porker as it kicked
up sawdust on the 130-foot track.
The fan cursed quietly when the 8-week-old, named after another star
athlete, finished next to last.
The roughly 100 spectators who gathered for one of four daily pig
races at the Orange County Fair were extremely engaged. But then again,
pig racing is serious business. Those who pick the winning pig, a
one-in-eight chance, walk away with a pound of bacon, courtesy of a local
supermarket chain.
“We make stars out of these pigs for a few months,” said Bart Noll,
race announcer, pig owner and trainer. He and his spiky-haired
13-year-old son, Chad, spend much of the year buying pigs near their
ranch outside Springfield, Ore., and exercising them for the summer race
season.
“We like runts,” Noll said. “We can race them longer.”
When pigs grow larger than 45 pounds -- generally after three months
on the road -- they can no longer jump the six-inch hurdles and make
their way around the track.
The Nolls sell the pigs back to farmers once their racing careers
expire. On their way to retirement, senior swine can grow to as large as
1,000 pounds.
Teaching the pigs to run the course is easier than one might think.
After about two weeks, piglets are racing along the track.
“The secret is you reward them with food,” said Chad, who also sells
pig racing T-shirts, beanbag pigs, bucket hats, baseball hats,
sweatshirts and embroidered knitted golf shirts. He also promotes the
pigs’ own Web site, o7 https://www.pigrace.comf7 .
“You give them food at the starting gate and at the finish.”
The pigs’ food of choice: animal crackers.
“Very appropriate, I guess,” Noll said. “On second thought, maybe we
should find ‘people crackers.’ ”
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