WORKING -- April Ford
- Share via
Andrew Glazer
SHE IS
Hauling hay every day at the Orange County Fair’s Great American
Petting Zoo.
PET PROJECT
Ford joined the traveling zoo 12 years ago after spotting an
employment ad in the back of a political magazine.
“The owner’s dad owned the magazine,” said the Louisiana native. “And
it seemed like the perfect job. I like traveling, being outside and I
love animals.”
MIXED MENAGERIE
This particular petting zoo has an odd collection of animals that
probably would never be seen together in the wild. European deer nuzzle
Australian kangaroos. Andean Llamas sniff goats.
“When baby animals are born, we expose them to the zoo as soon as
possible,” Ford said. “It doesn’t take long before they adapt to one
another and having people around. We just have to make sure the goats
don’t jump up.”
GETTING HER GOAT
Ford, 30, said her company provides visitors with an important
service.
“Taking care of animals is really hard business,” she said. “Most
people don’t have the space, time or money. So we take care of the
animals and all they have to do is enjoy.”
A group of children crouched near a black goat with a full belly that
spread across the hay where it lay. While it stared ahead, some brave
children pet its head. Others watched her nervously, flinching every time
she jerked her hornless head.
BOTTLE FEEDER
Three fawns, two female and one male, followed Ford around the pen,
emitting guttural gurgles and chirps.
“I’ve bottle-fed them since they were born,” she said. “They really
know me.”
Isabel, a fawn with mocha-and-cream colored fur, even came running
across the hay after Ford called her name.
Perhaps she just knew it was feeding time.
Ford unsheathed several bottles of milk harvested from the goats (an
addition to the weird interspecies mingling going on) and began feeding
the three fawns. Other animals -- a few goats, a pig and nearly a dozen
5-year-old kids -- swarmed around Ford.
HAY FEVER
Ford said she sleeps well in her trailer, which is parked on the
Fairgrounds, each night. Shoveling hay, feeding the animals, herding
children and cleaning the pen is hard work, she said.
“When I first started, it was much easier,” she said. “I guess I’m
older now.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.