This little piggy steals the show
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Danette Goulet
FAIRGROUNDS -- He may be the smallest but he’s also the smartest.
Living up to his name, Sow Capone, the All Alaskan Racing Pig, steals
the prize at the end of the race at the Orange County Fairgrounds.
As the four pigs line up at the starting gate, little Sow Capone paws
at the starting gate just like the rest of them.
But when the gate swings open and his competitors take off around the
track, Capone ducks under the fence and across the track slipping back
under the fence stealing the coveted food.
“I liked it when they cheated,” said Ellen Weber, 7, with a
mischievous grin.
His trick was one of the favorites with the crowd, but it is not a
gimmick he was taught, said his trainers Marc Stamper and Holly
Standiford.
“He’s smart,” Standiford said. “He’s the runt of the litter and he’s
figured out that he won’t get any food.”
Stamper said he tried to break that habit repeatedly -- going so far
as to put up chicken wire, but still Sow Capone would nudge his way under
and across.
Audiences’ laughter finally convinced them to let Capone have his
impish way.
It’s not really too shocking considering that it does not take the
intensive training one might think to teach the young pigs to race.
“Training is really easy,” Stamper said. “They pretty much do this on
their own. It takes about three hours.”
That is not the only misconception Stamper cleared up. It seems there
is no such breed as an Alaskan Pig.
“The Alaskan Pig is a myth,” Stamper said. “The show started in
Alaska.”
Even without the pound of bacon prize this year, which in the past
delighted some while upsetting others, races have been packed, filling
the Newport Arena to its 1,100 capacity.
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