The Press

No porkies: Pigs in blankets – with people

- MADDISON NORTHCOTT

On cold nights, Eva Purkart and her partner snuggle up in bed next to their two 100-kilogram kunekune pigs.

The Canterbury couple and their prized trotters, Peach and Maya, go on family car rides, dance to live music and watch TV together.

However, Purkart, who is a trained vet nurse, says that while she loves her pigs they can be a handful and people need to be wary about getting them as pets.

She’s concerned people are buying piglets expecting them to remain small ‘‘teacup pigs’’ for the rest of their lives.

‘‘Miniature pigs just don’t exist. If you’re very lucky you might get a

70kg pig, but even that is pretty big to have around the house, and a whole lot of work,’’ she said yesterday at her Hororata home.

The New Zealand Kunekune Associatio­n says it has been inundated with queries from people wanting to adopt ‘‘miniature’’ pigs.

An animal rights advocate says pigs should not be kept as indoor pets.

Purkart and her partner, Shane Jones, adopted Peach and Maya as

8-week-old piglets and ‘‘expected them to be half their size’’. Purkart’s cousin had bought a pet pig and, as an animal lover, she wanted her own.

Maya, the runt of the litter, was about the weight of a box of beer when they picked her up from her Darfield breeder.

Peach, who was the biggest in the litter, was lazy and laid back. Both were very territoria­l and acted as ‘‘guard pigs’’ if a stranger approached.

‘‘On the night we got them home it was snowing, so we let them sleep on a cardboard box in the kitchen. We had a whole pen set up outside but they were just so little and we just never really kicked them out,’’ Purkart said.

The pair have grown from their 8kg birth weight to over 100kg each, despite being exercised daily and fed a strict diet of grass and vegetables.

The 6-year-old sisters eat out of dinner bowls, dance to live music at a nearby cafe and go on walks in their harness at the nearby domain. When they’re in the car, they have to be restrained otherwise they will ‘‘try and get in the driver’s seat’’. They are bathed, brushed and pampered with shampoo to keep their skin soft and clean.

Life with the sisters has not always been smooth sailing. Purkart and Jones once went on a trip and came home to find the pigs had rampaged through the house. They had opened the glass sliding door with their snouts and ate a 1kg bag of sugar, smashed a tablet computer and broke ‘‘a heap of stuff’’. ‘‘That was certainly an interestin­g insurance claim,’’ Purkart said.

On another occasion, Peach sniffed out Easter treats and went into anaphylact­ic shock after having an allergic reaction.

Purkart said she had no idea how big her pigs would get and was not warned by the breeder what to expect.

The New Zealand Kunekune Associatio­n website says it has been inundated with queries about adopting ‘‘miniature’’ kunekune pigs. Despite kunekune meaning fat and round in Maori, the breed is actually one of the smallest and therefore most popular options as a domestic pet. The website says the associatio­n is working towards developing a policy on what constitute­s a miniature pig and firming up breeder guidelines.

Freedom Farms NZ advocates for fair treatment of farm animals. Spokeswoma­n Hilary Pearson said people should not keep indoor pigs and their owners needed to stop being so ‘‘pignorant’’. ‘‘The research is pretty clear that pigs need socialisat­ion with other pigs [and] a natural environmen­t where they can forage and do piggie things.

‘‘Our belief is pretty strongly that they shouldn’t be kept in a home environmen­t.’’

Purkart said the spacious yard at her home gave the pigs the opportunit­y to roam outdoors and kept them ‘‘happy and healthy’’.

‘‘I wouldn’t like to think of people locking a pig indoors all day,’’ she said.

Breeders overseas have gone to great lengths to breed litters of small pigs to meet demand after their rise to popularly through reality television. In 2009, Paris Hilton shone the spotlight on her new pet pig, Princess Pigelette, and their popularity spiked again in 2012 when pageant celebrity Honey Boo Boo’s family decided a pig was the perfect companion.

 ?? PHOTO: DAVID WALKER/STUFF ?? Rural Canterbury woman Eva Purkart is not ‘‘pignorant’’ when it comes to the needs of her two kunekune pigs. But some people don’t know what they’re getting into when they adopt a piglet.
PHOTO: DAVID WALKER/STUFF Rural Canterbury woman Eva Purkart is not ‘‘pignorant’’ when it comes to the needs of her two kunekune pigs. But some people don’t know what they’re getting into when they adopt a piglet.
 ?? PHOTO: EVA PURKART ?? Six-year-old pet pig sisters Peach and Maya are as at home in the family bed as they are in the family garden.
PHOTO: EVA PURKART Six-year-old pet pig sisters Peach and Maya are as at home in the family bed as they are in the family garden.

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