Times Colonist

Have you seen Berleen, the 450-pound pig missing from Cobble Hill farm?

- DARRON KLOSTER dkloster@timescolon­ist.com

She’s hard to miss: About 450 pounds with a fatty lump on her rump, pink all over with a strong scent of manure. Berleen the pig — a gentle infertile sow saved from the butcher — has been missing from her Cobble Hill area farm since Sunday.

And she vanished just two weeks before punching her ticket to a farm sanctuary on the Prairies where she would have lived out the remainder of her days wallowing in the mud.

So is she on the run? Or has big Berleen been pig-napped?

“I believe she was taken,” owner Lee Schroeder said in an interview Friday. “The property is fully fenced and I checked for any holes in the fencing. The gates are closed.

“She’s so affectiona­te … she could be coaxed away by anyone. It’s heartbreak­ing.”

Sarien Slabbert, co-founder of a Port Moody-based organizati­on that transports animals to farm sanctuarie­s, has a 17-foot stock trailer ready to transport Berleen and two holstein cows to Kismet Creek Farm near Steinbach, Man.

The freedom run will leave Aug. 23, but time might be running out for Berleen to catch the ride.

“We don’t have much hope … it’s been so long since she went missing,” Slabbert said Friday.

She said the trip is carefully planned with scheduled stops at farm sanctuarie­s along the way. The run to Manitoba is the longest yet for the fledgling organizati­on called PEACE (People Ensuring Animal Care Exists), which normally delivers farm animals around B.C. and to Alberta. Most of the regular “no-kill” farms didn’t have room, so the network was expanded into Manitoba.

The owners of Kismet Creek Farm said in a Facebook post they were “devastated” to learn that Berleen had vanished. “We are hoping she will be found safe so she can get the happy ending she deserves.”

Schroeder took Berleen a couple of months ago from a local farmer who had grown attached to the big sow and didn’t want to send her to the slaughterh­ouse.

Schroeder said he and his partner have several rescued animals on their property, including other pigs, horses and goats.

He said Berleen follows him everywhere and craves human contact.

But she’s also a handful, rooting though garbage and knocking over the barbecue. He said it was time to find her a “forever home.”

Michelle Singleton, who runs Homes With Hooves sanctuary near Duncan and connected Berleen with the relocating team, said stealing Berleen would take a stock trailer, a lot of muscle and plenty of patience.

“My experience has been it is not easy to crate a pig or get them on a trailer … it takes an hour,” said Singleton, who has an 800-pounder named Theo, and Lillian, who weighs in at 500.

She said if Berleen is on the lam or lost, she would be easily spotted. Or she could be obscured by forest or brush.

“Pigs are smart and they will forage on plants,” Singleton said. “They will eat just about anything, and can actually go a long time without food.”

 ?? SUBMITTED ?? Berleen the pig — a gentle infertile sow saved from the butcher — has been missing since Sunday.
SUBMITTED Berleen the pig — a gentle infertile sow saved from the butcher — has been missing since Sunday.

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