Preschoolers meet piglets
Melanie Crowson/ Valley Press | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 12 years, 10 months AGO
PLAINS - Home Start Preschool students were tickled pink with meeting Dave Williams’ two female 3-month-old piglets Friday afternoon as part of a school field trip.
Williams, a Plains resident and pig farmer, invited the group to observe and play with his two newest additions to his stock.
At first, the group of young ones were timid to meet the other young ones, but one particular birthday girl - a Miss Kaitlyn Ducept of Plains - braved the tiny pig pen and stepped in with the pair of Yorkshire-Hampshire crosses. Ducept was described by her teacher, Miss Jess, as being brave and inquisitive. Also given the fact that it was her fifth birthday, Ducept expressed her eagerness to try anything. As the piglets sniffed at her clothes and shoes, Ducept tenderly pet them and tried to rub their bellies.
“Ah! They’re trying to eat my shoes!” Ducept said as she danced around the pen to protect her Skechers ‘twinkle toes’ shoes. “I think they’re trying to eat them because they’re sparkly.”
The curious piglets nibbled at Ducept’s shoes and jeans, but were playful nonetheless. Ducept’s bravery inspired classmate Logan Steinebach, 4, to climb the fence and step in with her and the piglets. Steinebach stuck close to Ducept, who showed him how to pet the piglets. While the preschoolers interacted with the piglets, teacher Miss Jess asked them questions about them.
“How do they feel?” Miss Jess asked her students. “Are they soft, or is their hair rough?”
The preschoolers bent over and pet the pair and concluded they were soft.
“These will be used for breeding,” Williams said of the piglets. “We got them out of Missoula and they’re not for slaughter.”
ARTICLES BY MELANIE CROWSON/ VALLEY PRESS
Getting treated like a Rockstar
Karrie Shinnick sits in her private room at Rockstars Salon, where she offers services such as facials, waxing, eyebrow and lash tinting, and human energy chelation therapy.
Local blood saves lives
Mark Sheets of Thompson Falls knows how donated blood saves lives. At age 16, a roof collapsed on top of him and among his many injuries, his femoral artery was severed. He would have died if not for receiving up to 5 pints of donated, matching blood following the accident. Sheets has been donating his own blood to American Red Cross ever since.
Dianne Rummel formally charged
THOMPSON FALLS – Sanders County Clerk of Court Dianne Rummel was arraigned for criminal charges Tuesday in direct relation to allegations of theft, embezzlement tampering with county records and witnesses.