April 28, 2009

Daisy, the pig who promoted reading, is dead at 14


Daisy the Pig, who encouraged children to “Pig Out on Reading” during three national tours that brought her to 48 states, died Monday at the age of 14.
“She encouraged millions of kids to read more books,” said her owner, Paul “Farmer” Minor. “She brought joy to so many lives.”
Daisy, a 115-pound potbellied pig, was featured in countless news stories across America and in many other countries.
The first pig formally invited inside the pork-happy U.S. Capitol, back in 2002, Daisy was touted on everything from Belgium television to the Montel William Show.
She held hundreds of library cards from across the United States, received a letter from former First Lady Laura Bush and was even showcased on the CD cover of “Big Fun on the Hog Farm” by River City Slim and the Zydeco Hogs.
Minor said Tuesday he remembers a time in Virginia where an autistic boy who had never said a word, uttered his first sound when he met Daisy.
Mayor Art Ward said that Daisy and Minor “gave a lot of delight to a lot of people, especially kids.”
But fame never went to Daisy’s head.
How did a simple pig on Hill Street rise to such porcine heights?
“When she was just a baby, she started getting famous because of a number of fund-raisers,” Minor said, including a walk against hunger and the annual “Kiss-A-Pig” contest for the Bristol Boys and Girls Club, which hauled in more than $100,000 over the years as people paid to ensure their favorite contestant got to smooch the porker.
Her big break came 11 years ago, when a Hartford librarian invited Daisy to come and help expose children to the wonders of reading. That gig landed her a spot in a guide for reading programs “and she just took off,” Minor said.
For the first couple of years, Minor carted Daisy around to schools and libraries during his off hours from his telephone company job. Then he retired and started spending as much as nine months a year on the road with Daisy.
Ward said the reading program that Minor put together with Daisy, which included an astounding array of children’s books about pigs, gave students “an appreciation for the things that are being taught and a recognition of the value of animals in the process.”
He said it proved “an ingenious program” to amuse and educate youngsters.
Recognizing last fall that Daisy was aging, Minor looked around for a successor. Six month old Daisy 2 is already an old professional, he said, after making joint appearances with Daisy a number of times.
“He’s wonderful. He learned from Daisy,” Minor said. Plus, he said, the still-growing newcomer “is awesome with kids.”
“There’s no negatives associated with Daisy, D2, Paul or the program,” Ward said.
Minor said it broke his heart Monday when he and his wife took Daisy to the veterinarian for the last time.
“Daisy was in my lap,” he said, and died peacefully.
“It’s just so hard,” Minor added. “That pig’s been sleeping with me for 14 ½ years.”
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Copyright 2009. All rights reserved.
Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Time to fire up the smoker .....

Ham ... Bacon ... Chops ....


mmmmmmmmmmmmmm........

Anonymous said...

Hey .... I think I had Daisys' grandmother as my first year latin teacher .

The both smelled about the same anyways ...

Anonymous said...

Thoughts and prayers are with the Minor family. If anyone knows what its like to lose a family pet...

not likely said...

7:05 - not likely, you would have learned some manners and not turned out as such a rude person as you are.

Anonymous said...

My children were very sad when they heard the news. Every summer, they read like crazy to fill up their summer reading lists, because if the school as a whole reads a certain number of books, the principal kissed Daisy on the snout. Last summer, they each read more than 20 books. They are both now far beyond the normal reading level for children their age. Any pig that can get elementary school kids to spend a good chunk of their summer reading deserves a spot in the hall of fame. Thank you Daisy!

Anonymous said...

That pig was mean. I saw it bite a young child once. This certainly is a loss for the Minors, but not any kind of community tragedy.

Anonymous said...

Farmer Minor is a generous, sweet man, and Daisy has been coming to our library each summer for years! She will be really missed by the children and staff here. We are looking forward to meeting Daisy 2 this summer, but it will be bittersweet.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous if your cooking it up, make sure it's free of the swine flu lol... but seriously, I am sorry for the loss of your pet.

Anonymous said...

Generous? Farmer Minor brought home a lot of bacon with Daisy. Probably some government reading grants, too.

Anonymous said...

Steve, thanks to you or your editor for not placing the last sentence in the blog into the Press story. A few hundred read the blog, several thousand read the paper.

“It’s just so hard,” Minor added. “That pig’s been sleeping with me for 14 ½ years.”

Anonymous said...

We should live and let live.