WASILLA — It’s a frigid late November day on this Mat-Su metropolis, however inside Sheila Pontier’s storage at Alaska’s solely potbelly pig rescue, 13 pigs slumber, heat and dry.
Among the pigs cuddle with each other, pressed collectively in a cosy row. Others snore softly, noses twitching, ears drooping.
Pigs of every kind come to Alaska Potbelly Pig Rescue from communities across the state for various causes, actually because their households can now not take care of them or didn’t know what they have been moving into. Even pigs labeled “teacup” or “miniature” can develop to be 200 kilos or extra.
The rescue, which Pontier based in 2019, has since grown into two places: a property in Massive Lake the place nearly all of the pigs are homed whereas they await adoption, and Pontier’s storage, the place older pigs and people with particular wants stay.
Pontier has rescued greater than 150 pigs to date. She has no plans to cease now.
However recently, the exhaustion of working a sanctuary — particularly with a winter heating problem that lately surfaced and a fowl flu outbreak in her poultry flocks — has been sporting on her. At instances, it may possibly really feel like an excessive amount of for one particular person.
Regardless of how a lot she loves what she does, Pontier’s voice fills with emotion when she talks about how a lot work it’s to run a sanctuary.
“There are days I don’t need to get away from bed,” she stated. “However I believe God constructed me a bit bit totally different.”
Pig goals
Pontier, an accountant with a enterprise in Wasilla, has a tough time remembering the precise second she first fell in love with pigs. She’s at all times been drawn to them — when she was a child visiting the Alaska State Honest and dealing at a pet retailer, and now, as an grownup.
“I believe I simply fell in love with their noses,” she stated in a current interview. To Pontier, the snouts appear to be upside-down hearts. She thinks pigs are misunderstood creatures, and really simple to attach with. Their eyes have a shocking depth.
“Their eyes are human eyes,” she stated.
Like people, pigs cry in the event that they’re getting uncared for, Pontier stated. She has seen precise tears stream down their faces, often after they’re dropped off by households that may now not take care of them.
She serves as proprietor and government director of the rescue nonprofit she based three years in the past.
Pontier bought the 55-acre Massive Lake plot of land, together with a $7,000 pure gasoline generator that she deliberate to run all winter lengthy to maintain the pigs heat.
The Wasilla lady has a dream for the gorgeous Massive Lake property — for it to be develop into a sanctuary with picnic areas, and alternatives for households to feed and work together with the pigs and different animals.
The land has a lot potential, she says. However recently, it’s been a large quantity of labor, with problem after problem. In November, she contended with an avian influenza outbreak that killed most of her chickens and threatened her geese, too.
Pontier, who was raised in Cordova, grew up looking and fishing, dwelling off the land, and DIY problem-solving. However when a line to the generator froze in November, and oil spilled inflicting the generator to interrupt, the stress pushed even her Alaskan grit to the brink.
She already wakes up on daily basis at 4 a.m. to handle her pigs and run two separate companies, and isn’t in mattress till after 11 p.m.
Now she’s counting on a gasoline generator that may solely be used twice a day to maintain the Massive Lake pigs heat.
Because the temperatures within the Valley have gotten colder, she’s been fearful in regards to the pigs, and about the fee wanted to appreciate her imaginative and prescient.
She’s been working with Matanuska Electrical Affiliation on getting everlasting electrical energy for summer time 2023. It’ll price over $30,000. She’s been doing numerous fundraising, submitting numerous grants.
“I’ve large concepts and large goals for this place, and we simply must get there,” she stated. “Proper now, we’re simply attempting to outlive.”
Every pig has a narrative
When Pontier is requested about her pigs, she lights up.
There may be Bernie, who arrived on Pontier’s doorstep emaciated after he was found curled up in a snowbank dwelling off of a moose head. And Willie and Ernie, who Pontier present in 2016 by a for-sale signal on the aspect of the street the place they have been being bought for meat.
There may be Miss Piggie, who arrived inside a guinea pig cage she’d been saved in, on a balcony of an house constructing that didn’t enable pets. And 21-year-old Wiggles, whose former proprietor died two years in the past.
Pontier places every part she has into caring for these animals which have develop into like household. She spends between $5,000 and $7,000 a month holding the pigs fed and cared for — their feed is dear. And pigs eat loads.
Pontier goals of a future the place she has the time and assets to sit down down for meals, put up Christmas decorations, and take per week off right here and there — three issues she’s been too busy to do as of late.
She says her nonprofit is at all times accepting monetary or in-kind donations to assist maintain the pigs fed and housed, and canopy vet care and generator bills — and at present, to arrange electrical energy in Massive Lake.
They’re additionally on the lookout for volunteers to assist with feeding and caring for the pigs, in Massive Lake and Wasilla.
Not everybody in Pontier’s life understands how she will spend a lot cash, time and power on the pigs on the expense of doing the issues she loves, like looking and tenting.
“Once I solely had just a few, they have been tremendous,” she stated, when requested how her household has responded to her life with the pigs. Then she laughed. “Now I’m only a loopy pig girl.”
• • •