Community Corner

Wayward Pig Likely to Find Home Soon

The 1-year-old potbellied pig led animal control officers on a four-day game of hide and seek before being caught near I-75.

A Chihuahua yapped incessantly in a nearby cage while the black potbellied pig looked on.

He seemed to sigh at the drama and flopped over on his side, snorting softly under his breath.

But the pig­—who has been calling the Cobb County animal shelter home since Sunday—need not snub his snout at others. Last week the wayward pig was at the center of an unsuccessful four-day swine hunt.

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The pig, named Ken by animal control staff (Barbie was another pig at the shelter recently), was first spotted during rush hour Jan. 27 along I-75 near Chastain Road.

Animal control officers went in search of Ken and set some humane traps. Police were afraid the animal would run into interstate traffic.

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In the following days Ken was spotted here and there near the first place he was seen. But each time officers would get close, the 20-to-30-pound animal would run into the woods.

Cobb police praised Ken’s intelligence this week, saying he was a “very smart little guy.”

But finally on Sunday, the gig was up. Ken was spotted and apprehended by animal control officers who were checking the traps.

And that brings us to Ken’s current situation. Police think he is somebody’s pet, said Sgt. Dana Pierce, spokesman with the Cobb police.

But nobody’s come to get him. “And the pig’s not talking,” Pierce said.

Ken has been subsisting on dog food at the shelter and spent most of Thursday afternoon snoozing on a gray wool blanket in his cage.

He is in a separate room from the general population—a pregnant lab to his left and the vocal Chihuahua to the right on top of a counter. It was unclear why the tiny dog was in the room.

Ken’s owner has until Saturday to come get him. After that, he will go up for adoption, said Don Bruce, operations manager at the facility.

Even though there is a long list of people who have called about taking Ken home, he will more than likely go to live with one of the officers who helped catch him.

“He decided he wanted a pig,” Bruce said.

Hope he has a secure place to keep him.


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