logo
Blind pig figures out how to use electric gate

Blind pig figures out how to use electric gate

RNZ Newsa day ago
Woody the Kunekune pig, before she was rehomed, loved nothing more than to wait on the doorstep at night for dinner and a rub.
Photo:
Supplied
Lisa Lindsay's partner Nathan Rotch offers rescued animals a new home on the couple's lifestyle block near Dunedin.
So when Woody the overweight Kunekune pig was advertised on Facebook, the couple could not resist.
For two years Woody wandered around the five-acre block happily hanging out with Huni the goat, both lying on the doorstep each night waiting for dinner and "a rub".
Lindsay said the couple did not realise at first that Woody was blind because she was so overweight, but with a bit of extra attention and exercise Woody soon trimmed down.
Life with her animal mates - the other pigs, the two goats, the cat, dog and sheep - was bliss for a while, but then Woody discovered how to open an electric gate.
An electric gate had been installed on the driveway they shared with five neighbours.
"Woody worked out how to push the gate open and go for a wee wander," Lindsay said.
She got up the driveway and into the neighbours' "flash" vege gardens.
"They were excellent, they were wonderful. They'd just send a message and say, 'Woody's in the garden again.' So we'd rush off and get her, very embarrassed though, coming back with a tail between our legs."
Woody would be returned home only to escape again, until the electric gate had to be tied up.
Woody the blind Kunekune pig in her new home.
Photo:
Supplied
"My partner doesn't believe in pinning them in. She had free range of the whole property, five acres, she could come and go as she pleased, often at our front door waiting like a dog to be fed."
One neighbour was not keen on Woody's visits, and suggested Rotch fence her.
So Lindsay made the tough decision to list Woody on Facebook. Kym Craig contacted her immediately and offered to take the pet pig.
"She was just amazing and she made that whole process so much easier."
Craig took Woody away in a horse float and rehomed her on another rural property, at Millburn.
"Woody's got a wee pen, sleeping in a wee hay pen, and, but he did go missing on the first night at her house. I was like, 'Oh my goodness.'"
Craig sends Lindsay pictures of Woody, now a happy pig in hay.
"She is gorgeous. The goats and the pig were always at the door waiting for a feed at the end of the day."
Woody had been gone a week and Lindsay missed her, however said Craig had invited them to visit any time.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter
curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Navy enlisted in Zealandia lake survey effort
Navy enlisted in Zealandia lake survey effort

RNZ News

time15 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Navy enlisted in Zealandia lake survey effort

The survey is like mowing a lawn, traversing back and forth mapping the lakebed below. Photo: Kate Green / RNZ The Navy has descended on a Wellington eco-sanctuary - but it's not to prevent an invasion, pests or otherwise. Rather it is conducting a survey of the Zealandia lake, good practice for the crew and useful information for the sanctuary. Zealandia chief financial officer John Diggins watched on while the Navy crew set up their black, inflatable Zodiac with surveying equipment on Wednesday morning. "It's really exciting," he said. "It actually shows us how the lake sits underneath, you can see the old creak that runs through, the original creak from before the dam was actually built, and just shows us any submerged logs. "There's also potentially a little goldmine down there, a little goldmine shaft that they saw on the last survey." The Navy crew sets up their surveying equipment aboard the Zodiac on Wednesday morning. Photo: Kate Green / RNZ That survey was done in 2018, and since then, technology had advanced and would hopefully give them a better look. The results would make it safer to navigate Zealandia's electric boat, Ara Kawau, around the man-made lake, Diggins said. "It's a really cool trip, and it's just really good to know if there are submerged logs that are hazards for the boat so we can just stay away from them." The Navy crew would be on deck for the next couple of days, and Diggins hoped they might get time to map the Upper Dam as well, which had never been surveyed before. Chief petty officer Julie O'Hara of HMNZS Matataua and the Navy's search, survey and recovery team. Photo: Kate Green / RNZ Chief Petty Officer Julie O'Hara of HMNZS Matataua and the Navy's search, survey and recovery team explained the portable multi-beam surveying system could see down to depths of 300 metres - but she was not expecting anything deeper than 15 metres. Three crew members set out across the lake in the Zodiac just after 10am. The boat would traverse back and forth across the lake, mapping the floor below. "It's kind of like mowing the lawns," O'Hara explained. The end product would come in the form of a map, with different colours representing different depths, which Zealandia could use to steer clear of shallows and obstacles - and it could be ready as soon as Friday. Zealandia's chief financial officer John Diggins watches on, as the Navy crew sets up the boat for the lake survey. Photo: Kate Green / RNZ As well as being useful for Zealandia, O'Hara said it was good training. "We had a bit of an operational pause at the start of the year from the Manawanui sinking [in October 2024], so we came together as a trade and looked at how we can improve." "A lot of training, getting back into it, and then doing this training exercise here to really consolidate it." Zealandia's electric boat, Ara Kawau. Photo: Kate Green / RNZ The team carried out a huge variety of work - uncovering landmines, recovering vehicles, searching for missing people and surveying sea floors. "We never know where we're going to deploy in the world, and what's asked of us, so by doing different lakes it really gives us the training that we need to move from normally working salt water, to working in fresh water." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Rotorua sleeping pods for homeless no longer being used
Rotorua sleeping pods for homeless no longer being used

RNZ News

time19 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Rotorua sleeping pods for homeless no longer being used

life and society housing 20 minutes ago The maker of sleeping pods being used to house some of the homeless in Rotorua has said it is disheartening to see the project just tossed to the side. Julie King of Love Soup came up with the idea to use some of Tuff Roto-Moulders' pods - which are insulated, lockable and traditionally used for camping to create her Village of Hope. Rotorua has been grappling with a large homeless population in recent years, and the project's aim was to keep people safe through a community-based solution. Issues with council and land have forced an end to the project. Maker of the pods, Hilton McLachlan spoke to Lisa Owen.

Locals divided over fallen pohutakawa tree
Locals divided over fallen pohutakawa tree

RNZ News

time19 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Locals divided over fallen pohutakawa tree

A fallen pohutakawa tree at a prestigious North Shore apartment complex has locals divided over whether it should be saved or sawn to bits. A factious Devonport Takapuna Local Board meeting took place today to decide the fate of the tree that fell at Takapuna's Sands Apartments in 2022. It may have fallen but it's still very much alive. Residents of the Sands want it gone, but the removal has been opposed by some iwi groups because of the tree's cultural significantce. Finn Blackwell reports.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store