Thunder the Boar, Well-Known Stud and Blue Ribbon Winner, Has Gone to Hog Heaven

<p>Thunder Ben David of Chilmark died Thursday, July 25, after seven glorious years as the biggest attraction at Native Earth Teaching Farm owned by Rebecca Gilbert and Randy Ben David. &ldquo;He was our rock star boar,&rdquo; said Ms. Gilbert.</p>

Thunder Ben David of Chilmark died Thursday, July 25, after seven glorious years as the biggest attraction at Native Earth Teaching Farm owned by Rebecca Gilbert and Randy Ben David. “He was our rock star boar,” said Ms. Gilbert.

Thunder was born in 2006 in Pennsylvania at a farm known for breeding Berkshire pigs since the 1950s. “He came from a good blood line,” said Mr. Ben David, “and I’m pretty sure he was the first Berkshire pig on Martha’s Vineyard.” He weighed upwards of 800 pounds, had a fine black coat with random white patches, and sported distinctively notched ears — one way pigs are branded when they are little.

During his lifetime Thunder was well known as a desirable stud and his services were in high demand with other pig farmers. He sired dozens of offspring around Martha’s Vineyard until the summer of 2010 when his stud services were officially taken over by his son, Thunder Jr.

From 2010 to 2012 Thunder was employed to root out and create a pasture at Tupelo Farm in West Tisbury. He happily consumed an acre of poison ivy and cat briers, rooted up old stumps, large rocks and dug numerous wallows. He loved to be scratched with a flexible metal rake and would lie down and shut his eyes in happy abandon during this treatment.

In his spare time, Thunder delighted visitors to the Native Earth Teaching Farm, won numerous blue ribbons at the Martha’s Vineyard Agricultural Fair and was the star attraction at a parade in West Tisbury where he upstaged the selectmen. He was also featured in a short documentary shown on MVTV, A Pig and a Pumpkin, that captured his prowess at consuming pumpkins down to the very last seed.

During this past winter Thunder appeared twice in the Vineyard Gazette, once when he escaped his pen on Christmas day and again on a cold and windy January day when he left his enclosure and attempted joining the humans of Tupelo Farm inside their home.

As to Thunder’s demise last Wednesday, Mr. Ben David explained that it is not economical to keep an animal you don’t use and it is not good practice to have two boars on the same farm. Ordinarily Thunder would have lived only five years, but due to his rooting job at Tupelo Farm he had another three years of service. “He was a good pig and will be missed by lots of people,” Mr. Ben David said.

Thunder will be fondly remembered by his owners, Randy Ben David and Rebecca Gilbert and their extended families on and off Martha’s Vineyard, Jim Sullivan also of Native Earth Teaching Farm, Joanie Ames of Tupelo Farm and her extended family and neighbors, the crew at Seven Gates Farm, and many others too numerous to name who brought him leftovers, especially corn and watermelon — two of his favorites.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/01/2013 - 10:40

Permalink

Jay usa

"As to Thunder’s demise last Wednesday, Mr.
Ben David explained that it is not
economical to keep an animal you don’t use
and it is not good practice to have two
boars on the same farm. Ordinarily
Thunder would have lived only five years,

but due to his rooting job at Tupelo Farm he
had another three years of service."

So did Thunder die from natural causes or was he 'assisted'? If the latter, this article seems to dance around it and would be a shame Thunder couldn't live out his natural life given his service.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/01/2013 - 12:39

Permalink

Deb a little farm

My thoughts exactly. A nice tribute until reaching that paragraph. TMI.
My senior, arthritic, fairly useless-as-far-as-riding-is-concerned horse still enjoys grazing out back with his buddy at home. Realistically, if he was owned by someone who had to pay high monthly board, he would not be as fortunate. And there is a time for euthanasia of an animal with intractable pain or severe injury, but it didn't sound as though this was that time for Thunder.

Add new comment

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.