Rescue & Adoptions
In Loving Memory
Babe
Babe
was named in honor of the film, "Babe," in which longtime
Farm Sanctuary supporter and farm animal advocate James Cromwell
played the role of Farmer Hoggett. Just as our "Babe"
first arrived at our California Shelter from Nevada, James was speaking
at a Farm Sanctuary media event to encourage people to save all
pigs and go vegetarian --and so the name stuck.
Throughout her lifetime, Babe also did her part to teach people that pigs need
protection, by using her intelligence and charm to inspire compassionate
change in countless visitors to the farm. Babe was one of the many pigs who ultimately die from complications of genetic alteration and commercial breeding. Most pigs bred for
meat on modern-day farms are engineered to gain so much weight,
so quickly, that their skeletal systems cannot support the bulk
of their bodies. Most pigs are slaughtered once they reach six months
of age, or 250 pounds, but when allowed to live longer and grow
larger than this (as Babe did), the effects of their unnatural breeding
become even more apparent. Several chronic conditions may have contributed to Babe's death.
For much of her time at our California Shelter, we treated abscesses
on her hips and legs. We monitored the abscesses closely and flushed
them regularly to prevent further infection. Babe also suffered
from arthritis and a genetic condition in her spine that caused
permanent nerve damage. On January 3, 2004 the effects of this damage
to her nerves and spinal cord grew markedly worse. Her rear legs
suddenly became paralyzed and she was unable to rise even with help
from her caregivers. Babe was clearly uncomfortable, and she seemed
unable to cope emotionally with her sudden handicap. Within a few
days of the onset of her paralysis, Babe stopped eating and grew
so desperate to stand up that she began to injure herself.
Babe was always a spirited and strong-willed girl. She was wholly unwilling
and unprepared to accept her life as a paraplegic. Although we did
not want to lose Babe, the decision was made to humanely euthanize
her. She died peacefully, surrounded by her caregivers and dear
friends in the pig barn.
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