He owned up to 40 “pet” pigs that will now be moved to a Wellington sanctuary to protect them from poachers.
Up to 40 “pet” pigs are set to be moved from the Coromandel Peninsula to a sanctuary in Wellington after their long-time carer was charged with murder.
The future of the pigs had been in doubt after property owner Stuart Edmondson pleaded not guilty to murdering Kevin Mabbot and the attempted murder of another man on the 309 Rd last week.
Edmondson had become famous in the community for caring for the friendly pigs and piglets, with locals and tourists often visiting his property to snap photos of themselves petting the animals.
However, he had also long reported having trouble with people stealing and killing some of them.
Now animal welfare group Helping You Help Animals (HUHA) says it’s planning to rescue about 40 of the pigs and move them to its 157-acre Haywards Hill sanctuary in rural Wellington.
Edmondson’s three dogs will also be rescued in the Sunday operation.
“We will keep them safe and give each of them a bright future away from the people wanting to harm them,” the group said in a Facebook post.
Edmondson, 77, appeared briefly in the High Court in Hamilton earlier this week to enter not-guilty pleas to multiple charges.
To help feed the existing 30 pigs, HUHA currently receives about $64,000 in donated food a year consisting of food scraps from Pak’nSave and malt from Panhead brewery.
She hopes to be able to get more volunteers to come in and “scratch their bellies and tell them they’re lovely”.
“All need to know they’re loved and cared for,” Press-McKenzie said.
The aim will be to rehome all 70 pigs and Edmondson’s dogs but if suitable homes cannot be found they’ll be welcomed to live out the rest of their lives on the sanctuary.
In a video directed by Amy Taylor and James Muir and posted to YouTube in 2018, Edmondson talks about having had trouble with people hurting pigs he regarded as pets.
“They just walk up to people and they just shoot them with a crossbow and put them in all that pain, very slow deaths,” he said in the documentary.