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Jenny the donkey peers over a new fence after
being captured on Wednesday at the Joe Varricchio and Mary Gaeta farm in
Pittsfield. Horse trainer Karina Lewis lured the wayward animal into a
fence, ending a month-long effort to corral the critter.
PITTSFIELD -- In the end,
she went in quietly, led into captivity by a trusted friend.
After more than a month on
the loose and numerous vain capture attempts, Jenny the donkey simply
walked back into captivity Wednesday morning.
As she pranced around her
temporary corral, the donkey, whose stranglehold on freedom made
national headlines, already seemed at home.
"I'm thrilled that she's
safe," said Mary Gaeta, whose life had been turned upside down since the
donkey's Jan. 18 escape from Gaeta's Higgins Road farm. "I'm sure
everyone is going to be pleased, now she's been caught."
Jenny, who is actually
believed to be a hinny, the offspring of a male horse and female donkey,
was led into captivity, more than caught. Karina Lewis, an equine
behavior specialist, had spent more than a week earning Jenny's trust
and building a rapport.
"We spent a lot of cold
days out there," Lewis said. "I spent a lot of time just shivering on
the ground and respecting her."
Lewis spent Tuesday in the
woods behind Gaeta's farm, where Jenny ran whenever she felt threatened.
There was a major breakthrough when Jenny started following Lewis. Lewis
walked through the corral area with Jenny on her heels, an act that set
the stage for Wednesday's capture.
"So today, when it came
down to doing that, it was a natural process," Lewis said.
Jenny followed Lewis into
the three-sided corral, which is an amalgamation of pallets and wire
fencing reinforced by snow banks, and waited patiently as Lewis and her
partner, Kirk Stanley, erected the fourth side to complete the
enclosure.
"We let things be her idea
and we didn't force it," Lewis said.
The temporary corral will
be replaced by a sturdier pipe fence by the end of the weekend, Lewis
said.
"That will be a more
permanent structure (Jenny) can't jump or get hurt on," Lewis said.
She is hoping Jenny's
notoriety will lead people to donate money for a new fence to enclose
Gaeta's 18-acre farm. Lewis estimates the project will cost $10,000.
Anyone who wishes to
donate may send a check payable to Jenny's Fund to Bangor Savings Bank,
83 Somerset Plaza, Pittsfield, ME 049677. Any leftover money will be
given to a mule rescue organization.
Throughout her escape,
Jenny had continued to return to the farm for food, but would never
allow Gaeta or her partner, Joe Varricchio, to get closer than 10 feet
before fleeing into the woods. Attempts to tranquilize Jenny's food, and
even an injection fired from a dart gun, failed to take the animal down.
The experience left Jenny
no worse for wear, according to Lewis.
"She's in very good
health," Lewis said. "She's very cute and she's just as smart as they
come."
Lewis believes Jenny's
travels, which rarely went beyond Gaeta's farm and the surrounding woods
and fields, were motivated by a lost companion that was sold separately
from Jenny at an auction last fall.
The companion, which Lewis
believes is a twin sibling, is living at a New Hampshire farm after
being acquired by a rescue organization.
Lewis hopes to build
appropriate facilities that would allow the two animals to be reunited
at Gaeta's farm.
"That sure would be neat
if we could get her twin here," Stanley said. "It would be a gift to
her."
Lewis said she plans to
continue to work with Jenny, Gaeta and Varricchio to develop a trusting
relationship.
"We want her to get better
conditioned to humans and not be afraid," Lewis said.
Gaeta was served with a
subpoena on Tuesday charging her with animal trespassing; a civil
violation that was leveled after a neighbor filed a complaint, according
to Sgt. Tim Roussin of the Pittsfield Police Department.
Overall, though, Gaeta and
Varricchio said the experience has only fostered hope and friendships.
The couple had dozens if
not hundreds of calls from across the country from people offering help
and, in some cases, prayers.
The couple holds
particular affection for Lewis and Stanley.
"I'll
tell you, they are great people," Varricchio said. "They're a godsend
really. There's still a lot of nice people in the world. its gives you a
good feeling."
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