Racing pigs, a circus and lots of food as the Montgomery County Fair fun begins

Credit: DaytonDailyNews

The Montgomery County Fair opened Sunday with a full day of fun scheduled, including the first of the week’s crowd-pleasing pig races.

The races are put on by South Carolina-based All American Pig Races and will be a feature of each day of the fair, although Sunday’s afternoon races were postponed due to a problem with the sound system that plays music while the pigs race.

Owner Charlie Beam said training his domesticated six-month old pigs and pot-bellied pigs involves cookies.

The three pigs are among nine that a scheduled to run races at the Montgomery County Fair this year. Here the wait in their pan before the race. They are owned by South Carolina-based All American Pig Race. Lynn Hulsey/STAFF

Credit: Lynn Hulsey

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Credit: Lynn Hulsey

“They race for Oreo cookies. They love Oreo cookies,” Beam said. “We train them to eat Oreo cookies and we let them out the gate and they start getting the cookies.”

In training the pigs first get cookie samples along the way as they go around the track. Once they get the hang of it, the cookies are only at the end.

The races last a few seconds and Beam races three sets of three pigs and then a final race with all nine.

“We say the winners get the cookies, the losers get the crumbs,” he said.

Each pig has a colorful collar and Beam randomly selects kids from the audience to pick which pig they think will win. Kids who pick winners in the first three races get a free large cup of food for the petting zoo Beam also operates at the fair and the final race winner gets a pony ride.

Shelbie Smith (right) of Centerville helps her granddaughter, Brynn Redman, 4, of Columbus feed a miniature horse at the petting zoo at the Montgomery County Fair on Sunday, July 10, 2022. Lynn Hulsey/STAFF

Credit: Lynn Hulsey

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Credit: Lynn Hulsey

Four-year-old Brynn Redman was with her grandma, Shelbie Smith of Centerville, in the petting zoo feeding a white miniature horse. She was obviously delighted, but afterward said her favorite was petting the pot-bellied pig and her piglets.

The schedule for the first day of the 170th edition of the fair included a variety of animal showmanship competitions, the Cincinnati Circus, a performance by Gospel Explosion and truck/tractor pulls. And of course there were be the animal barns to visit, produce and pies to admire, rides and lots of fair food.

Judy Hill, 62, of Clayton said the funnel cakes are her favorite. For Robert Bunch, 62, of Troy, it is the corn dogs.

Jami Allen, 33, of Germantown said her favorite part of the fair are the livestock competitions.

“We show animals.” said Allen, 33, whose daughter Sienna Ferraro, 12, shows goats and chickens. “Good old fashioned fair fun. And it teaches the kids lots of responsibility.”

Among the scheduled events Monday are pig races and the circus, as well as an evening demolition derby and performance by the 70/75 Band.


HOW TO GO

What: Montgomery County Fair

When: 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday

Where: Montgomery County Fairgrounds, 645 Infirmary Road, Dayton

Details: The 170th installment of the Montgomery County Fair returns for a week of carnival food, rides, games, livestock programs, live performances and more.

Cost: $10, children younger than 6 admitted free with a paid adult. All day ride wristbands $25

More info: 937-224-1619 or montcofair.com

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