Giants steer fairgoers to amazing livestock
Jimmy Stroup
At 6-feet, 8-inches tall and tipping the scales at a massive 3,400
pounds, White Mountain the giant steer provides the biggest animal
thrills available this year at the fair.
Well, he and his equine partner Hercules, whose 2,850 pounds and 6
feet, 6 inches in height is nothing to scoff at.
At $1 for adults and 50 cents for kids and seniors, you can look
up at White Mountain and Hercules -- unless they’re lying down.
“He was very gentle,” said Rebecca Gibbons of Irvine who saw White
Mountain on Friday with her three kids and two of their cousins.
“He got real close to us. You could touch him with your knees
because his head was bent down, even though you’re not really
supposed to touch,” she whispered.
“It’s big,” was all her daughter Megan, 9, could bring herself to
say.
And with a strict diet of one bale of hay, 15 pounds of grain and
30 gallons of water per day, White Mountain isn’t likely to get any
smaller.
The steer is a large Italian breed known as Chianina, which was
primarily used for heavy labor. White Mountain is twice as big as
they usually come, according to the information sheet you get as you
enter his tent.
“You know how Shaquille O’Neal is, like, a really tall person?
It’s like that,” said Cassie Conway, 17, a Corona del Mar High School
senior, who’s been working with White Mountain and Hercules at the
fair all month.
Hercules is a Brabant, or a Belgian draft, and is a full foot
taller than his breed normally grows. The “giant horse” is also known
for his easy temperament, a trait Hercules has plenty of.
“Yes, he was giant,” said Amy Rand, 29, of Lake Forest. “And he
had a short tail ... and I asked the girl, and she said he used to be
a carriage horse, and that’s why they bobbed his tail.”
Neither White Mountain nor Hercules will be pulling anything but
their own weight anymore. They adhere to a yearly schedule of summer
fair touring and wintering in relaxation at their home in Bradenton,
Fla., on the 15-acre ranch of owner Tom Beimborn.
More than anything, the giant horse and the giant steer provide
gasps and gazes for the locals at the Orange County Fair who’ve never
seen anything like them before.
“I think he needs to go on a diet,” said 13-year-old Brittney
Duggan of Irvine about White Mountain.
Another way to look at it came from Jennifer Raner, 29, a camp
counselor at the Rainbow Rising program out of Irvine, who saw White
Mountain on Friday.
“That’s a lot of steak,” she said.
Hercules and White Mountain are on display in the livestock area
near the Yellow gate at the Orange County Fair until Sunday.
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