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PAGE B4 • STAR TRIBUNE * <br />PAUL from E <br />METRO/STATEt <br />MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 3.2001 <br />Pregnant pony was start of <br />the animal-raising business <br />She repeated the stories a <br />*couple times. After she left, <br />the nurse told me they hadn't <br />heard the woman speak in the <br />past five years." <br />A vaned brood <br />At their home base in <br />White Bear Township, the <br />Walton feed and shelter more <br />than 150 animals, most of <br />them of a huggable size. <br />They're running out of room, <br />though, and are building a <br />new place in Lino Lakes to <br />house their varied menagerie. <br />When they take their pet- <br />ting zoo on the road, the Wal- <br />ton usually set up small en- <br />closures in parlcing lots or on <br />. Chicks and ducks and <br />start to scurry when the <br />r —s open at public events <br />private parties. Rabbits, <br />pigs, calves, llamas, turkeys, <br />goats and some riding ponies <br />also roam around the pens. <br />They also keep some small <br />Norwegian Fjord horses at the <br />barn, which they use for fall <br />wagon rides. There are no <br />wild or exotic animals. • <br />Usually lounging along the <br />fence is Buddy, one of the <br />family's three Great Pyrenees <br />dogs who help protect the an- <br />imals back on the farm. <br />• "We were losing 40 to 50 <br />birds a summer — chickens, <br />ducks, peacocks — to fox and. <br />raccoons that would sneak in <br />at night. So we got the Great <br />Pyrenees, which are livestock <br />guard dogs," Walton said. <br />Losses now are way dawn, <br />but occasionally an . owl <br />swoops down and carries off a <br />small bird, to the great frus- <br />tration of the dogs, which can <br />only bark helplessly at the es- <br />. <br />use e predator. <br />rare rare o attacks happen <br />b at the farms, never during <br />Ling zoo performance. <br />' Rose Furst, a <br />volunteer at <br />Ebenezer Hall, <br />a health -care <br />facility ln Min- <br />neapolis, . • <br />made•a face. <br />Friday at a lla- <br />ma named <br />"Paint the <br />Town,” <br />Starltibune <br />photo by bey <br />Md°elster <br />A pregnant pony <br />Them business is called An- <br />imals of Walton's Hollow and. <br />it's grown . rapidly in recent <br />years. <br />Jean and Bill both grew up <br />on farms; his family lived in <br />• North Dakota, she came from <br />Iowa. They met in Des Moines <br />while Bill was in school . Soon <br />after they were married, he <br />joined the Army and served in <br />Vietnam. In. 1971, Bill became <br />a St Paul police officer. He <br />retired six years ago. <br />They got into the animal- <br />raising business 22 years ago. <br />They wanted to move from <br />Shoreview to the acreage in <br />White ' Bear, but their two <br />sons, then 6 and 8, weren't <br />excited at the prospect of <br />moving away from their <br />friends. "So we bribed them <br />with a pony," Walton said. <br />Turned out that Ginger, the <br />pony, was pregnant. And so it <br />began. <br />" n. <br />"Once we had a barn, we <br />decided we might as well get <br />more animals," he said. <br />The boys, Jason and Justin, <br />now think their parents are <br />nuts for spending so much <br />time and energy on the pet - <br />ting zoo. They ask: `Are you <br />making 25 cents an hour <br />yeti' " Jean Walton said. <br />i,n „a WPTP. aratAftll <br />• <br />Business prospers. <br />Since Bill's retirement, the <br />couple has taken on more and <br />more engagements; many <br />days, Jean will take one trailer <br />of animals to a day care while <br />Bill takes another trailer to a <br />senior center. <br />For the past year, they've <br />been assisted by the four Bev , <br />erly sisters: Congetta, 17; Ali-: • <br />sha, 15; Gretchen, 10 and Las- <br />sie, 7. Their parents; Garcia <br />and Jackie, had hired the Wal- <br />ton to appear at the girls' <br />birthday. parties for several <br />years and eventually all four <br />asked if they could help out, <br />first as volunteers but now as <br />paid assistants. <br />Jean Walton says she loves <br />sharing the animals with chil- <br />dren and adults. She always <br />points out the many kinds of <br />chickens and goats, making <br />the point that different breeds • <br />all get along in the pens. . <br />' Last week at Ebenezer Hall, <br />a Minneapolis home for sen- <br />iors, Jean held rabbits and <br />chickens fqr residents, while <br />Bill led a llama and a calf <br />through the rows • of wheel- <br />chairs. A week earlier, he had <br />taken a llama on an elevator <br />to the top of another senior <br />housing center, creating quite <br />a stir among those visiting at <br />Ruthie Hall, an • Ebenezer <br />resident, tried to feed grain to <br />one of the ducks, but an adult <br />Vietnamese potbellied pig <br />kept nosing.in. . <br />"I thought you were going <br />to bring a baby pig instead, <br />Jean said to ljill. <br />"Couldn't catch. any," Bill <br />said. . <br />Some people seem con- <br />cerned about whether the ani- <br />mals get good care,- but once <br />they see how clean they are <br />and healthy, we get a positive <br />reaction," Jean Walton said. <br />The. couple keeps all the <br />animals year - round, never eat <br />any of them and provide regu- <br />lar veterinary care. ' <br />One of the reasons we <br />*started the petting zoo was to • <br />help pay the costs of all the <br />ani•aiv we already had," Bill <br />Walton said. <br />And now it's become•a full - <br />time job for the couple. <br />• One of the Ebenezer resi- <br />dents asked Jean: "What else <br />do you dol" <br />"Lots of chores and, poop <br />pickup," she said. <br />— Around St. Paul runsMon- <br />daysand Fridays. foe mbail <br />is at 651 -29 &1553 or joek- <br />@startribune.com <br />