•Th e IF P• H al to n H ill s • Th ur sd ay , M ay 1 5, 2 01 4 20 GeorGetown's source for new and used sports equipment! S P O R T S E X C H A NG E 68 Main St. N. MOORE PARK PLAZA • 905-873-0176 Your one Stop SportS Store GOLF: - New aNd used sets, drivers, hybrids aNd putters - everything you need for all levels LACroSSe BASeBALL - head to toe... players and team sales SoCCer: -shoes, shins, balls, etc ruGBY&FootBALL -cleats HoCKeY pLAYerS AnD GoALIeS • Prompt Emergency Care • Complimentary Consultations • Implant Supported Partial & Complete Dentures • Dean's Award 2008 • House Calls OPTICAL In business over 24 years! Georgetown 905•873•3050 Bolton 905•857•5556 In Store Eye ExamsArranged www.familyoptical. ca 97 King St., Georgetown www.bareimage.ca905-873-6388 Celebrating 15 years in business! www.bareimage.ca Permanent Results!! with Laser Hair Removal • Safe • Affordable • Gentle • Certified technicians • Comfortable home environment Bare Image Electrolysis & Laser Inc. Since 1999 A Georgetown couple has raised close to $95,000 in less than two weeks for a farm sanctuary they hope to open for their 450-pound pet pig Esther and other animals. The money has come in to Steve Jen- kins, Derek Walter and Esther through the crowd-funding site Indiegogo from approximately 1,300 people across the world. The couple started the fundraiser after they found a $900,000 farm in Campbellville they feel would be a per- fect sanctuary for Esther, who was sup- posed to be a mini-pig, and other farm animals. Jenkins said they hope to be able to provide a home for other pigs that are abandoned after being sold to unsuspecting people as mini or micro pigs, and animals that escaped from their farm or on their way to slaughter. They're well on their way to reach- ing their $400,000 goal. They hope to close the deal on the farm by Novem- ber, and open the sanctuary by next spring. That's not all that's been happening for the couple and Esther since the me- dia shone a spotlight on them last year. Jenkins said they have a book deal with "one of the biggest publishers in the world" and are just waiting for an author to be selected. He said the non- fiction book would tell the story of how Esther impacted the couple's lives. "She's changed everything," said Jenkins. There's also a reality show about them in development by a California production company that is currently shopping it to networks. Jenkins said the pilot will be shot soon, focusing on their and Esther's lives in their suburban Georgetown home and when they'll make the move to the farm. "Derek and I are not farmers," he said. They have also launched the Esther Store online where they have sold well over 1,000 Esther t-shirts and have more than 135,000 followers on Es- ther's Facebook page. "It's created this whole kind of move- ment," he said. The couple will be speaking at The Humane Society of The United States national conference in Washington D.C. in June. It's overwhelming, it's unbelievable," Jenkins said. Check out their story and the fun- draising site at www.estherthewon- derpig.com/ or on Facebook at www. facebook.com/estherthewonderpig Esther may soon have a new home Steve Jenkins with his pet pig, Esther. File photo