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Showbird turkeys seeking Trump pardon must first strut stuff

Showbird turkeys seeking Trump pardon must first strut stuff
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FILE - In this Nov. 23, 2016 file photo, President Barack Obama with his nephews Aaron Robinson and Austin Robinson, and National Turkey Federation Chairman John Reicks, pardons the National Thanksgiving Turkey, Tot, during a ceremony in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington. A Minnesota turkey farmer and a group of 4-H kids are raising a flock of turkeys that will produce the two birds that will be make the trip to the White House for an official pardon from President Donald Trump. It’s the 70th anniversary of the pre-Thanksgiving tradition. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)

Showbird turkeys seeking Trump pardon must first strut stuff

MINNEAPOLIS — What makes a good presidential turkey? Showmanship. A readiness to strut his stuff and gobble on command, yet enough restraint to stay on a table for the big photo op.

So say a Minnesota turkey farmer and 4-H kids who raised the turkey that will go to the White House for an official pardon from President Donald Trump on Tuesday. It’s the 70th anniversary of the National Thanksgiving Turkey tradition. Here’s a little deeper look at the event and what goes into it:

White House archives show that Americans have sent presidents holiday turkeys at least since 1873 under President Ulysses S. Grant. But the National Thanksgiving Turkey dates from 1947, when the National Turkey Federation became the official supplier and presented a 47-pound gobbler to President Harry Truman. In those days the turkeys were destined for dinner.

Formal pardons began with President George H.W. Bush in 1989, though stories of spared turkeys date back to President Abraham Lincoln. President John F. Kennedy sent his 1963 turkey back to its farm. Sometime around the Nixon era the White House began sending them to petting zoos after the ceremonies, though without formal pardons.

The perk of taking presidential turkeys to Washington goes to the chairman of the National Turkey Federation . This year that’s Carl Wittenburg, from the Minnesota town of Alexandria.

Wittenburg recruited five Douglas County 4-H members to help. They’re the same teens he and his wife, Sharlene, mentored to a second-place finish in the statewide 4-H Science of Agriculture Challenge this summer with a project on turkey bedding. None of the girls had worked with turkeys before. Now they’re all going to the White House to help oversee the bird, though Wittenburg’s 19-year-old son, Wyatt, will lift it up onto the table.

The Wittenburgs grow more than 100,000 turkeys annually for Northern Pride Cooperative in Wyndmere, North Dakota, but they raised the presidential flock on their smaller hobby farm near Alexandria. The birds hatched in late June. The star and an understudy who would step in if there’s a last-minute problem will be around 47 and 37 pounds respectively by pardoning time.

The goal is getting the turkeys used to people. Teaching them to stay on the table and behave is the key, said Katie Kent, 18. The birds are hand-fed grub worms as bribes.

“We’re getting them used to being on that table and getting them to gobble and strut on command,” said Kodi Bundermann, 17.

Strutting for a turkey means fanning out his tail feathers and puffing out his body feathers. Toms do it to look good to the hens, Wittenburg said. Gobbling also is a male behaviour females click or cluck. It’s hard to get turkeys to strut on command, he said, but they’ll gobble nine times out of 10.

The 4-Hers also play them music. They seem to like country, said Christina Kuismi, 16.

“They love anything shiny, or even the ends of shoelaces, which are a little shiny,” Kuismi said. “They like to untie shoelaces. They’ve gotten really good at it.”

Another challenge for the ceremony is that turkeys are very easily distracted, she said.

“They’re just very easily entertained,” she said. “They just want to go everywhere and see everything and explore.”

The team selected the two best birds from a flock of about 20, They looked for showmanship and character with an absence of any stage fright, Wittenburg said. They wanted turkeys that would strut and gobble for the cameras and the president yet remain calm on the table, he said.

The birds got officially named Drumstick and Wishbone on Monday, and the White House opened a Twitter poll on which one Trump should pardon. They stayed at a hotel near the White House for the run-up to the big show. A flock-mate was pardoned by Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton on Friday.