ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) - For her 10th birthday, Jeanna Smith was surprised with a special gift.
Her party at the Milwaukee County Zoo would have been plenty. But then the zoo director - a friend of Smith’s father - handed her a young tortoise. It was Smith’s to keep.
The year was 1962.
Today, Smith is 65.
She still has her pet.
“George is probably my oldest friend,” Jeanna Smith said of the gopher tortoise she brought home 56 years ago. “He’s just really been a wonderful pet.”
From day one, Smith had a soft spot for the creature beneath the hard shell.
“He’s always gotten strawberries and kiwi for Christmas morning,” Jeanna Smith told KARE-TV . “He’d ride in my bike basket when I was a little girl.”
She grew up in suburban Milwaukee, taking summer vacations with her family in Wisconsin’s Door County.
“George always came with us and enjoyed walking down the beach on Lake Michigan,” she said. “He traveled everywhere we went.”
One year for Halloween Smith dressed herself and George as bees, greeting trick-or-treaters in their matching costumes.
When Smith graduated from high school, there was never a question.
“I went off to college and George came with me,” she said. “And George lived in my dorm room.”
When Kirby Smith met his future wife at University of Wisconsin - River Falls, he quickly realized that Jeanna and George came as a package deal.
“He doesn’t sit on your lap and can’t take him on walk, but he’s a great pet,” Kirby Smith said.
The Smiths have also owned a series of Labradors. Their pictures grace the refrigerator of the Smiths’ St. Paul home.
“He’s gone through five dogs,” Kirby Smith said smiling. He said the dogs all did their share of barking at George, but, “he got the last laugh by outlasting them.”
That is not to say there haven’t been close calls.
George has escaped his backyard three times, the most recent in 1988 when he burrowed under a fence.
The neighborhood kids came to help with the search. A TV news crew showed up about the time George was discovered hiding beneath some foliage in a neighbor’s yard.
He was quickly whisked back to his home.
Thirty years since his last disappearance, George seems content to dine on lettuce and strawberries in the Smiths’ kitchen.
Jeanna Smith, who fixed the meal, stands nearby.
“I would say George is thriving,” she said.
In truth, Jeanna Smith’s tortoise has lived his life out of his element. Tortoises like George are only found naturally in warm climates.
They are now protected in the states where they live, making ownership of gopher tortoises difficult. Things have changed a lot since Jeanna Smith was gifted George.
In nature, gopher tortoises can live from 40 to 60 years, but in captivity their lifespan has been known to stretch past 100 years.
Which means George, who was given to Jeanna Smith during the Kennedy administration, might be alive for many more years.
Jeanna Smith has it covered.
“I have one daughter and she has three children,” she said. “When I go, then George will go and live with them.”
Jeanna Smith paused, then added, “It’s in the will.”
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Information from: KARE-TV, http://www.kare11.com
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