A rare steer that escaped its stall at the Common Ground Country Fair in Unity last week was found by its owner Wednesday night.
Jason Stutheit, who owns Pond Hill Farms in Brooks, said he found the Wagyu steer in a field in near the fairgrounds while searching with his son.
“He was with another herd grazing,” Stutheit said.
The steer, a Japanese breed of beef cattle known for its marbled meat, first got away from Stutheit and his daughter when they were dropping him off at the fair.
“He jumped out of the stall,” Stutheit said. Steers are different than dairy cows and will jump and climb, he said. “They’re just more agile than a dairy cow. They don’t like to be penned.”
The steer, called “70,” even tried to climb over a 5-foot-high panel wall while Stutheit loaded him into a trailer Wednesday night.
The 13-month-old steer managed to elude capture for days, traveling over a wooded area of a few square miles near the fair. During the day, he would stand in the shade to keep cool from the heat.
“Imagine trying to find a needle in the haystack,” Stutheit said. “A black cow at night, which is when they’re moving.”
Stutheit alerted law enforcement agencies, he said, but the steer wasn’t dangerous to the public, “just loose.”
To his knowledge, the two Wagyu steers he owns are the only ones in Maine. They’ll be butchered when they’re about 3 and have grown to 1,800 pounds or so.
“We’re trying to establish a market for them in Maine,” said Stutheit, who runs a grass-fed beef farm that also sells Angus beef. The steer, whose meat goes for about $100 per pound, cost Stutheit roughly $4,000.
Despite the hassle 70 caused, Stutheit said he and his family enjoyed bringing their two Wagyu steers to the fair for the first time and they hope to do it again next year.
“Hopefully we’ll do it again without an escapee stunt,” he said.
Madeline St. Amour — 861-9239
mstamour@centralmaine.com
Twitter: @madelinestamour
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