Pig farmer hits slop jackpot in Las Vegas

Casino leftovers make a fine swine stew

NORTH LAS VEGAS, Nev. - With a satisfied grin, farmer Bob Combs watches the big truck slowly dump its greasy load, a Niagara Falls of yesterday’s kitchen leftovers that sends off a sickening spray as it splashes into a metal bin.

The greenish-brown concoction - with hot dogs, corn, bright-orange carrots and bits of lobster bubbling to its surface - is ready to start a new culinary chapter. Just 24 hours earlier, these food scraps, albeit in decidedly more appetizing form, were served up to customers at lavish all-you-can eat buffets on and off the Strip.

Now a new, less finicky clientele awaits: 2,500 pigs on Combs’ hog farm, a ramshackle spread of pens just 10 miles from the resort city’s gleaming hotel restaurants. A nose-insulting stench permeates the air.

“What smell?” the farmer asks with a wry smile. “Ahhhh, that’s good. It don’t bother me. To me, it’s like walking past a bakery.”

For hours each day, Combs oversees a process in which the noxious mulch is steamed, cleaned and culled for such impurities as plastic bags, champagne bottles and, once, a loaded.38-caliber pistol.

After that, it’s time to ring the hog farm’s dinner bell.

PORCINE VISIONARY

For half a century, long before the nation’s “green” frenzy, the 72-year-old Combs has recycled not only food but also cardboard, plastic, scrap iron, outdated milk - you name it. He’s one of southern Nevada’s most visionary yet controversial entrepreneurs and, over time, has serviced nearly every casino on the Strip.

Each night, Combs’ three trucks - with their image of a cartoon pig in bib overalls - collect the day’s buffet leavings of 12 client casinos. By morning, the slop has been whisked back to his 160-acre RC Farms, where it goes through a sorting and sanitizing process that Combs devised himself, including heating tanks to meet health codes and a conveyor system to make his job easier.

Six months later, Combs sells the pigs to middlemen, part of a process that eventually lands many back on the casino buffets. It’s a cycle of life and luxury dining - 1,000 tons of food scraps each month - that pleases the fifth-generation hog farmer. Combs calls the casinos his cornfields.

The casino buffet business in recent years has morphed from 99-cent fare to spreads such as the “Bacchanal Buffet” at Caesars Palace, where nine kitchens serve up to 500 dishes, including prime rib, king crab, dim sum, roasted South Carolina shrimp, chocolate souffle, creme brulee, velvet pancakes and gelato. In the end, the leavings still go to Combs and a few recycling competitors.

RC Farms resembles the realm of some wacky artist whose passion is pigs. Porcine images prevail, with hog statues in the front yard and on the hood of a 1930s farm truck.

Inside the house are pig clocks, glasses and pictures. The e-mail name for Combs’ wife, Janet, is “misspiggycombs.” Chickens - including a finicky rooster named Henry - rule the yard alongside rabbits, a peacock and piglets escaped from their pens.

Combs speaks with a slight slur, the vestiges of a car crash 20 years ago. He keeps his sense of humor. Dressed in a blue flannel shirt, jeans and boots left behind by a visitor revolted by their smell, he calls a shovel his “pig attitude adjuster.”

Riding in his golf cart, he ended a spiel about the bulk of food he handles by saying, “That’s the extent of my math - I’ve got a headache now.”

He likes feeding time: “Anytime I walk by those pens and hear ’em eating - that snorting, squeally sound - that’s as pretty to my ears as a babbling brook. I love to hear them hogs slop it up.”

TROUBLE IN PIG PARADISE

Not everyone feels that way. During the recent building boom in North Las Vegas, a suburb of its mammoth namesake, developers surrounded Combs’ farm with rows of suburban housing so close he can see them from the pens. Residents complain about the odor, which after a spring rain can be so pungent that two nearby schools have the same nickname: “Pigsty High.”

Combs’ relationship with the county is tense. Inspectors say the pig farmer has banned them from his premises and protests new recycling licensing codes. “He’s contentious, often irascible,” said Dennis Campbell, environmental health manager for the Southern Nevada Health District. “We’ve been trying to work with him for years.”

The farmer denies keeping officials off his land. Recently, he welcomed two animal-control officers who showed up unannounced to ask about uncaged animals in the yard. Although he says he’s stayed out of court, Combs acknowledges that responding to odor complaints is often a pain.

Combs has his defenders, such as casino owner Angelo Stamis, who has done business with him for five decades. “Back in the 1960s, nobody was thinking about recycling - just Bob Combs,” said the co-owner of Jerry’s Nugget casino in North Las Vegas. “And guess what - now his philosophy is wildly popular.”

Clark County Commissioner Tom Collins, another Combs supporter, says overzealous officials will not stop harassing the pig farmer until he agrees to sell his land.

“You’ve got a bunch of city slickers who think milk comes from a carton and hamburgers from McDonald’s,” Collins said.

“They don’t understand the good he’s doing out there. That farm was green long before the nation was green.”

Combs isn’t going anywhere. He says he once turned down a $70 million buyout offer: “There’s a hungry world out there, and I’m gonna feed it. I’m gonna go down with this ship.”

FATHER SAW GOLD

Combs’ recycling career began in 1963. On a family trip to Las Vegas, his father stumbled across a large galvanized can where workers tossed food scraps outside the Thunderbird Hotel. To the elder Combs, it was a pot of gold.

At the family’s San Diego-area pig farm, the Combses paid restaurants for surplus food. But in Las Vegas the leftovers were free to anyone who could haul them away.

“This stuff had value, and he knew it,” Combs recalls. “But here it was waste, a nuisance.”

Out at the pig corral, Combs gazes over the rows of pens and brags about his pigs like a proud father. What he says about pigs might be said of himself: “They’re intelligent and determined. People get mad at them because they’re stubborn, but they’re conservationists.”

He knows all of his hogs must eventually go to market. “I don’t dwell on the slaughter,” he says. “We’re all gonna die. These pigs lead short and sweet lives. And they go to a good cause: feeding people.”

Front Section, Pages 3 on 04/28/2013

Upcoming Events