The world must need moose turds right now.
Since a video of Mary Winchenbach peddling her moose-turd art at the Common Ground Fair went viral several weeks ago, Winchenbach and her homespun wares have been featured on television and radio across the country and as far away as Ireland.
The video of Winchenbach has been viewed millions of times since it was posted Sept. 21 on Facebook. And now she is struggling to keep up with more than 2,000 orders for the moose-turd art through her business, Tirdy Works.
Just days after the fair, Winchenbach took a two-week leave of absence from her job at a seaweed plant to keep up with orders. She hired a lawyer to help navigate her growing business, and hired her sister-in-law, Rachel Morse, to manage the website and interviews.
Then, Winchenbach quit her job at Ocean Organics to devote herself to the turds full time.
“An opportunity like this comes along once in a lifetime,” said Winchenbach, 57. “I’ve worked my whole life. If I fail at this, I’ll find work. I just have to give this a shot.”
Art made from moose droppings is not unique. It is sold in gift stores in Alaska, the only state with a larger moose population than Maine’s.
Winchenbach first hawked her moose-turd art back in 2005. She started making it because she loves a good laugh — and providing one.
“I had way too much time on my hands and one day when I was in the woods, I found a pile of turds and jokingly thought, ‘How funny would it be to put eyeballs on it and call it a (expletive) head?’ So I did,” she said.
When Winchenbach met her partner, Deb Nicholls, they started making moose-turd art together until they adopted their three children and had little time for the turds.
Then, this year with their children older, they made a bit of turd art inventory. On a whim they rented a booth at the Unity fair.
“We didn’t think we’d make enough to pay for the booth,” Winchenbach said. “All of a sudden we show up nine years later and out of the blue people are filming me.”
Moose droppings — which look remarkably like stale malted milk balls — can be used as fertilizer, just like cow or horse manure, because moose are vegetarians. In addition, Winchenbach and Nicholls dehydrate the turds and coat them twice with polyurethane, so the turds are safe to handle and clean enough to hang on your walls, your Christmas tree, even your earlobes.
“Deb has started making some pretty moose-turd earrings,” Winchenbach said.
She collects the turds on her and Nicholls’ 2 acres, and also where they find them near a local bog. Winchenbach doesn’t find handling the turds to be a dirty job. She said they’re all fiber and as organic as seaweed.
Since the Common Ground Fair, Winchenbach and Nicholls have been working 12-hour days making moose-turd products to ship to customers as far away as Russia, Greece and Denmark. The most popular item is their “poo-poo clock” (which has turds placed between the numbers to indicate “one-turdy, two-turdy” and so on).
Winchenbach wouldn’t say how much revenue they’ve brought in since the video went viral. But she said hundreds of orders sent to the Tirdy Works Facebook page and Etsy page are on back order. Tirdy Works sold out of the 50 logo T-shirts in four hours.
“Just on Etsy right now there is 729 orders, on Facebook there are more than 700, on my email there is over 300 and then there is Mary’s email, where there is more than 400,” Morse said. “It’s crazy, but we are shipping (expletive) everywhere.”
Tirdy Works gifts cost from $6 for a Moose Turd Keychain or $7 for the Santa Turd ornament to $45 for the poo-poo clocks.
And the Tirdy Works team has designed new products, such as a pottery bowl full of turds they call a “crock of (expletive)” and doll house-size, birch-bark chairs with a seated turd that they call “stool sample.”
“We have 10 new products that are going to be coming out,” Winchenbach said. “We are going to make a character called Forrest Gump, except we’re gonna do Forrest Dump.”
Winchenbach’s favorite is her Santa Turd, dressed in a Santa Claus hat, that is made with googly eyes.
“When you put them eyeballs on them turds, they get their own little personalities, God bless them,” Winchenbach said as she worked in her kitchen. “I mean really, God bless them.”
She’s also fond of the angel turd with the halo called: “Holy crap.”
David Wilson of St. Louis was one of hundreds of customers who posted on the Tirdy Works Facebook page promising to buy some Tirdy Works gifts for his family at Christmas. He said he wanted to order the poo-poo clock and the picture frame, which says: “Put photo of your favorite (expletive) head here.”
“I think it would be a funny gift,” Wilson said. “Especially for my rural family. They would get a kick out of it. I definitely want to buy some soon, before she raises her prices.”
On the Tirdy Works Facebook page, hundreds of others from across the country thanked Winchenbach for the laughs, the smiles and, best of all, the silly distraction.
Carol Richard of Clinton, Tennessee, the woman who posted the video that started it all, said Winchenbach’s presentation at the Common Ground Fair was an uncommon stand-up routine. Within days, the video had 1 million views.
“It kind of blew up,” said Richard, a Maine native.
And yet Richard thinks what has made Winchenbach a worldwide phenomenon has little to do with the turds.
“It’s her, it’s her sense of humor,” Richard said. “She’s down to earth. And people need to laugh with everything going on now.”
Deirdre Fleming can be contacted at 791-6452 or at: dfleming@pressherald.com Twitter: FlemingPph
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