Elephant Headpieces
Like any big stars, these elephants have to look their best when they perform. These decorative headpieces add some pizzazz and function as a grip for trainers and performers. Made from two-ply harness leather by Classic Leather Works of Altoona, Florida, the headpieces are adorned with a metal shield and small metal rivets, manufactured by Ringling Bros., that say "The Greatest Show on Earth." Leatherworker Don Engleking founded Classic Leather Works in 1997. The two-employee shop makes about 25 elephant headpieces for Ringling Bros. each year, along with holsters and accessories for Old West gun enthusiasts.
Concession Equipment
The Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Funundrum tour will stop at more than 40 U.S. cities this year. During each leg, crowds will eat about half a ton of popcorn, popped fresh in machines made by Gold Medal Products. The Cincinnati company also supplies the circus with cotton-candy and snow-cone machines. David C. Evans started Gold Medal in 1931, initially selling inks, pastes, and glues before switching to "fun foods." Evans's son, J.C., is chairman of the business, which is now run by president Dan Kroeger. It has more than 350 employees, and its customers include ice cream shops and movie theaters around the world.
Animal Feed
Weighing as much as 10,000 pounds each, these Asian elephants don't live on peanuts alone. Their diet consists of hay, vegetables, and roughage, along with grain-based feed provided by Smelt Feed in Tampa. Smelt also supplies feed and some hay for the circus horses, dogs, llamas, and zebras, sourcing it from farmers, brokers, and pet-food company Purina. Owner Alton Smelt runs the $2 million company, which his father, Jack, founded in 1981. It has seven employees and serves zoos and theme parks nationwide, including Busch Gardens in Tampa.
Trapeze Rigging
They may dangle 35 feet above the ground, but the circus's trapeze artists can take comfort knowing their equipment is safe. The wire ropes, shackles, and support rigging, supplied by Southeast Rigging of Jacksonville, Florida, are made of galvanized steel and load-tested to be certified secure. Co-owners Dan Giannattasio and Scott Elliott bought the 15-employee company in 2002 from a larger Baltimore-based wire supplier. The bulk of the company's roughly $7 million in sales comes from supplying wire rope and rigging for construction, marine, and roadwork projects.
Genelle Frenoy Shania Twain Gwen Stefani Sunny Mabrey KarolĂna Kurková
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