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Category: Rescue Rants

Are “Throwaways” Built into the system?

2 Comments

September 22, 2011 at 4:35 pmCategory:general info | Rescue Rants

Apathy Hurts

What hurts the most maybe isn’t the greed. Nor the abuse. Nor the inhumane ends. What hurts the most may be the apathy. The not caring by those who purport to be enthusiasts. The unquestioning acceptance of the what is-ness of what is rather than the willingness to step in and make conscientious choices. And among these usually just minor adjustments.

Where Do “Unwanted” Horses Come From?

Horse racing. Finding the fastest horse is an irrelevant pursuit. ANY well-matched horse race is an interesting race. Therefore breeding thousands of “throw away” horses because they’re not THE fastest just doesn’t make sense.

Halter Horses. Finding the beefiest, stockiest most musculature on the squarest frame in the world of the quarter horse doesn’t make sense in this era of monster trucks. Breeding for disposition now there’s an idea.

Trotter. Does it make sense to continue looking for the speediest trotting or pacing horse?

Park Horses. Really? Because we need to look awesome in our fine duds on some random Sunday afternoon in the park with all the others promenading hither and thither? Or how about ANY gorgeously turned out horse is a worthy mount for the showy public display, hmmmm? The draft cross, the Premarin™ mare’s tossed aside foal, the horse who’s almost a pony and all the others.

Think of any breed of discipline from which you know a certain set of breeders derive generous income from breeding and creating skewed versions of equines and there you will find the “throw aways”, the “unwanteds”, the so-called “disposable” horses. Oh not from my point of view, nor yours either if you’re still reading this. You and I, we love all horses don’t we. We’re drawn to helping the less fortunate, right?

What’s The Fix?

How can we get buyers to stop creating the demand for the horses uncaring breeders create?

How do we inspire people to think further into the horse selections? How do we get them to embrace the concept of finding great horses for our needs today? Great buddy horses. Sturdy trail pals. Weekend warrior mounts? Not the high strung, imbalanced, nut-jobs some of the current unnatural selections are creating. And mind you, I love those horses too. Very much. But they’re very hard to place. Sometimes even impossible.

 Horses Live 30+ Years

Maybe the disconnect here is how people seem to conveniently overlook the fact that horses live to be thirty years and more. So while they may offer them employment for the first 5 or 6 of those years – what happens to them when they’re ‘spent’? Ask any equine rescuer what happens to them. That’s where we need to stake a claim in responsibility as horse lovers. We need to look beyond the gorgeous scenes of show horses and race horses in their jobs – and acknowledge that throughout the upper levels of these pursuits – those horses we see in the shows and at the races are thoroughly replaceable. Me, I know my 3 have another 25+ years on them and I am arranging my life and their training accordingly.

 

Free to Good Home Horses

7 Comments

August 30, 2011 at 3:01 amCategory:Rescue Rants

Mary Cahill's Rib

Mary Cahill's Rib

Free to good home

Her name is Mary Cahill’s Rib. Someone raced her 40 times. Then they sold her as brood mare. Now she’s 17 years old and her recent owners are done with her.

I guess the breeder doesn’t want her. Nor anyone else from her past. I’m not targeting these folks necessarily. After all, the racing world is filled with hundreds, even thousands of such people. And Mary is just one of thousands of thoroughbreds that when she stops being able to make money for anybody joins the ranks of the “Free to Good Home” horses.

Her last race was 11 years ago. From there she was turned into a broodmare and since that was over a decade ago she probably produced some foals. Maybe they sold maybe they didn’t. If I had an account at brisnet.com I’d look her up. I did find she had a daughter who one a race at a low level track in 2006.

Mary isn’t what those in the know would call a ‘classy thoroughbred’. She didn’t make anybody enough money to capture that particular upgrade. Of course that’s just their opinion. I bet I would consider her very classy indeed. Any friendly horse has class in my opinion.

Here’s what her offering says:

Free to a good home, a 17 year old thoroughbred mare, Mary Cahill’s Rib. She is a dark bay mare by horse of the year, Conquistador Cielo, out of Fireside Lullaby.  Mary was owned by Bill Melton.  She raced 40 times, then was used as a brood mare.  She is friendly, sound and beautiful. We are needing to reduce the number of horses that we own.   Call  xxx-xxx-xxxx.  She is at our farm near NameofFarm.

Let me interpret this for you.

Free to a good home – She ‘s not worth anything to us. Not sure what they consider a ‘good home’. Hopefully they’ll check it thoroughly. Depends on how desperate they are to unload Mary.

 a 17 year old thoroughbred mare – She raced for awhile so has had a saddle and a bridle on. She probably has experience with lots of trailers and handlers. But for the past 11 years since her last race – she’s probably only been handled minimally. Maybe she’s had her feet done. Maybe not. Maybe she’s had her teeth floated. Maybe not.

She is a dark bay mare - so many are. I can see she’s very pretty – and just look at her soft eye and beautiful face.

by horse of the year, Conquistador Cielo, out of Fireside Lullaby. Thats’ all rather beside the point any more for if any of this had any more value to anyone – she wouldn’t be free.

 Mary was owned by Bill Melton – Don’t really know who this is. Nor the farm, Silverleaf. Probably not a big outfit in any case.

She raced 40 times – on pretty mediocre tracks. She won 1, came in second 4 times and finished third 5 times. Here’s her official race record. Someone was trying to squeeze value out of her. She won $17,819 dollars. I’m guessing she had a hard time earning her keep.

then was used as a brood mare Based on her record and her breeding she probably should have been re-trained and urged to leave the world of the race horse. That would have been a kindness.

She is friendly, sound and beautiful – I’m sure she is friendly – look at her eye. And yes she’s a beauty. Whether or not she’s sound at this point likely means she’s not limping. After all she hasn’t done anything athletic (well besides carrying foals) and likely isn’t trained for any sort of riding other than racing which, I have some who will argue with me, really isn’t riding. Not safe controlled riding anyway.

We are needing to reduce the number of horses that we own. What they mean is she isn’t providing value and she costs money to take care of, even the minimal amount she’s at for maintenance now. She needs to go.

What’s the Hope for Mary?

Maybe someone who knew her will step and give her the forever home she deserves. Maybe someone will recognize her name. I look at her picture and I see a beautiful horse who has given every thing she was ever asked to give and still looks optimistic about human stewardship. But maybe someone else will notice how nice and plump she is and do some quick math and decide to run her through the system of ‘processing’ unwanted horses. What’s that? Slaughter. We currently truck over to Mexico and Canada thousands upon thousands of Marys every year to be butchered for their meat.

I Don’t Like What Happens to “Free to Good Home” Horses

Occasionally one hits the jackpot and lands right side up at a forever home farm. But mostly they don’t. Mostly these horses, ponies, mules and minis end up on a downward slide into the back of one of the meanest shipping trucks you ever saw.

Thats’ Why I Do What I Do

I’ve never made a penny from a horse. I never tried to. For me the horses I live with are my companions, my partners, my pets – not my potential income. So it’s not like I owe the horse world my services. But I think I owe horses to help make the world kinder for them. I live in Kentucky and here there are some of the single most worst practices in horsemanship in the land. Kentucky also has among the bottom four worst overall record in animal welfare. I have a lot of motivation. My goal is to help people come to learn better practices in ethical equine stewardship. I don’t define what that is – I let experts do that. SO what I do is provide an outlet for their work. Their programs. Their Missions. When I can I support these endeavors with a lighthearted touch – or a far reaching connection.

What’s Our Goal?

To create a world in which  ”Free to Good Home Horses” ads carries as much suspicion with them as a “Free to Good ome” auto ad might today.