New Vocations off to a rocking new year

Singing in Spring (Jockey Club: Pleasant Spring) with his new owner Cortni Volkman, who acquired her lovely mare during the New Vocations sale this winter. Photo by Klaire Tardiff

Singing in Spring (Jockey Club: Pleasant Spring) with his new owner Cortni Volkman, who acquired her lovely mare during the New Vocations sale this winter. Photo by Klaire Tardiff

Capping off a successful December promotion that resulted in 51 ex-racehorses finding new homes, the New Vocations Racehorse Adoption Program announced a new partnership that will further enhance its abilities to place deserving horses into loving homes.

On Jan. 13, New Vocations Director Anna Ford announced that the Gallop On Riding Program in northeast Ohio has made 11 stalls available to New Vocations, and will collaborate with the re-homing organization to train ex-racehorses in field foxhunting and other disciplines, and help re-home them.

“With the new partnership, the Gallop On program will serve as a New Vocations facility … helping us better serve the horses in northern Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia,” says Ford, noting that the new facility is ideally situated near the Thistledown Racino and Beulah Park, and is just over an hour away from the Mountaineer Race Track.

In deciding to partner with New Vocations, Gallop On Director Heidi Van de Motter says it was a natural fit.

Noting that she has had great success with seven talented Thoroughbreds she previously adopted from New Vocations, Van de Motter says demand is high for talented foxhunters, and that Thoroughbreds are, hands down, the best.

“I have hunted a Thoroughbred for 42 years, I’ve never been on anything else,” she says. “The breed makes the best field hunter.”

Amanda Bonath rides New Vocations OTTB Captain Hawke, whom she adopted in 2007. Photo courtesy Heidi Van de Motter

Amanda Bonath rides New Vocations OTTB Captain Hawke, whom she adopted in 2007. Photo courtesy Heidi Van de Motter

And the proof is in her recent success training and adopting out four New Vocations OTTBs this past month!

Gallop On, which was founded in 2011, strives to provide equestrian and educational opportunities for underfunded young riders, while providing rehabilitation and retraining for noncompetitive Thoroughbred ex-racehorses.

The partnership comes at the conclusion of a very successful month at New Vocations.

Following its annual December promotion, which offers half off the adoption fee of a horse, the racehorse adoption program adopted out 51 ex-racehorses to new homes. This number broke the previous monthly adoption record of 41 horses, according to a press release.

And a young Kentucky student of Murray State University was among those fortunate to find a dream match at New Vocations.

Cortni Volkman adopted Pleasant Spring, a racemare she renamed Singing In Spring, after a Walt Whitman poem.

She met the mare in her stall, and knew almost instantly that the plain bay with a crooked star was her perfect match.

New Vocations horses will now enjoy foxhunt training from Gallop On in Ohio. Photo courtesy Heidi Van de Motter

New Vocations horses will now enjoy foxhunt training from Gallop On in Ohio. Photo courtesy Heidi Van de Motter

“As soon as I walked into her stall, she put her nose on me and started breathing on me,” Volkman says. “And I thought, ‘This is my horse!’ ”

After watching a rider put the mare through all three gaits, in both directions, and noting that Pleasant Spring easily picked up her right-lead canter, the deal was struck, she says.

“She’s one of those horses who is solidly built, but is so quiet, and such a fluid mover that you don’t hear her when she trots,” Volkman says, noting that she plans to train her as an Eventer.

Volkman’s satisfaction with her new mare, the happiness of other adopters and their horses, and the new partnership between New Vocations and Gallop On all add up to a promising new start to 2014.

Says Ford, “New Vocations has had the privilege of working with Heidi Van de Motter for several news now, and we are honored to be working with her program on a formal basis. The partnership is a natural fit, as Gallop On shares a similar mission and philosophy in working with retired racehorses.”

4 responses to “New Vocations off to a rocking new year”

  1. Deidra Darsa

    Great story. Interesting that the horse picking up the right lead was a selling point. When I started my OTTB back to work after letting him down, the right lead was the only lead he’d pickup without a bunch of work and drama. You just never know with these guys. Plus, there’s a myth that they only work on the left lead at the track. Watch a race and you’ll see the run on both leads.

  2. Dina Volkman

    Spring is an amazing horse and New Vocations is an amazing. The facility in Ohio was so great to work with. The horses are well taken care of. Thanks New Vocations in Marysville OH !

  3. Linda R. Moss

    LOVE it – these guys ROCK!!!

  4. David B Magee

    This is FANTASTIC !!! I’m Contributing TODAY. Skip that 2nd Latte` and re-direct
    5 bucks or more to this worthy organization !!! Save The Horses !!! Get Involved
    Today ~ I AM !!!!

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