Fla. horses starve as owners ‘chase the dream’

Authorities returned for the second time to a one-acre Miami Gardens lot where horses go hungry.

Authorities returned for the second time to a one-acre Miami Gardens lot where horses go hungry. A Thoroughbred and three other equines were seized from squalor.

Left once again to pick up the wreckage of another wannabe horse owner “chasing the dream” —his animals wasting away —Laurie Waggoner of the South Florida SPCA returned last month to the same scene where a year earlier, three Thoroughbreds had starved, nearly to death.

Working in tandem with the Miami Gardens Police last month, Waggoner seized four horses, including a foal, and most notably, 5-year-old mare Enchanting Tide, who last raced at Gulfstream Park before falling into the wrong hands. They all showed the heartlessly familiar signs of neglect, she says.

“You could look at the horses and know that they didn’t eat everyday,” Waggoner says, noting that the owner, who was arrested at the scene and charged with animal cruelty, did have some food and water on the premises—but not nearly enough. “The owner recently came here from Cuba and was ignorant about how to take of horses; and he just wanted to live the dream.”

Enchanting Tide
Sire: Untuttable
Dam: Marhaba, by Turkoman
Foal date: March 15, 2010
The suspect, whose identity was not available to Off Track Thoroughbreds.com by the time this story was published, reported to Waggoner he had owned Enchanting Tide for only a matter of days, she says. And he produced her registration papers at the time the animal was seized, Waggoner adds, noting the Thoroughbred was in comparatively good shape, with a Henneke Body Score of 3. The suspect’s other horses did not fare so well, she says.

“An appendix-type mare and her 8-month-old foal were living in the same stall, and the foal had dreadlocks” due to inattention and worse. Her mother and a gray horse were also in various states of starvation.

Enchanting Tide, who last raced at Gulfstream Park, was reportedly at the shanty for only four days. Her condition is far better than that of her herdmates.

Enchanting Tide, who last raced at Gulfstream Park, was reportedly at the shanty for only four days. Her condition is far better than that of her herdmates.

Sadder than the story of Enchanting Tide and the three other rescues, is the seemingly endless cycle of indifference, disregard and animal cruelty occurring in the one-acre facility of shanty stalls situated in Opa-locka, Waggoner says.

On a property squeezed between other miniature farms on scant acreage, and across the street from an apartment complex, owners pay a minimal monthly fee for rough board in a low-slung shanty, she says.

This is a stall in Miami Gardens where a seized horse was confined. There is no turnout available at the one-acre facility, according to Laurie Waggoner of the South Florida SPCA.

This is a stall in Miami Gardens where a seized horse was confined. There is no turnout available at the one-acre facility, according to Laurie Waggoner of the South Florida SPCA.

Many stalls were thick with mud and waste, and the room clearance is so low horses can’t fully lift their heads. There is not enough room on the property for turnout, yet, she estimates there were 10 horses on the property by the time Miami Gardens Police responded to the scene after a young woman barraged them with pleading phone calls to investigate the matter.

It was the same scene Waggoner responded to last year to rescue OTTB Silver and Smoke, and others. Please see that story here: http://offtrackthoroughbreds.com/2014/08/05/locked-in-tbs-couldnt-lift-heads-in-stalls/

“The situation is overwhelming,” Waggoner says. “It’s the same location, different owner. Last year we had a 77-year-old man who had a dream to make it big at the racetrack. But he never wins. He just had the dream.”

Sadly, Waggoner suspects the sad cycle will continue, as more owners move their horses into the muck and filth of the sad little stable in Florida.

“There is no solution,” she says. “If I don’t do it, the animals wouldn’t be picked up. It would be like all the other places out there, where the animal is left until he dies.”

Author’s note: The Comments function will be restored very soon. In the meantime, if you wish to comment on this story, please log in via your cell phone and make your comment from there. Thank you for your patience, and for reading this blog.

4 responses to “Fla. horses starve as owners ‘chase the dream’”

  1. Gina Powell

    What everybody needs to realize is that the culprit is the horse racing industry and it should be banned. The industry creates a mess for everybody else to clean up. This is a multimillion dollar industry that gives little or nothing to OTTB Rescue Groups. Moreover, it’s a cesspool of corruption that puts forth a dream that 90% of people never achieve, but it’s the racehorses that pay with their lives. These horses are exploited for profit to fill races for bets. They are set up for the fall. 90% don’t make money and are quickly dumped when no longer profitable. They are running for their lives. Many end up starving in farms or die at the slaughterhouse. Don’t be fooled by pro-racing people who spew the party line. This is a horrific business that promotes itself for one race, The Derby, that lasts for 2 minutes. People and horses lives are destroyed by this 2.minute deception that everybody has access to. It’s the same Trainers winning year in year out and that’s not coincidence or luck. Racehorses are dying every day on racetracks all over North America, and it’s horrific.

  2. Nanci Macias (Horses For Harmony)

    Perhaps they should rezone that property to prevent future incidents. Those stalls are hideous, I just can’t imagine. Enchanting Tide is fortunate they found her sooner than later. She is a beautiful little filly as is the grey. Thank you Susan for bringing their plight to light.

  3. Rebecca Honzik

    what are you doing with Enchanting Tide? Is she up for adoption?

    Thank you

Leave a Reply to Nanci Macias (Horses For Harmony) Cancel reply