Kicked in the face, dues paid, a new day dawns

Rachel Hess was kicked in the face by Air Cruiser at Christmastime, and sustained major injuries. Now healed, she and the OTTB will prepare to conquer fears and other sport horses at the upcoming Retired Racehorse Project's Thoroughbred Makeover in Kentucky.

Rachel Hess was kicked in the face by Air Cruiser at Christmastime, and sustained major injuries. Now healed, she and the OTTB will prepare to conquer fears and other sport horses at the upcoming Retired Racehorse Project’s Thoroughbred Makeover in Kentucky.

“The sound was sickening,” says Hess, 25, of South Jersey.

As the flying hind hoof of a Thoroughbred struck hard and fast, making contact with her jaw, the sound it made was like the crack of a baseball bat when it crushes the ball.

But the intrepid equestrian, who’d come through adversity before, including a brain bleed sustained in a rotational fall on a different horse, vowed as she hit the dirt that she would keep on fighting. And she promised herself as the world got gray and fuzzy that one day she and the giant Thoroughbred Air Cruiser would ride to glory, if not even become champions.

Air Cruiser
Sire: Horse Greeley
Dam: Hitchin, by Dixie Union
Foal date: May 14, 2011
“The accident happened in December, and when I got out of the hospital, I remember telling my family that I couldn’t wait to ride him. They all thought I was crazy. But, I knew it was a freak thing, and he didn’t mean to hit me,” she says. “It was my mistake. I got too comfortable while handling him, and let myself get positioned near his hip.”

She explains that as she was leading him out to the arena, she asked him to pick up a jog. The new horse, who’d shipped to her on Dec. 20, soon became jittery in unfamiliar surroundings. As she struggled to bring him back under control, he started to buck; she tried to half-halt; and, she was quickly shuffled to his left hip.

Knocked immediately to the ground by a leg that struck with the snap of a boa constrictor, Hess reached up to feel her face, as blood poured into her hands. She would learn minutes later at the hospital that she’d sustained fractures to her cheekbones, her upper mandibles and her nose.

Air Cruiser recovered from a hip fracture, and Rachel Hess from a fractured face.

Air Cruiser recovered from a hip fracture, and Rachel Hess from a fractured face.

During the weeks that followed, Hess ate dinner through a straw, as her jaw remained wired shut. And she had a lot of time to think about where she’d gone wrong, and how she would face down her fears.

As her face and jaw healed, she remembered a much worse accident. In 2007, while schooling a young horse over a jump, the animal somersaulted and landed on top of her. Details to this day are sketchy as she sustained a lower brain bleed and amnesia.

“This accident was different. I remembered every detail, and played it over and over in my head like a movie,” Hess says, noting that she knew she needed to write a better ending for herself rather than risk losing her nerve.

So she sat down and drafted a letter of application to the Retired Racehorse Project’s famous Thoroughbred Makeover contest. She entered herself and the 17.3 hand gelding, whom she’d adopted from Parx Racing’s Turning for Home, and soon learned she’d been accepted to compete at about the time the wires were scheduled to be removed from her jaw.

In the past few months, Hess has bonded with Air Cruiser in preparation for a show career.

In the past few months, Hess has bonded with Air Cruiser in preparation for a show career.

Nervous but excited, Hess says her goal now is to school the big, beautiful Thoroughbred well enough to show off his massive floating trot in a ring filled with competitive OTTBs. And to show how willing, quiet and adaptable has become the Thoroughbred with the “big baroque head” and expressive kind eyes.

“He has become such a gentleman. A couple weeks ago we had torrential rains with high winds and I led him into the paddock. He never spooked. I was on edge because of what had happened, but he was a gem,” she says. And as she eagerly looks forward to riding through her fears and into the Kentucky Horse Park in October to compete her massive Thoroughbred with the uphill build of a Warmblood, she already feels like a champion.

“I’m nervous, but to me, the end reward of riding into that ring will be worth it,” she says. “I am very humbled as I start this process … this is my life, the life I chose.”

And the young rider, who has done her time in the hospital, and made her mistakes, will dust herself off and rise to the challenge, earning if not a championship, a badge of courage in the process.

7 responses to “Kicked in the face, dues paid, a new day dawns”

  1. JoAnn

    I meet Rachel about 2 months ago I had seen the video of her getting kicked never did I think she would recover from it
    I admire and respect Rachel and wish her all the luck that she so derseves I will be cheering for her I think she is a champion already

  2. Austen Samet

    I have a very similar story with my OTTB. I was kicked in the head by my big guy. Everyone was surprised that I wanted to go see him the minute I got out of the hospital. We struggled through lots of spooks, falls, and fights but I have to say he is now one of the best horses I have ever gotten to ride!! People comment now on how wonderful he is and how good of a team we make, if only they new him in his younger days lol!!

  3. lexi63

    lucky girl , lucky horse she still loves him. safety is a factor AT ALL TIMES around these animals, their size alone makes them dangerous under the best conditions . a great series of VIDEO’S to watch on you tube are Clinton Anderson ( he is a master horseman , , ground training – respect ALL THE TIME from your horse and you being careful ALL the time . so glad you decided to keep the horse, it was not his fault as you know . you must always have their respect , watch how they treat each other in the pasture , the pecking order is not to be messed with or the horse lower on the totem pole will learn a swift lesson. and when they are excited and in new surroundings is time to be extra careful that you have their complete attention. good luck going forward .

  4. missdeena

    God bless you and your horse Rachel! I know some people wander how we can go back with the horse after a traumatic injury. Accidents do happen and when we realize what might have caused it, it is only fair to give the horse a second chance. It looks like your love and your bond with your horse is even stronger. I wish you all of the best and I agree you are already a champion! The very, very best to you!!

  5. Cindy

    Glad she is healed and ready to go forward. My filly and Air Cruiser are related! My Dixie Spot is also from the Dixie Union line on the dam side, she’s 4 now and HUGE! Good luck to Rachel at RRP will be rooting for her.

  6. Martha.

    Rachel is so lucky. And twice now. I lost a friend from a blow to the head by a horse that she had become comfortable with. Every time I work with or am around ANY horse, even my own 20 yr old OTTB. I think of her. All she was doing was picking her horses hooves. I hope the rest of their journey together is not with spent with her in the hospital. But in the saddle.

  7. colmel

    In my mind, Rachel is already a champion! Both she and Air Cruiser are making comebacks and going for it. Accidents happen. Only the truly dedicated analyze, adjust, and persevere. Rachel has. I’ll be rooting for them to achieve each goal they set.

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