A T’bred danced away from death; twinkle toes

Got the Urge was sent to the Camelot Auction as a 3 year old. And then his life changed.

Got the Urge was sent to the Camelot Auction as a 3 year old. And then his life changed.

A ragged racehorse, who narrowly escaped the slaughterhouse with the help of a kind stranger, has blossomed into a fancy stepping dressage prospect loved beyond measure.

Got the Urge, a 3-year-old Thoroughbred gelding who wound up at the Camelot Auction in 2013, made it out on Thanksgiving Day after Rhiannon Toman awoke from nightmares about the vulnerable animal and quickly decided to save him.

And in no time, the bleak animal has gone from an 800 pound, ewe-necked horse to a beautiful mover admired by many in just a few short years.

Affectionately known as Surge, his rags-to-riches story turned on a dime. Toman happened to see the very unremarkable-looking animal advertised as a Camelot Auction horse in a picture on Facebook. The thin bay stood meekly, not eating, in front of a manger full of hay. Guessing that few would be interested in a horse like that, especially as the press of holiday was upon everyone, Toman decided to call the auction house.

Got the Urge
Barn name: Surge
Sire: Purge
Dam: Raise a Roar
Foal date: April 5, 2010
“I didn’t think anybody would answer because it was Thanksgiving morning. But I wound up getting ahold of somebody, so I said I was interested in Hip Number 344. And the guy told me he was gone. Then he said, ‘Wait, wait, what number was that? Oh, he’s still here. Do you want him?’ And the next thing I knew, I was handing over my credit card information to an auction I didn’t know, to buy a horse I’d only seen in a picture.”

The Virginia equestrian, who suffered the sad loss of her horse Chili to intestinal cancer in 2010, the year Surge born, shocked everyone with her spontaneity, even herself.

“Stunned is how I’d describe my coach’s reaction,” she says. “She probably wanted to tell me this wasn’t the smartest move in the world, and some people in my barn did say just that when this little 15.3 hand Thoroughbred, who was probably 800 pounds, walked into the barn.”

Surge has a toe-flick and a natural frame that make him a natural for dressage.

Surge has a toe-flick and a natural frame that make him a natural for dressage.

And yet, the ragamuffin soon blossomed into a horse so handsome that the same coach, stunned then, is now bowled over by the animal’s beauty, Toman says.

“My coach is head-over-heels for him now,” she says. “He has a very big, Warmblood movement, with a toe-flicking trot, and sometimes she’ll pull me aside and say, ‘Will you look at him? He’s such a nice horse!’ ”And yet, the ragamuffin soon blossomed into a horse so handsome that the same coach, stunned then, is now bowled over by the animal’s beauty, Toman says.

First impressions can be so wrong, she adds.

“The picture of him standing in the feedlot was certainly far from flattering, and it certainly didn’t make a casual observer look twice,” Toman says. “He was underweight and unkempt, a far cry from the horse he has become today— which is a big, bold, and expressive horse with a wonderfully goofy, kind personality.”

This picture, showing Got the Urge at the Camelot Auction, was what prompted Rhiannon Toman to leap out of bed on Thanksgiving morning and buy him.

This picture, showing Got the Urge at the Camelot Auction, was what prompted Rhiannon Toman to leap out of bed on Thanksgiving morning and buy him.

The trio has worked for two years to build upon the young gelding’s surprising aptitude for dressage movement. Surge had a few things running in his favor: His feet had been well kept, as had his teeth. So building up his body weight proved to be fairly easy. And he possessed a natural balance that allowed him to move easily into a frame.

It wasn’t long before his short, flat trot grew to an expressive gait punctuated by a hyperextension and toe-flip so desired in a dressage horse.The trio has worked for two years to build upon the young gelding’s surprising aptitude for dressage movement. Surge had a few things running in his favor: His feet had been well kept, as had his teeth. So building up his body weight proved to be fairly easy. And he possessed a natural balance that allowed him to move easily into a frame.

And though it’s early days in the show ring, Surge has already placed a few times. He took 5th at the Meadows Event Park in Doswell, Va., against 17 competitors last year, and is smoothly learning the dressage ropes, just like the big boys.

“He has a very similar movement to the big, expressive trot of a Warmblood,” she says. “For this reason I call him twinkle toes!” — Originally published on March 20, 2015

5 responses to “A T’bred danced away from death; twinkle toes”

  1. valerie

    Beautiful Horse and wonderful people to save him, here in South Australia I used to go to a Horse sales at Gepps x, S.A to save horses lives, I bought quite a number of TB’s there, some crippled with the scapula out and swinging, I can put joints back in and did so with this scared TB Mare. And 1 week later she was completely sound.Only I could get near her or catch her, she mistrusted everybody else. I kept her until her death, I never rode her but just fed her well, loved her, and she had her life. It is a beautiful feeling taking any animal out of an abattoirs and getting them well again.

  2. Marilyn and Robin Hannah

    I love to see others who have the foresight to look past the long coat and boney frame to see the potential of these horses. Thank you for starting off my day on the right foot!

  3. Gail Smith

    Sending you all congratulations – and very best wishes for your future with him x

  4. PonyPal

    I am so glad that this story ended well for sweet Surge, but just how the h*** does a 3-year old horse end up at a slaughter auction? How do we stop that from happening in the first place?

  5. Raegan Rothchilde

    AWESOME! I am so glad you listened to your intuition. He is very lucky to have you, and vice versa.

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