Photo of the Week: Mystical gray beauty

Realbigwig and his owner/rider Shannon Smith did a fashion photo shoot three weeks ago. Photo by Michele Taras

Realbigwig and his owner/rider Shannon Smith did a fashion photo shoot three weeks ago. Photo by Michele Taras

One afternoon about three weeks ago, Shannon Smith slipped into a couture jacket and onto the back of her storybook-beautiful gray gelding.

Posing for photographer Michele Taras in an outfit by a local designer, the Ontario equestrian and her OTTB Realbigwig romped in the woods without a care in the world.

“Normally I wouldn’t ride without a helmet,” Smith says. “But nothing fazes him. He’s super smart and super brave. He’ll do anything you ask; he’s not a spooker and he’s super levelheaded.”

Real Big Wig
Barn: Russell
Sire: Ghostzapper
Dam: Pop Princess, by Alphabet Soup
Foal date: May 22, 2010
Smith adopted Realbigwig two years ago from Adena Springs Farm after putting out feelers. When she got a call from her friend Stacy Clark, who ran the retirement program for the farm, her gut reaction to Realbigwig guided her.

“I fell in love with him right away,” she says. “We took him out to the arena, and at the time he’d only had three rides on him, and I watched him work. He was super green, but he didn’t put a foot wrong. I remember thinking I’ve waited forever for this guy.”

After giving him about a year off due to winter weather, she started him in training in the spring. And she was so impressed with his talent that he’s entered in the October Thoroughbred Makeover Project in Kentucky.

“I love his versatility. He’s a quick study and he has paid me back in spades with his commitment,” she says. Even let his horse mom drape a long train over his hindquarters as they canter in the very picture of a young girl’s dream come true.

Filly finishes 49 lengths behind, wins in the end

Kat's Journey finished an astonishing 49 lengths behind the pack in her first race. Breeders Robin and Carolyn Hoffos will take her back, no questions asked.

Kat’s Journey finished an astonishing 49 lengths behind the pack in her first race. Breeders Robin and Carolyn Hoffos stepped up to take her back, no questions asked.

The phones began ringing and the emails started flying shortly after the 3-year-old chestnut finished an astonishing 49 lengths behind the rest of the pack this month at Canterbury Park, says Donna Keen, a racehorse owner who operates Texas-based Thoroughbred charity Remember Me Rescue.

Racing against the clock, the original breeders of failed racehorse filly Kat’s Journey joined in an all-out effort to buy back the beautiful chestnut Thoroughbred and return her back to them, where she was well loved and cared for as if she’d won a great race.

Like all racehorses deserve, say breeders Robin and Carolyn Hoffos of Rockin Robin Racing Stables.

Kat’s Journey
Sire: Good Journey
Dam: Fargo’s Legacy
Foal date: Jan. 29, 2012
“My wife helped pull her out of the womb,” says Robin Hoffos. “We’re a small, little contingency out here, but our horses mean a lot to us, and when I saw she had lost by 49 lengths I knew she wasn’t a racehorse. My wife asked if there was anything we could do to get her back, and I picked up the phone and called Peter Lurie” a sports anchor for HRTV and TVG.

The anchor immediately called Keen, a longtime friend, and set the ball in motion.

“This all happened so quickly,” Keen says. “My friend Peter asked me if I could help contact the people who (were her connections in that race) and wanted to know if we could either buy her or claim her. About three days later I saw the trainer (James Donlin) on the racetrack and asked if he’d be interested in selling (Kat’s Journey), and he said he’d have to talk to the owner, his son James Donlin and daughter- in-law.”

Donna Keen, pictured with a racehorse at the Breeders' Cup, helped get a California bred retired to her original breeder. Terri Cage Photography

Donna Keen, pictured with a racehorse at the Breeders’ Cup, helped get a California bred retired to her original breeder. Terri Cage Photography

After they agreed to sell her for $2,500, the owner cried before handing the horse over to Keen. “When they came to drop her off the wife just cried and cried and cried,” says Keen. “She just loved that horse.”

But no one loved the filly as much as her original breeders, who camped by the foaling stall for two weeks before her late birth in January 2012, and who were ready and willing to take her back after she failed, no questions asked.

Carolyn Hoffos, an Eventer and horseman who has bred six horses in her lifetime, says she always felt a little uneasy about sending Kat’s Journey off for a life as a racehorse. “It just didn’t sit right with me because I didn’t know where she was going or where she’d end up,” she says. “My husband had her in a virtual stable, which is how we found out she did so horribly, and it was then we realized we had to get her back because her future as a racehorse was not looking very good.”

Kat's Journey as she appeared before she was sold. Photo courtesy Robin Hoffos

Kat’s Journey as she appeared before she was sold. Photo courtesy Robin Hoffos

Recalling the two-week vigil that she kept outside Kat’s Journey’s foaling stall in 2012, Carolyn Hoffos says she roomed in a live-in trailer parked right outside the stall. The windows were lined up so she could see inside the foaling stall from her trailer, and night after night, she awakened every few hours to check on Kat’s mother, Fargo’s Legacy.

“She was a stubborn one. She was two weeks late, and she came at 2 a.m.,” she recalls. Toward the end of the routine delivery, the broodmare started to tire, so Carolyn gently reached out and pulled the foal’s legs to guide her from the birth canal to the soft bedding.

“She was adorable! She came out with a big blaze and stood immediately,” she says, noting that she is relieved and happy to welcome the filly back into her life. “I feel that when you breed horses, and I’ve bred a total of six horses, that it’s your responsibility to make sure their life is as good as it can be.”

Once Kat’s Journey arrives at her 70-acre facility, Copper Meadows Equestrian Center in Ramon, Calif., she will be assessed, loved, and possibly prepared for a future career as an Eventer, Carolyn says.

The decision to take Kat’s Journey back wasn’t even a question, says Robin Hoffos. “Obviously we can’t claim them all, but this was the least we can do. These horses run their guts out for people; everybody should step up like this,” he says.

Kat’s Journey will eventually make her way from Donna Keen’s stables at Canterbury Park to Kentucky, and then ship from there back to California. Keen notes that the rapid response by the breeders, and the collaboration to help take this filly home, was a proud moment, a good day made by good people doing what’s right.

“I love it when breeders step up like that and hunt their horses down,” Keen says.

Washed up racehorse is picture-perfect hunter

Pokey and Kira routinely square off against purpose-bred Thoroughbreds in the hunter/jumper ring.

Pokey and Kira routinely square off against purpose-bred Thoroughbreds in the hunter/jumper ring.

Five years after washing up on the backside of the Suffolk Downs racetrack, Pokeys Punch has started to gain ground in the world of the competitive hunter/jumper circuit, beating out horses who were purposely bred to do what only comes naturally to him.

Under the training and direction of owner/rider Kira Karbocus, a volunteer with the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation, Pokey has picked up a head of steam competing in the three-foot hunter/jumpers, and winning with a natural grace and balance that did nothing for him on the east coast racetracks, but is putting him in high ribbons in his new career.

Pokeys Punch
New name: Revere
Sire: Special Coach
Dam: Susan Pixum
Foal date: May 13, 2004
“In our first horse show at the Saratoga Show Grounds, we competed against 40 professional riders, getting a 6th and a 7th ribbon in the 2-6 foot schooling round,” says Karbocus, who bought Pokey in 2010 from the Suffolk Downs racetrack in East Boston, Mass. “He has a really great jump. He’s really scopey with a tight front end and knees, and makes a picture perfect hunter over fences.”

And since that first show two years ago, the pair has been moving up the ranks, achieving a personal best earlier this month at the Vermont Summer Festival.

Pitted against A-rated professionals riding un-raced Thoroughbreds who were “purpose” bred to be hunter/jumpers, Pokey achieved 2nd place ribbons in a pair of 3-foot hunter classes, she says.

Pokeys Punch was a washed up racehorse when Kira Karbocus took a chance on him.

Pokeys Punch was a washed up racehorse when Kira Karbocus took a chance on him.

“I got so lucky with him,” Karbocus says. “I had no idea what to expect when I got him off the track. At the time, I went with my trainer and looked at 10-to-15 horses at Suffolk Downs. I watched Pokey jog and that was it. We picked him up the next day.”

“He’s a really smart horse who just wants to please. He remembers things really well, so he was a joy to train,” she says.

Though they had to cool their heels early on while Pokey recovered from a bout with ulcers followed by an injury sustained in the paddock, the last two years riding hunter/jumpers have underscored Karbocus’s belief that an off-track Thoroughbred can be every bit as competitive as a horse who has never raced.

“We compete in Thoroughbred divisions at the shows because I like to support the cause” and illustrate that a horse with 30 starts can hold up, and even win against horses who never raced, she says.

For Pokey, the journey has been hard won. First, he had a late start, taking a year off to let down off the track and gain weight. And then was sidelined again with a bout with ulcers followed by a bruised sesamoid, sustained while romping in the paddock. “He has such a huge stride that he kicked himself while in the pasture, bruising his sesamoid. He had to go on stall rest and I wasn’t sure he’d ever recover.”

But recover he did. And now, after only two years of regular showing, Pokeys Punch is a force to be reckoned with in his second career.

“Many A-rated hunter/jumper shows now have Thoroughbred divisions. In the past, these classes were barely filled with enough entries, but this year, they’re packed,” she says. “This gives me hope that awareness of this wonderful breed is growing.”