News Briefs: TB charities buoyed by donors

Inmates in the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation's Second Chance's program take care of ex-racehorses. Photo by EquiSportPhoto

Inmates in the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation’s Second Chance’s program take care of ex-racehorses. Photo by EquiSportPhoto

TRF hosts Hay, Oats fundraiser
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y., July 28, 2015 – The Third Annual “Hay, Oats & Spaghetti” dinner to support the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation (TRF) hosted by Giuseppe and Lauren Grisio at Bravo! on Monday July 27 raised more than $11,000 for the world’s oldest and largest Thoroughbred aftercare organization.

“In three short years, this event has skyrocketed and shows exactly what is best about Saratoga,” said TRF Board member and Thoroughbred breeder Suzie O’Cain. “You have old friends reuniting, you have a generous community businessman who happens to own one of the best restaurants around, and it all comes together to benefit the horses, which is the reason why all of us are here in the first place.”

The Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation serves up spaghetti at successful Saratoga Springs fundraiser.

The Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation serves up spaghetti at successful Saratoga Springs fundraiser.

Previously held at Mama Mia’s Pizza & Cafe, owners Giuseppe and Lauren Grisio hosted “Hay, Oats & Spaghetti” at their new Bravo! restaurant to accommodate a larger crowd.

Among the approximately 200 in attendance were many personalities from Saratoga’s horse racing scene, including trainers Mike Hushion, Rick Violette Jr., H. James Bond and his wife, Tina; Ian Wilkes and his wife, Tracey, Carl Domino, and Richard Schosberg and his wife, Dawn; Joe and Anne McMahon of McMahon Thoroughbreds; Terry Finley of West Point Thoroughbreds; Tom Gallo of Parting Glass Racing; Saratoga philanthropist Michele Riggi and Saratoga Springs Mayor Joanne Yepsen. Other generous event sponsors included DeCresente, Saratogian, Adirondack Trust, Thorobred Feed Sales, and Saratoga Strategic Partners.

“The Foods of Anne Burrell,” also to benefit the TRF, will be held at The Canfield Casino in Congress Park on Sunday, August 9, Please visit http://www.trfinc.org/event/the-foods-of-anne-burrell for more details.

Founded in 1983, the TRF has rescued more than 4,000 former racehorses and retrained many of them for a variety of second careers. TRF horses have gone on to careers in the show ring, on the trail, and as companion horses. They have become healers in equine therapy programs serving veterans, amputees, and others in need. They work as teachers in the TRF Second Chances program, where inmates provide care for the horses while learning valuable life and vocation skills. TRF horses who can’t go on to a second careers are given lifetime retirement in the TRF herd. Currently, the TRF has more than 900 horses in its care at 24 farms across the country. The TRF is a 501 (c)(3) and depends fully on philanthropic support.

Kentucky Derby winner Silver Charm enjoys retirement at Old Friends Photo by Laura Battles

Kentucky Derby winner Silver Charm enjoys retirement at Old Friends. Photo by Laura Battles

ASPCA grant to Old Friends
GEORGETOWN, KY – JULY 28, 2015 – Old Friends, the Thoroughbred Retirement Farm in Georgetown, KY, has received a $15,000 grant from the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA®).

Old Friends founder and President Michael Blowen made the announcement today.

The grant is part of the ASPCA’s “Rescuing Racers Initiative,” which was established in 2009 to support horses impacted by the racing industry. Old Friends received two previous grants under this initiative, in 2010 and 2011, which were used for run-in sheds and the construction of new paddocks.

These project funds will be also be used to construct new run-in sheds on Old Friends’ expanded Georgetown facility.

Old Friends supports more than 150 retired racehorses in all, including a dozen on its satellite facility in New York, Old Friends at Cabin Creek: The Bobby Frankel Division.

Most recently Old Friends permanently retired Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner Silver Charm, multiple Grade 1 winner Game On Dude and Breeders’ Cup Sprint Champion Amazombie. The organization will welcome a second Kentucky Derby champion, 2002 winner War Emblem, in the fall.

The farm is open to tourists daily by appointment.

“We are so grateful for this funding and for the continued assistance from the ASPCA,” said Blowen. “Our horses live out most of the time, and run-in sheds are crucial to their well-being. This grant will help us prepare now for the coming winter,” Blowen added. “We appreciate the support and confidence the ASPCA has in Old Friends to continue its mission.”

 

Camelot pauper is show-ring prince

Atom is schooled by Teresa Tolar.

Atom is schooled by junior rider Teresa Tolar.Photo by Jessica West

A dusty Camelot castaway, plucked by chance from an auction that could have catapulted him to the slaughterhouse, is now on the cusp of a first-class hunter/jumper career.

Atom, an un-raced bay Thoroughbred, has emerged from his shell under the training of Mooresville, N.C. trainer Karen Benson to take high ribbons in big classes at the Totally Thoroughbred Show at Pimlico, clearing jump after jump with the high-knee tuck of the refined show horse he was born to be.

“He has an amazing natural talent,” says Benson, who helped save him from the Camelot auction in 2012. “He’s so good with his front … that one of his riders took him to train with Liza Boyd, who rides top-dollar hunters and was international hunter rider of the year. And she loves him!”

Atom
Sire: Royal Academy
Dam: Araadh, by Blushing Groom
Foal date: April 17, 2007
Brilliantly balanced over the jumps, Atom leapt his way into the high ribbons in large classes at the Totally Thoroughbred Show at Pimlico two weeks ago. With very few showing miles under his girth, and ridden by Judith Schaefer, he finished 3rd out of 30 in his first class, and 5th out of over 50 in the Hunter Classic, Benson says. “And he jumped so big the jumps were almost too small for him,” she says, noting that he also took 3rd in the hack class.

Rider Teresa Tolar, who plans to compete him in the A circuit at the Aiken Fall Classic and at the TAKE 2 Thoroughbred hunters, also rides him, Benson adds.

Though hardly recognizable from the timid-looking horse in the crowd at Camelot a few years ago, his remaking into a show horse has not come without its difficulties.

Atom as he appeared at the Camelot auction just a few years ago. Photo by Sarah Andrew

Atom as he appeared at the Camelot auction just a few years ago. Photo by Sarah Andrew

In fact, Atom went through a “very bratty stage” that had Benson second-guessing whether he was just a little too much horse for her. “One day he bucked so hard with my trainer on him that he almost fell to the ground,” she says. “And he continued to be so bratty that last year summer I decided to give him 60 days of really good training.”

Throwing out the usual playbook, Benson took Atom on trail rides to the mountains and through streams. She rode him western, and put many, many miles on him letting him unwind and grow up.

By the time she started back in with his hunter/jumper training, he was a new horse. And after his success at Pimlico, is well on his way to becoming a top-notch show horse.

“When I think how pathetic he looked in the Camelot kill pen, and look at him now, there’s no comparison,” she says. “And he was the last horse to go because nobody wanted him.”

Photo of the Week: Rahy’s spirit runs deep

Laurie Tuozzolo of Rhode Island has spent 15 incredible years with Rahy's son, Kim's Rahy. Photo by Jerri Moon Cantone

Laurie Tuozzolo of Rhode Island has spent 15 incredible years with Rahy’s son, Kim’s Rahy. Photo by Jerri Moon Cantone

Laurie Tuozzolo adopted Rahy’s son, Kim’s Rahy off the track from Suffolk Downs in 2000 at 65 starts. And shortly after, she has been hopping bareback on her 21-year-old gelding and riding him to the Oak Swamp in Rhode Island to take a swim. (Please see earlier story on the pair:http://offtrackthoroughbreds.com/2011/09/22/swimming-with-a-thoroughbred-recaptures-joy/).

The hot summers spent enjoying the feel of cool water slushing past their legs took Tuozzolo back to her childhood, and help push the pressures of life aside.

For her special horse, she wrote this poem:

When I See My Horse
“The long hard day becomes easy,
The pressure released.
The tears somehow dry,
Turmoil fades to peace…”