TB saved: Taken to auction, taken back as pet

Anne Feltt kisses MG Actor, a Thoroughbred she rode to the Unadilla Auction with over 10 years ago, and then saved when she realized his fate.

Anne Feltt kisses MG Actor, a Thoroughbred she rode to the Unadilla Auction with over 10 years ago, and then saved when she realized his fate.

Moe was sweating hard by the time he reached the Unadilla Auction.

Soon he was tied to a wall and left to stand next to a pony so unnaturally close that only fear and the urge to flee animated him.

Already separated from his pasture friend, he was so scared standing alongside a desolate row of strange horses inside the western New York auction, that he “nearly pulled himself free,” recalls longtime owner Anne Feltt of Saratoga.

“He seemed so lost. I felt terrible for him,” Feltt says.

MG Actor
Barn name: Moe
Sire: Noactor
Dam: Watchmyspot, by Forever Casting
Foal date: May 15, 1994
Earnings: $148,610 in 21 starts
Her feelings were compounded by an unusual twist. She had actually gone on the trailer ride that brought Moe to this terrible place.

Asked by a friend about 10 years ago to accompany her on a trailer ride to drop off a horse at the Unadilla Auction, Feltt figured she’d do a little horse shopping while Moe found a new owner.

It wasn’t until she saw the beautiful chestnut gelding reduced to a nervous wreck that the reality of the situation started to sink in. Though there were some fine horses available for sale, some with thousand-dollar price tags, Moe (JC: MG Actor) was not among them. Those horses were stabled in another section of the auction. This poor animal was tied in a row of lower-value animals, some in poor condition, she says.

As her alarm rose, an older gentleman friend tried to reassure her that the horse was fine. But Feltt was having none of it.

MG Actor pictured with Leah Feltt two years after his rescue from Unadilla.

MG Actor pictured with Leah Feltt two years after his rescue from Unadilla.

“I remember yelling, ‘No, they’re not fine!’ Moe was tied with bailing twine with his nose five inches from the wall,” she says. “And I said we had to help him.”

Though she wanted to jump in and grab the horse back the instant she realized he was in trouble, her attempts to reach him were thwarted when the panicked animal flattened his ears and raised up his head, in his panic nearly pulling down the boards off the ramshackle wall, she says.

So she waited on pins and needles until the bidding began and won his freedom for him for a mere $25.

“I couldn’t wait to get him out of there so I asked if we could take him out and, as crazy as this sounds, we tacked him up and my friend’s child rode him around. And after all that, for a scared, green horse, he was really pretty good.”

From that moment on, Moe became a lifetime pet in Feltt’s family with worth beyond measure.

Leah and Moe were riding partners for many years after he was saved.

Leah and Moe were riding partners for many years after he was saved.

Prior to taking that fateful trip to the auction, her daughter Leah had jokingly asked her to bring back a chestnut Quarter Horse with four white socks and a white blaze. But when it was time to reveal Moe to her daughter— an adorable horse-savvy 7-year-old —the child turned to her mother and said, “I hope you didn’t think you were buying a Quarter Horse because he’s a Thoroughbred!”

For months Feltt encouraged her daughter to ride her new “Quarter Horse,” until one day the lightning fast OTTB ran away with the youngster. And the jig was up!

“One day he took off running and Leah came back sweating and said, ‘Mom, he’s a Thoroughbred. Somebody lied to you!’ ”

Thoroughbred or Quarter Horse, it made no difference to the Feltt family. What mattered was that Moe turned out to be the best horse they ever owned. Her daughter, now 19, rode him for years in 4H, and when the Feltts traveled to Florida the horse traveled with them.

Always more Anne’s horse than her daughter’s, the attentive gelding would keep an ear trained on the lady who saved him when Leah rode him in the lesson ring. “It was funny. She’d be trying to get him to canter and he wouldn’t listen, so I’d say, ‘Moe, pick up your canter!’ and he would do it. If he was on the wrong lead, I’d tell him to fix his lead, and he would.”

“I love to tell his story. He was the horse (possibly) going to slaughter … I was actuality going to (Unadilla) to look for a horse for my daughter; I thought maybe I could find an older horse, or one who needed a job.

“Little did I know it was the Thoroughbred I was actually traveling with, and his new job would be to take care of my little girl and become my best friend!”

Charities run, shine, break ground for t’breds

TRF Run for the Horses to benefit local horse charities.

TRF Run for the Horses to benefit local horse charities.

TRF hosts Run for the Horses

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y.— The Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation (TRF) has expanded the mission of its annual 5K Run/Walk for the Horses to support all local racehorse welfare organizations.

The Sixth Annual Run for the Horses, which has been selected as a Saratoga Centennial Event, will be held Saturday morning, September 5, 2015 at the Orenda Pavilion at the Spa State Park in Saratoga Springs. The 5K course is certified and all proceeds benefit local non-profits that rescue and provide second careers or homes for ex-racehorses.

“It’s all about the horses. To help more horses, we local organizations know that we need to help and support each other,” said Diana Pikulski, Director of External Affairs for the TRF. “We are adding fun new elements to the race so that the whole community can come out to learn about and support the racehorses that make Saratoga Springs the special place that it is.”

The Run for the Horses begins with a 7 a.m. check-in and will benefit these locally based organizations that rescue, rehabilitate, retrain and retire ex-racehorses:

ACTT NaturallyHeading for Home, Old Friends at Cabin CreekReRun Inc., and Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation.

Check-in is at 7:00am. The Kids Fun Run will start at 8:00am and the 5K Race will start at 8:30am. There will be refreshments and prizes in all race/walk divisions. Runners finishing 19th and 15th place will each be presented with a Saratoga Centennial-shirt by members from the Centennial Committee. Pre-race registration for the event is $20. Race day registration is $25.

For more information call Mary Abbruzzese at 518-226-0028, or to register, please visit http://www.trfinc.org/event/run-for-the-horses-5k/

Texas Thoroughbred President Hal Wiggins presents the TCA Award of Merit to Jennifer Gibbs of LOPE. Photo credit: Gay Glazbrook

Texas Thoroughbred President Hal Wiggins presents the TCA Award of Merit to Jennifer Gibbs of LOPE. Photo credit: Gay Glazbrook

TCA June Merit Awards

LEXINGTON, Ky. – Louisiana and Texas OTTB charities were named last month as the Thoroughbred Charities of America (TCA) Award of Merit winners for their hard work providing a better life for Thoroughbreds.

Merit Award winners were The Louisiana Horse Rescue Association (LAHRA), a nonprofit organization that aims to rescue, retrain and rehome Thoroughbred racehorses, and LoneStar Outreach to Place Ex-Racers (LOPE), a Texas-based charity that rehabs, retrains and re-homes Texas racehorses. Texas-based LOPE, which was founded by Lynn Reardon, author of Beyond the Homestretch, has assisted well over 1,000 Thoroughbreds. And the Louisiana charity has assisted over 200 since its inception in 2010.

From left: Louisiana Horse Rescue Association Directors Therese Arroyo and Victoria Richmond, President Patrick Richmond, Michele Rodriguez, Judy Agular and Dr. Frank Andrews (LSU). Photo credit: Linda McLellan

From left: Louisiana Horse Rescue Association Directors Therese Arroyo and Victoria Richmond, President Patrick Richmond, Michele Rodriguez, Judy Agular and Dr. Frank Andrews (LSU). Photo credit: Linda McLellan

Both charities were lauded by the TCA for exemplary work in an ongoing merit program designed to highlight the good work being done by charities. The Award of Merit program was launched by the TCA in January and has been honoring award winners each month.

Other recipients honored earlier this year include Kip Elser, Elizabeth MacDonald, Russ Rhone, Bowman Second Chance Thoroughbred Adoption, Emerald Downs’ the Prodigious Fund, Amy Tarrant, Akindale Thoroughbred Rescue, Dennis Miller, Hope After Racing (H.A.R.T.), Anne Tucker of the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation (TRF), Midwest Thoroughbreds, Steuart Pittman and the Retired Racehorse Project and Turning for Home.

New Vocations breaks ground on new OTTB facility.

New Vocations breaks ground on new OTTB facility.

New Vocations breaks ground

LEXINGTON, Ky.— (June 26, 2015) Over 100 guests gathered on Wednesday, June 24, to celebrate the groundbreaking of New Vocations’ new facility at Mereworth Farm. The facility will double the program’s Lexington capacity. The ceremony took place at the building site located on 85 acres on the iconic Mereworth Farm.

The brief presentation opened with New Vocations’ program director Anna Ford sharing the history of New Vocations Racehorse Adoption Program and the vision behind the building project.

Featured guest speaker Boyd Browning of Fasig-Tipton and Elliott Walden of WinStar Farm spoke about their support of New Vocation’s mission and dedication to retiring racehorses. Elizabeth Hughes, president of the Susan S. Donaldson Foundation, emphasized that by joining forces with New Vocations, Mereworth Farm will be able to better carry out its mission to house unwanted horses.

In addition to the new facility, Mereworth Farm will also provide the use of a 20-stall barn, and feed for New Vocation’s horses in need of rehabilitation prior to beginning their retraining.

The presentation concluded with a blessing of the grounds by Hall of Fame jockey Pat Day.

To date, $800,000 has been raised to begin construction on the facility, which will include two 15-stall barns, an indoor arena with viewing area, an outdoor arena, an office and ample paddocks and pastures. New Vocations will work diligently over the next year to raise the remaining funds needed to complete the project by seeking support through a variety of naming and giving options. More information on the New Vocations Capital Campaign can be found at www.newvocations.org/capital-campaign.

Photo of the Week: Prince of tides

Prince of Rhodes and owner/rider Ed Schlairet enjoy a relaxing moment at the water's edge.

Prince of Rhodes and owner/rider Ed Schlairet enjoy a relaxing moment at the water’s edge.

Prince of Rhodes is a testament to how great an older racehorse can be, says his owner Ed Schlairet.

Pictured at Caesar Creek State Park in Ohio on a blustery cold day, the pair watched the waves roll across the lake before taking a walk through the water.

The pair enjoys trail riding for miles and when they’re in the mood for competition, they participate in gymkhana series shows, says Schlairet, who notes that Prince has taken a turn working at a kids summer camp, and is still unbeatable in a friendly horse race between friends.

“He has taught more first-time riders than I can count,” he says. “But I have yet to come across another horse who can beat him in a heads-up, full-on race. He will make you smile and your eyes water. I don’t know if you can tell, but I sure do love that horse of mine!”