Photo of the Week: Future Kings gets ribbons

Future Kings ribbons at his first show, months after being plucked from the slaughter pipeline.

Future Kings ribbons at his first show, months after being plucked from the slaughter pipeline.

Future Kings, an Irish bred gelding who sold for $200,000 in his prime, but who landed in the slaughter pipeline at age 15, ribboned at his first horse show last month.

Ridden by Grace Clairmont at the Thoroughly Thoroughbred Horse Shows May 31, the beautiful bay won two jumps pleasure classes, reports his proud new owner, Marilyn Lee of Sherwood Farms, Ontario. No stranger to the joys of OTTBs, Sherwood is the owner of Prodigioso the Everglades Horse, a Thoroughbred dumped in the Everglades of Florida and left to the fates. (Please see Prodigioso’s story here).

Buoyed by the success she and her daughter Robin Hannah-Carlton have had with Prodigioso, the pair stepped up and offered Future Kings a home earlier this year after the bay grandson of 1979 Champion U.S. Sprinter Star de Naskra was rescued from the slaughter pipeline.

Marlene Murray of R.A.C.E. Fund, Gail Hirt of Beyond the Roses, and Thoroughbred advocate John Murrell all stepped up and purchased Future Kings from a meat buyer.

Says Lee, “My daughter Robin and I both happened to be looking at Facebook and we both found King’s picture. We weren’t looking at him together, but we both recognized how cute he is. We knew nothing about his story, and there’s still quite a bit of mystery about him. He hasn’t raced since his last race at Thistledown in 2006 and we have no idea where he’s been, or how he wound up there.”

But now he is home, a prized treasure in her Ontario stable.

Seized OTTB goes from squalor to show ring

A short time ago, Kenny's Z was rescued by police and the South Florida SPCA. Now look at him!

A short time ago, Kenny’s Z was rescued by police and the South Florida SPCA. Now look at him!

A bay Thoroughbred who walked away from a low-slung shanty in January, where too many horses had wasted away without food, stepped onto a crowed stock trailer pulled by rescue workers from the South Florida SPCA, and has blossomed into a beautiful show horse.

Kenny’s Z, a 16.2 hand beauty with the personality of a Teddy bear, ribboned in his first-ever horse show last month for new owner Suzanne Norris, an achievement occurring mere months after he was seized by the SPCA and local police, and ushered into a crowded trailer with five other rescued Thoroughbreds.

Kenny’s Z
Sire: Congrats
Dam: Too Many Choices, by Bright Launch
Foal date: April 23, 2008
“He warmed up to me right away, and so I decided to take him to a schooling show at the Rocking Horse Stables in Altoona, Fla., to let him get accustomed,” Norris says. “I took him out on the cross-country course on the lead line, and after 15 minutes I was on his back. He willingly jumped everything. He just did everything in his stride. So on the spot, I signed him up for the Tadpole Division, which is show jumping and cross-country at the 2-foot level.”

Lo and behold, Kenny’s Z came away with a 5th place ribbon overall in a field of 12 horses. And he is being prepped to compete in the October Retired Racehorse Project’s Thoroughbred Makeover show, which showcases OTTBs as valuable, versatile sport horses.

Kenny's Z as he appeared shortly after his rescue.

Kenny’s Z as he appeared shortly after his rescue.

His ribbon was a considerable feat, considering Kenny hadn’t ever jumped a course before he hit the show, notes Norris, who adopted him from the SPCA to retrain at her facility, Hidden Acres Rescue for Thoroughbreds.

“Our philosophy in training horses is to go slow to get their faster. And a lot of horses need hand-holding during training; they need to think something is their idea,” she says. “But this horse is different. He has such a brain. This is the kind of horse who would lay down and die for you; he’s a real ambassador of the breed.”

An ambassador who has risen from squalid conditions at a cramped one-acre horse boarding facility in Miami Gardens; the scene of other raids by the local police, that have netted ex-racehorses such as Silver and Smoke, who nearly died of starvation and Bring Check Charlie, says Laurie Waggoner, director of the South Florida SPCA. (Please see earlier article).

Kenny’s Z was owned by owners different than those connected with Silver and Smoke and Bring Check Charlie, but was housed at the same shanty style barn. He was rescued as one of six other horses, including She’s a Freshy, a Florida-bred who had to be euthanized.

As someone who has seen the worst of the saddest cases, Kenny’s Z budding success and hopeful future lifts Waggoner’s heart.

“I’m thrilled he’s going to compete,” she says. “I was telling someone this morning that I’m so glad they’re doing Thoroughbred shows now. There was a time when you couldn’t get rid of them when the Warmbloods came on the scene, and now that they have their own shows, it’s just fantastic for the horses.

“Hopefully Z and the Retired Racehorse Project will bolster public awareness of these horses so that people will realize they don’t have to spend $30,000 on a hunter; they can adopt a rescue horse, put some money into training, and have a horse that is just as good, if not better.”

American Pharoah’s legacy helps OTTB charities

Triple Crown winning trainer Bob Baffert and son Bode share a moment with Silver Charm at Old Friends. Photo by Tim Wilson

Triple Crown winning trainer Bob Baffert and son Bode share a moment with Silver Charm at Old Friends. Photo by Tim Wilson

GEORGETOWN, Ky. —JUNE 8, 2015 – Old Friends, the Thoroughbred Retirement Facility in Georgetown, Ky., will be the recipient of a $50,000 donation from Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert and his wife, Jill.

Baffert’s American Pharoah swept the coveted Triple Crown–the first in 37 years–when he won the Belmont Stakes on June 6.

Immediately following the horse’s victory the Bafferts pledged a $50,000 donation each to four charitable organizations: Old Friends, The Permanently Disabled Jockey Fund, The Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance and CARMAcares.

Old Friends is the retirement home of three of Baffert’s former trainees: Derby contender Danthebluegrassman, multiple grade 1 winning fan favorite Game On Dude and 1997 Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner Silver Charm.

Baffert visited Old Friends just prior to this year’s Kentucky Derby where he saw Silver Charm for the first time in more than a decade.

“I want to share this, I want to make sure that those horses that we really love–we have to take care of them,” Baffert said following American Pharoah’s Belmont victory. “Win, lose, or draw, I was going to do it.”

“We are so grateful to Bob and Jill for this wonderful gift,” said Michael Blowen, president and founder of Old Friends. “The thrill and excitement of the first Triple Crown in 37 years would have been enough, but their generosity is unsurpassed, as is their love and dedication to the horses.” Blowen added.

“Everyone at Old Friends wishes to congratulate Bob and Jill and American Pharoah’s owners the Zayat family on their historic victory, and for sharing their wonderful horse with all of his fans.”