Tearful breeder reunited with TRF rescue horse

Ollie now enjoys retirement life at the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation. Photo by Debby Thomas

Ollie now enjoys retirement life at the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation. Photo by Debby Thomas

Cathy Hartsock rushed into Barn 4 at the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation’s James River location, found the right stall, and threw her arms around the neck of the copper chestnut gelding she’d been worrying about for years. She began to cry.

“I felt like I was seeing one of my children,” says Cathy Hartsock, who along with her husband Bob Hartsock had always wondered what happened to the off-track Thoroughbred Oligopolist. “He was the best horse we ever bred,” adds Bob Hartsock.

The Maryland couple, who bred four horses in their lifetime, sold Oligopolist as a 2-year-old and avidly followed his racing career. They phoned his trainer, rejoiced at his victories —he earned more than $100,000 in 43 starts—until they lost track of his whereabouts after his race career ended in 2009.

Oligopolist
Sire: Mutakddim
Dam: Corporate Takeover, by Corporate Report
Foal date: March 24, 2003
Earnings: $110,182, 43 starts
“From age 6 to 13, we had no idea where he ended up,” Bob Hartsock says. His wife adds, “We would plug his name into a Google search, but never found him until earlier this year when we plugged his name in, and up popped your story (in Off-Track Thoroughbreds.com) about how he was rescued by the TRF.”

The couple read with sadness that Ollie had been among 80+ horses rescued from Peaceable Farms in Orange, Va., a facility where horses died, or were near death, when authorities raided it in October 2015. But a foster farm had rescued Ollie and another OTTB, before the TRF offered a retirement home for the pair at James River Work Center in Virginia.

“Just knowing he was safe made us so happy,” Cathy Hartsock says, her husband adding, “He looked great.”

Bob and Cathy Hartsock were so thrilled to discover Ollie was safe that they spent the entire day with him at the TRF. They are pictured with Ollie and inmate William, Ollie's caretaker.

Bob and Cathy Hartsock were so thrilled to discover Ollie was safe that they spent the entire day with him at the TRF. They are pictured with Ollie and inmate William, Ollie’s caretaker.

The couple was the first to arrive and the last to leave at the Sept. 18 Open Barn at the TRF’s Barn 4, says Anne Tucker, co-founder of the program. “They stayed for four hours, and showed everyone Ollie’s baby pictures,” Tucker says. “Cathy told me about Ollie’s history and his half-sister and said they planned to be in touch, and come back to visit.”

The Hartsocks had a very small breeding operation at the time they brought Ollie into the world. They bred his mother Corporate Takeover, whose bloodlines were exciting because they were void of Northern Dancer and Mr. Prospector — a rarity in Thoroughbreds.

“We bought the broodmare as a weanling at Fasig-Tipton, and were excited by her unique bloodlines,” Cathy Hartsock says. “She wasn’t much of a racehorse, so we decided to breed her in Kentucky. We bred her twice to Mutakddim, and we got Ollie and a half sister, Rose to Riches.”

The mother was eventually euthanized for medical reasons, but they still own Rose, and board her at a facility where Cathy Hartsock rides her. Explaining that they don’t have a farm of their own in which to offer Ollie a home, the couple says they are over-the-moon that Ollie is safe.

“We didn’t want to leave him, so, at the end of the day, we followed the inmate who takes care of him and Ollie back out to the field,” she says, her husband adding, “We wanted to see him gallop. He looked good. Cathy cried knowing he’s safe.”— This blog is supported by the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation (TRF, Inc.). The TRF protects and cares for over 800 off-track Thoroughbreds around the country. Please consider making a small donation today: https://trf20546.thankyou4caring.org/Make-A-Gift

Horse charity launches huge anti-slaughter effort

Susan Wagner, executive director of Equine Advocates in New York, launched an effort to get 100,000 signatures on an appeal to end horse slaughter. She stands next to Press Exclusive, a Thoroughbred ex-racehorse who was trampled en route to slaughter and nearly died.

Susan Wagner, executive director of Equine Advocates in New York, launched an effort to get 100,000 signatures on an appeal to end horse slaughter. She stands next to Press Exclusive, a Thoroughbred ex-racehorse who was trampled en route to slaughter and nearly died. Press now resides with Susan on the New York horse sanctuary. To read Press’s story, please click this photo.

A New York charity, looking to end horse slaughter once and for all, is seeking to raise 100,000 signatures on an appeal to the White House.

Equine Advocates, a horse sanctuary based in Chatham, N.Y. launched a signature drive last week in an effort to gain enough signatures by Election Day to convince the current administration to intercede on behalf of the estimated 150,000 horses shipped to Mexico and Canada every year for slaughter.

Stating that mounting scientific evidence, published in top scientific journal Elsevier, as well as in the mainstream press, indicates horse meat is tainting “beef products” sold in countries like such as Great Britain, Susan Wagner of Equine Advocates says the issue of horse slaughter is about more than ending the brutality of horse slaughter. It’s about food safety, she says.

“At no other time in history has a presidential administration had so much information” that horse meat, which is commonly treated with medications and not recommended for human consumption, is possibly in the food chain, Wagner says. Citing the 2013 horse meat scandal in Europe, in which food advertised as beef products was in fact horse meat, Wagner says the best way to prevent horse meat from entering the food chain is to stop American horses from shipping to slaughter in Mexico and Canada. “I think we can stop this if we can stop the live transport of equines over our borders,” she says.

Buoyed by the 4,000 signatures already raised, Wagner and Equine Advocates supporters are meeting this week to enlist the aid of celebrities. They are hopeful that given Vice President Joe Biden’s historic support of anti-horse slaughter efforts, a petition at this juncture in history might stand a chance bringing about an executive order to end the shipment of horses to slaughter.

“Horse slaughter is a garbage disposal for (some) irresponsible people in the horse industry,” Wagner says. “We don’t consume horse meat in this country, and yet we ship it to other countries, even though horses are not bred for consumption. They’re bred to be sporting, recreational and companion animals.” To sign the petition, please click the link on Equine Advocates.com: https://www.equineadvocates.org/

Lumpy-legged mare rescued by girl now shows

After finding Ruby at the Unadilla Auction in 2014 and pleading with the meat buyer to let her go, Emma Myruski, 12, began showing her lumpy-legged rescue horse this summer.

After finding Ruby at the Unadilla Auction in 2014 and pleading with the meat buyer to let her go, Emma Myruski, 12, began showing her lumpy-legged rescue horse this summer.

A lumpy-legged mare destined for slaughter until a fearsome young girl intervened, made her Pony Club showing debut this summer in the next chapter of an “incredible journey” that began in a depressing auction house where all hope seemed lost.

Watching from the sidelines and rejoicing at the near-miracle that brought together her 12-year-old daughter Emma Myruski with the beautiful black mare Ruby, longtime Thoroughbred advocate and parent Kay O’Hanlon Myruski says she could not be more proud.

“Emma’s dedication and hard work never ceases to amaze me,” says Myruski. “She is an old soul in a young body. She feels what a horse needs and instinctively does it. Her knowledge doesn’t come from textbooks, it’s decades of horsemanship lineage in her DNA that has brought about this incredible journey with Ruby.”

The young girl found the unidentified Thoroughbred in 2014 at the Unadilla Auction in Upstate New York, tied with bailing twine to a long, oak feed manger, and frightened. So moved was Myruski that she sat with the mare, stroking her head and promising her better days ahead. And, she whispered, “No matter what happens, I’ll get you out, and you’ll be safe.”

Ruby was rescued from the Unadilla Auction in 2014 after Emma Myruski, 12, promised she'd "get her out." The pair has started to show this summer.

Ruby was rescued from the Unadilla Auction in 2014 after Emma Myruski, 12, promised she’d “get her out.” The pair has started to show this summer.

Making good on that pledge, Emma later tearfully pleaded with a meat buyer to let the horse go. And with the help of her mother and other Thoroughbred advocates, the child and older horse left the auction house to face the unknown together.

And in June, after spending time getting to know the mare, Emma took Ruby to Pony Club at Centenary College in New Jersey, after warning her friends and fellow riders that Ruby looked a little different than the other horses.

“I explained to my team that her legs are a little ugly, and that her back isn’t very straight, but that it’s OK. She’s not a normal horse. But I love her,” Emma says.

Emma forewarned her Pony Club team that Ruby's legs looked a little ugly, but that she was a great horse.

Emma forewarned her Pony Club team that Ruby’s legs looked a little ugly, but that she was a great horse.

After earning a 5th place ribbon in the first show, the pair took a 9th place equitation ribbon against 60 other riders at the Tryon Show in North Carolina in August. Buoyed by the experience, Emma says she plans to enter Ruby in more shows. Though the mare has weathered life’s storms, evident in her imperfect conformation, the horse is nonetheless amazing, Emma says.

“I wanted to bring her to these shows because she’s the best horse I had at the time. She still is. She acts like she’s done these shows a million times before. Nothing bothers her,” Emma says. “I think about” how she was rescued “and I feel happy she’s come so far. It was just really special for Ruby to be at a show.”

Emma’s mother agrees.

“These shows are a journey, adventure and a celebration of Ruby’s finest moments in life,” Myruski says. “This horse has never been so loved.”