Starving horses regain weight at Kentucky TRF

Z Camelot has put on 150 pounds since he was rescued two months ago and transferred to the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation's Blackburn facility. Photo by Sue Finley

Z Camelot has put on 150 pounds since he was rescued two months ago and transferred to the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation’s Blackburn facility. Photo by Sue Finley

Two months after arriving at the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation’s (TRF) Kentucky facility, six starving horses, abandoned and later seized by Mercer County officials, have bounced back on the road to recovering their health.

According to a report by Sue Finley of the Thoroughbred Daily News, the horses pulled from a farm leased by trainer Maria Borrell and her father in a highly publicized neglect case, have put on weight, and blossomed in the hands of inmates at the Blackburn Correctional Facility. (Please see earlier story here: http://offtrackthoroughbreds.com/2016/06/29/trf-takes-6-hungry-abandoned-horses-into-herd/).

Linda Dyer, farm manager of the TRF’s Second Chances program in Kentucky— where inmates learn life and horsemanship skills while caring for retired racehorses— reports to Finley that ex-racehorse Z Camelot has undergone one of the most dramatic transformations. Since the day of his rescue in June, Z  has gone from eating shavings to stay alive to blossoming under a carefully managed re-feeding program. Under the watchful eye of Rood & Riddle vets, the bay gelding has regained approximately 150 pounds.

Z Camelot has gained approximately 150 pounds since he arrived at the TRF's Kentucky facility in June.

Z Camelot has gained approximately 150 pounds since he arrived at the TRF’s Kentucky facility in June.

Z Camelot was among a group of horses accepted into the Blackburn TRF facility after authorities declared the horses abandoned and in need of rescue. The others include Silver Cliff, 14, Princess Megan, 12 and her weanling colt, Meddling, 12, Parhelion, 16, and Synergistic, 17, according to the Thoroughbred Daily News.

To read more about the horses and their condition, please go to the Thoroughbred Daily News story: http://www.thoroughbreddailynews.com/mercer-county-horses-thriving-at-trf/.

Donations to the TRF may be designated to help the newest additions to the Blackburn facility by clicking the donations link at the end of this sentence, scrolling to the lower left of the page, and clicking the Designations drop-down menu: https://trf20546.thankyou4caring.org/Make-A-Gift

Failed racehorse has big lead in OTTB hunters

OTTB Feather has a major point lead in the ongoing TAKE2 Thoroughbred shows. Ridden by owner Scotty Sherman, the pair will be hard to catch before the end of the competition season Oct. 2. Photo courtesy TAKE2

OTTB Feather has a major point lead in the ongoing TAKE2 Thoroughbred shows. Ridden by owner Scotty Sherman, the pair will be hard to catch before the end of the competition season Oct. 2. Photo courtesy TAKE2

Scotty Sherman’s Feather has soared to a commanding lead in the TAKE2 Hunter Division with 4,648 points, more than double that of Cree Sauer’s Cooperstown now in second place.

Feather, who raced under the name She’s From Money, was bred in Maryland and sold for $1,000 as a yearling. She was unsuccessful in four starts at the track, earning just $1,980, but has blossomed since changing careers. (Please see earlier story in Off-Track Thoroughbreds.com).

The 7-year-old mare was reserve champion hunter in the TAKE2 Thoroughbred League last year, and she will be tough to catch this season. The Thoroughbred League’s second season concludes Oct. 2.

She’s From Money
Show name: Feather
Sire: Love of Money
Dam: Alvinia, by Horatius
Foal date: Feb. 28, 2009
“Feather came from a racing background, not a jumping back ground like so many of the horses today, but she had a very special ability that a lot of horses do not have,” said owner/trainer/rider Sherman.

“Her biggest attribute is that she absolutely loves to jump; so teaching her how was very easy and fun. I think the most special thing about Feather is the way she glides across the ground, and the jump is just an extension of her canter.”

The veteran horsewoman added, “I have to give credit to Lynn Richardson, who found Feather on the racetrack and recognized her potential and brought her to me to train. Upon riding her, I knew I had to have her.

Feather and owner/rider Scotty Sherman have been winning hunter championships against talented Warmbloods in the Mid-Atlantic region, and are currently in the lead in Thoroughbred shows presented by TAKE2.

Feather and owner/rider Scotty Sherman have been winning hunter championships against talented Warmbloods in the Mid-Atlantic region, and are currently in the lead in Thoroughbred shows presented by TAKE2.

“Feather also has a full staff of people who wait on her hand and foot. Mary Wintz is her wonderful caretaker who has spoiled her rotten; Don Dressel, farrier to the stars, has made her little Thoroughbred feet beautiful; Dr. Roger Scullin, the most talented vet in the world, has kept her athletic body in prime condition.  It has taken an army who all love her to make her so consistently great!”

Sherman had high praise for TAKE2 as well.

“The TAKE2 Program is the best thing that has happened to racehorses ever,” she said. “It is a wonderful chance for these talented animals to have a life and bring pleasure to so many people that could not afford a Warm Blood. It is also rewarding to see the Thoroughbreds get recognition for their accomplishments.”

Grace Allen’s Bowie leads the TAKE2 Jumper Division with 989.67 points, and Alexandra Talmage’s Endimeous Triumph is second with 799. Click here for current TAKE2 Thoroughbred League Standings

The prestigious Capital Challenge Horse Show will host the presentation of the TAKE2 Thoroughbred League’s 2015 High-Score Hunter and Jumper Awards. The ceremony will be held Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2016 at the Prince George Equestrian Center in Upper Marlboro, MD.

“We are very proud of the success that the TAKE2 Program has enjoyed in such a short period of time, and very grateful for all the support we have received from the Thoroughbred racing and breeding industry and the horse show community as well,” said TAKE2 President Rick Violette Jr. “By working together, we have created something special that opens doors for racehorses after they leave the track and helps provide them with the happy and secure retirements they so richly deserve.”

— This blog is made possible by the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation (TRF,Inc.), the county’s oldest and largest sanctuary of its kind. There are nearly 900 ex-racehorse Thoroughbreds in the TRF herd.

He becomes an ‘Alpha mare’ to train OTTBs

Mark Bolender becomes the ‘Alpha Mare’ to enlist Dakota Demon in training.

Mark Bolender becomes the ‘Alpha Mare’ to enlist Dakota Demon in training.

Put a herd of 25 horses together for the first time, and after some kicking, biting, and a few flying tufts of torn-out hair, an alpha mare will emerge.

In 97 percent of the time, after the dust settles, it is the female horse who emerges victorious as the leaders, says Mark Bolender ofBolender Horse Park in Washington.

All devotion is vested in her, as long as she leads in a focused and consistent manner. But if she veers into inconsistent and unfocused leadership, the herd will turn on her and kill her.

“Once she is chosen, an instinct will come into her to die protecting her herd,” says Bolender, one of five trainers participating in the Emerald Downs Prodigious Fund’s Trainer Challenge. “This is how they’ve survived longer than we have.”

In this week’s Clubhouse Q&A, Bolender talks about getting into the head of a horse as he trains off-track Thoroughbred Dakota Demon to willingly, and bravely face the challenges of learning a new career.

Q: Please tell me about your philosophy of training horses.

Dakota was once on her way to being the Alpha Mare, but she relinquished that easily to her trainer.

Dakota was once on her way to being the Alpha Mare, but she relinquished that easily to her trainer.

My philosophy is that I started with Natural Horsemanship principals and traditional training, and connected the dots. I have a photograph that I show people at clinics I teach; it’s an old photo that shows a horse walking across a seven-inch beam. If you look closer you’ll see the horse is blindfolded, and if you look again, you realize the trainer is not touching the horse. I’m the man who wants to know why. We’ve taught horses to set up for lead changes and to slow down, but not many people can tell you why we do what we do, and why it works.

Q: When you begin training, you speak the horse’s language. How?

When we train, we enter into the horse’s world, for the most part. We train them under our human values. But, the horse’s world is very different from ours, with different values. We are not superior. We are not inferior. The horse is just a different nation that hears different voices, and they react with different senses that we never had, or we have lost.

A horse will size you up within the first hour of meeting you. You have to remember that to a horse, you’re either inferior or superior, and he’s trying to figure that out. So to train, you have to establish yourself as the Alpha Mare.

Dakota’s instinctive reactions to new stimulus are overridden by her desire to please her trainer.

Dakota’s instinctive reactions to new stimulus are overridden by her desire to please her trainer.

Q: The Alpha Mare?A horse will size you up within the first hour of meeting you. You have to remember that to a horse, you’re either inferior or superior, and he’s trying to figure that out. So to train, you have to establish yourself as the Alpha Mare.

If you watch 25 horses interact in a field together for the first time, you quickly have disorder. There’ll be kicking and biting, bumps and scratches. And out of that comes order—the pecking order.

Once that pecking order is established, in 97 percent of the time, it is an Alpha Mare who is chosen to lead. Once she is chosen, an instinct will come into her to die protecting the herd. It’s amazing; I’ve seen it. The second instinct is that the herd will follow that mare to their death.

As soon as she loses her consistency as their leader, they’ll turn on her and kill her. It’s instinctive: they’ll die following their leader, but if she’s not worthy, they’ll kill her.

Q: How does this translate into the working relationship between horse and human?

You have to understand that to a horse, they don’t have equals. You’re either inferior or superior to them. If you can establish yourself as their superior, as their Alpha Mare, they’ll want to please you. So the first thing a trainer has to achieve is for that horse to believe in us as being worthy of a leadership role. When that happens, most of your work is done.

Q: And how does a human project a leadership role with a horse?

Mark Bolender relaxes on the farm.

Mark Bolender relaxes on the farm.

A lot of it comes down to the less you do, the more what you do means. For example, when I work with a horse, the less I move, the more I mimic their language. If I see a person being touched by a horse in the training moment, while doing groundwork, if that horse walks up and touches them, that horse is telling them they’re inferior.

If you watch an Alpha Mare in a herd, nobody touches her unless she invites them to. If she backs up, they all back up. A horse will never enter the Alpha Mare’s space without her permission.
In my clinics, one of the first exercises I have my students do is to stand between me and their horse, with the horse behind them. Then, without looking at their horse, I have them back their horse up. In order to achieve this, the person must be very focused and take the role of the Alpha Mare.If you watch an Alpha Mare in a herd, nobody touches her unless she invites them to. If she backs up, they all back up. A horse will never enter the Alpha Mare’s space without her permission.

Q: What does this mean for all the horse lovers who coddle their horses and kiss their faces? Is this wrong?

Love covers a multitude of sins! But, it’s important to remember that they’re not little babies. If you want your horse to respect you as a trainer, you need to be the leader. I’m not talking about a dictatorship, but of becoming a leader worthy of being followed.

When you train a horse, you’re not doing it because they’re dumb. You want them to step up to the plate, and the more they believe in you, the faster it goes.

Q: Dakota Demon was an Alpha mare herself. Did that make your job with her more difficult?

No. The Alpha Mares actually relinquish their status faster than other horses, we find. So they’re actually easier to train. Dakota is a very smart horse, and she’s getting better and better.

Q: How does Dakota and her quick adjustment to a new discipline fit into the issue of the unwanted horse?

Dakota was clearly a horse who was not going to make it in racing, but we can make them ready for something else. I think we can easily make good trail horses out of off-track Thoroughbreds. They’re beautifully minded horses, but you can’t cowboy them into it, you have to outthink them. — Originally published July 31, 2013.