Camelot T-bred is muse for Miss Connecticut

Miss Connecticut Acacia Courtney plans to discuss horse welfare at the June 28 pageant. Here she is with Perfect Love, an ex-racehorse Thoroughbred she rescued from Camelot.

Miss Connecticut Acacia Courtney plans to discuss horse welfare at the June 28 pageant. Here she is with Perfect Love, an ex-racehorse Thoroughbred she rescued from Camelot.

Acacia Courtney was crowned Miss Connecticut last weekend! Inspired in life by her Thoroughbred, Acacia discussed her rescue work in the interview portion of the contest. In honor of her victory, we are repeating an earlier story on Acacia. And we’ll be talking with her soon for a followup story!

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As a large truck idled nearby like a predator lurking to take unwanted horses to slaughter, a young woman approached a skittish gray mare hiding in a paddock corner.

Frightened and evasive, Perfect Love held her head down and kept her posture low until out of the corner of her good eye, she spotted an attractive young Connecticut woman approaching with a lead rope.

Desperate to get the lovely gray ex-racehorse as far away from danger as she could, Acacia Courtney stepped boldly, but quietly toward the mare. And the animal turned to her new friend, allowing her to clip on the lead rope—an acquiescence she had not made for anyone at the feedlot, and walked willingly toward the waiting van.

“Clipping that lead rope to her halter was a big moment in my life,” says Courtney, 21. “There were so many horses who wouldn’t make it out of there, and there was a big trailer backed up to a loading ramp, ready to take them to slaughter. It was very chilling.”

Perfect Love
Nickname: Pearl
Sire: Perfect
Dam: Lovin’nonna
Foal date: April 2, 2006
Like fleeing a battle zone on the last flight out, Courtney walked the mare to her family’s horse trailer and led her on.

Sherrie Courtney, who often describes her daughter as Snow White because animals and children flock to her, watched the exchange and worries the animal might spook or bolt. But she didn’t. And the mother gladly paid $50 above the meat price to buy Perfect Love for $417.

With the animal safely aboard, the door closed and locked, they both hopped into the front seat of the truck, and made the two-hour journey home to Connecticut.

By the time they unloaded the mare and peeled the meat label from her hind end, two lives had changed. For the mare, a life of comfort and love awaited as she was retrained to be Courtney’s riding horse.

The mare took a lot of patience. For months, she stood at the back of her stall as though willing herself to be invisible, Sherrie Courtney says. “She wouldn’t look at me when I came into her stall, but she really seemed to have an affinity for my daughter,” she says. “Acacia was the one who broke through to her by loving her, hugging her and spending about two years working with her.”

Stopping for coffee after leaving the Camelot auction, Acacia stepped up on the horse trailer to say hello to her new friend.

Stopping for coffee after leaving the Camelot auction, Acacia stepped up on the horse trailer to say hello to her new friend.

The younger Courtney also saw her life altered from the experience.

The tall, slim young woman who has competed for and won pageant titles as well as equestrian awards —she was named Miss New York City last year—has embraced horse-welfare advocacy as a central mission.

When she was 18, Acacia Courtney started a small nonprofit Racing For Home, Inc., and successfully rescued and rehomed 15 horses in three years. It is work she is proud of, so important that when she competes June 28th for Miss Connecticut, she plans to discuss her experiences at Camelot and her life spent helping horses like Perfect Love.

The Fordham University communications student hopes to use the platform to discuss the urgent needs of unwanted horses.

“There are so many horses who need a home,” she says. “Some of the most rewarding moments I’ve had with my horse have been in the show ring, when I tell people that this beautiful horse who looks so flashy is a half-blind ex-racehorse we rescued from a feedlot.”

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Author’s note: Off-TrackThoroughbreds.com launched e-commerce site Off-TrackProducts this month. In it, we offer two saddle pad styles and a show cooler with a sporty logo. The logo features an oval, symbolic of a Thoroughbred’s race career, and the horse running free. Please check it out if you wish. And thank you for enjoying the blog!

In Hawaii a hot T-bred is now a cool sport horse

African Wildfire, an Illinois-bred now living in Hawaii, has adapted nicely to a land of wild pigs, soothing lakes and a constant  summer season.

African Wildfire, an Illinois-bred now living in Hawaii, has adapted nicely to a land of wild pigs, soothing lakes and a constant summer season.

After three years of persistence, a 15-year-old Honolulu equestrian and her spirited Illinois-bred Thoroughbred have proved the skeptics wrong.

People who used to wonder if Jenna Neher wasn’t a bit “over horsed” by her off-track Thoroughbred African Wildfire, are now commenting on how “good” the plain bay is for his young rider as the two compete at the USDF’s second level and jump three-foot courses.

“At first he was a hot Thoroughbred, and a lot of people thought he was a lot of horse for me,” Neher says. “But we’ve come such a long way since I got him in 2012 … it’s to the point that every clinician or show judge who pulls me aside has told me that they really like him, and they can see how much he wants to please me.”

African Wildfire
Barn name: Izzy
Sire: Tiger Tiger
Dam: Western Wildfire
Foal date: May 18,2000
This is high praise for the tremendous accomplishments the pair has had training and showing, not to mention the transition African Wildfire has made going from the chilly Illinois climate to the warm, balmy islands where wild pigs and truly free-range chickens wander.

“I think he was a little bit in shock when he first got here because I think he was waiting for the seasons to change, and they never did. It stayed summer. And the wild pigs and chickens especially got to him,” she says. “But now he loves it! And he especially loves it when it rains; he loves to slide in the mud.”

African Wildfire was shipped to Hawaii on Oct. 17, 2012 following an exhaustive search in the New Jersey area. Neher and her mother Lynne Wooddell tried many prospects, and several breeds, before learning about Wildfire by word of mouth. On a second trip from Hawaii to the mainland, Neher tried the 16.3-hand plain bay and found him so “perfect” that they flew him by FedEx back to Hawaii. (Please see an earlier story on African Wildfire).

Lynne Wooddell enjoys a splash in the lake aboard her daughter's horse.

Lynne Wooddell enjoys a splash in the lake aboard her daughter’s horse.

Once Wildfire landed however, the real work began. Neher enlisted the aid of cowboy dressage trainer Harrison Chong to teach her effective methods to correct behavior, and encourage Wildfire to settle into his work. Neher’s goals this year include getting her dressage score into the 60s, and earning a C3 rating at Pony Club.

And when they’re not practicing their skills in the ring, or across the Hawaiian countryside, Wildfire is sinking into the cool, inviting waters of a nearby lake.

“At the Dillingham Ranch where we practice, there’s a huge open field with a lake in the middle,” she says. “We’ll gallop around the field, going over huge fly jumps, and over obstacles on a hill, and when we’re done, I take off the tack, hop back on him bareback, and we go for a swim.”

In the land of lush, tropical abundance, Wildfire has found his second career on an island where it’s summer all the time, and where a sparkling clean lake soothes both horse and rider alike.

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Author’s note: Off-TrackThoroughbreds.com launched e-commerce site Off-TrackProducts this month. In it, we offer two saddle pad styles and a show cooler with a sporty logo. The logo features an oval, symbolic of a Thoroughbred’s race career, and the horse running free. Please check it out if you wish. And thank you for enjoying the blog!

Rick Capone pens book on Old Friends

Kentucky photographer and sports writer Rick Capone pens a book about Old Friends. Photo by Rick Capone

Kentucky photographer and sports writer Rick Capone pens a book about Old Friends. Photo by Rick Capone

Kentucky photographer Rick Capone, who has captured hundreds of gorgeous images of ex-racehorses frolicking at Old Friends Equine, has now found the words to describe the amazing undertaking to create the world-renowned home for retired Thoroughbreds.

In his new book, History of Old Friends, A Home for Retired Thoroughbreds, Capone tells the story of Michael Blowen’s farm. In addition, he includes biographies of the farm’s famous residents, including Sunshine and Creator, the first two residents to be flown from Japan to the sprawling retirement facility.

In this week’s Clubhouse Q&A, Capone discusses his background, the book, and his inspiration for the book, which is due to be released by History Press in early August.

Q: You never trained to be a photographer or with horses. Yet, you’ve published your photos and the story of one of the most compelling Thoroughbred centers out there.

Before my father died of lung cancer, after my mother died in 1972, my father and I used to take a yearly road trip. And the first leg of the trip always went from Philadelphia to Lexington. We used to drive at sunset through farm country, and I always thought it was so beautiful.

Sunshine Forever is one of the horses retired at Old Friends. Photo by Rick Capone

Sunshine Forever is one of the horses retired at Old Friends. Photo by Rick Capone

At the time, I had a pocket instamatic camera. And, we’d be driving around and I’d yell, “Stop the car now!” And, he’d say, “But there’s a car behind us!” And, I’d say, “I don’t care, I want to take a picture of a horse!”

Q: At this point in life, you had worked for many years as a technical writer— 10 at IBM— and had become a sports writer covering American volleyball. How did the horse photography take hold?

I eventually landed in Kentucky in 2006 writing for the American Volleyball Coaches Association, which was the pinnacle of sports writing. I started going out on Sunday mornings to the horse park to take pictures of horses. I never trained as a photographer, but my father always said I had the eye, that I just needed better equipment. So I bought a Nikon D-90, which I still shoot with today.

Q: A walk in 2008 around the Old Friends property pulled you in deeper.

The natural beauty of horses in the Kentucky bluegrass inspired Rick Capone to pick up his camera.

The natural beauty of horses in the Kentucky bluegrass inspired Rick Capone to pick up his camera.

I had just finished reading Horses of Proud Spirit, which is a great book about sanctuary horses, and was walking around Old Friends. Reading the book and seeing Old Friends gave me the idea to try to write something about Michael Blowen’s farm. So I wrote a little proposal, drove up to Old Friends, and handed to a man and asked him if he could please give it to Michael Blowen. That’s when he said he was Michael Blowen, and he promised to take a look at it. He called me a few weeks later and said he loved the idea. And after that, we started doing Saturday morning interviews.

Q: The book project was put on hold for a while, you became Michael’s go-to photographer, and then he got a serendipitous phone call.

After about the fifth interview we slowed down for a while. But he really liked my photography, so I became his unofficial “official” photographer. But it all came full circle when History Press contacted approached Michael about doing a book, and he pointed them to me.

History of Old Friends, A Home for Retired Thoroughbreds is due out in early August. Old Friends Equine is taking advanced orders, and it will be available at local bookstores, and on Amazon. Fifty percent of sale profits will be donated to Old Friends. Capone’s photographs can be viewed at www.kentuckyhorsephotos.com

 

A note from the blogger:  We’re offering a saddle pad with sporty original T-BRED logo for sale on our new e-commerce site, Off Track Products.