19 year old T-bred is Eventing rock star

Valentine manages as Kayla August attends to him.

Valentine manages as Kayla August attends to him.

Valentine, a poorly put together 19-year-old Thoroughbred with knee chips and early stage navicular, is blowing the socks off the competition in Preliminary cross-country throughout the Area 3 Eventing world.

The unlikely sport horse, who once won a race under Jockey Club name R Motel, by “running in terror from the other horses” is never so happy as when he is plunging into water, and soaring over obstacles with his owner Kayla August.

“His thing is Cross Country. He falls asleep before dressage and showing jumping. But put him in a start box and he goes wild,” she says. “At our first one-star, just before the starter said go, he reared and screamed” and they took off running, and haven’t looked back since.

August purchased Valentine, who some deemed dangerous, when he was a scrawny 15 years old. Said to require two hours of lunging before each ride, with August he fit hand-in-glove.

Race name: R Motel
Show name: Valentine
Barn name: Red
Sire: Chateaubay
Dam: Chaka Zulu
Foal date: May 21, 1995
“We clicked right away,” she says. “I remember getting this feeling like I was sitting at home in my saddle, and I had this snapshot in my head of how it would be. It was like he knew what I was asking without me needing to ask.”

Though X-rays on his legs have revealed bone chips in his knees, hocks and ankles, and navicular changes are starting in his front feet, her older gent has only taken two un-sound steps in his life; simultaneous abscesses in both front feet sidelined him once, and a stone bruise, picked up while running a course after throwing a shoe, sidelined him a second time.

“I had no idea the time he threw a shoe. I didn’t find out until we got to the Vet Box, and he was still fine on it and did Stadium Jumping the next day,” she says. “It wasn’t until we got home that he let me know he was sore.”

Valentine is a 19-year-old ex-racehorse Thoroughbred who shows no signs of stopping as an Eventing sport horse. Photo  courtesy of Kayla August.

Valentine is a 19-year-old ex-racehorse Thoroughbred who shows no signs of stopping as an Eventing sport horse. Photo courtesy of Kayla August.

He has done so well climbing the ranks that last March 30 he cleaned up against very fancy Warmbloods at the Full Gallop Farm event in Aiken. “We won it all,” she says. “I was riding against a woman who had a young horse, who was much fancier than my Red. I don’t know how we pulled it off!”

She considered dropping Valentine back down from Preliminary, where he is campaigning now. But he is not a horse who wants to be pulled back, she says. “He jumps Preliminary fences like he’s jumping Intermediate. He just loves it.”

Though the pair is riding out the summer heat away from the competition fields, she plans to enter him at Full Gallop in August or September, and other events in the Area 3 region. Age, to this horse, is a state of mind.

“He’s usually one of the oldest horses and he is not put together well at all, but when he moves, he’s amazing,” she says. “And he shows all those young horses exactly what perfection can look like!”

Author’s note— We are offering a sporty T-BRED saddle pad for sale at our new e-commerce site Off Track Products. Check it out if you’re looking for a new logo to show your Thoroughbred pride!

Weary racehorse comes home to tears, a hug

Megan Kerford searched for Lost Tribute for four years, losing track of him after his last race at Thisteldown. Photo courtesy Morgan Chapman

Megan Kerford searched for Lost Tribute for four years, losing track of him after his last race at Thisteldown. Photo courtesy Morgan Chapman

Goosebumps of pride and peals of laughter celebrated the moment as cameras flashed, and the winning photo was taken. And then all was blighted by the presentation of an ugly red claiming tag, which sucked the breath from Megan Kerford, and dissolved her to tears.

“I went from feeling like we’d won the Kentucky Derby to feeling like I was going to barf,” Kerford says. “Even just thinking back on it now makes me feel horrible. I remember that day like it was yesterday, and how I went into the bathroom at Woodbine (Race Track) and I lied down on the floor and cried.”

And as suddenly as the temperamental chestnut had entered her life, he was gone. Just like that. And from July 2009 until the year 2013, Kerford tried to buy the horse back, followed his every move on a virtual stable, and prayed that he would be OK.

Kerford and Last Tribute blew into Woodbine the previous year. She was recovering from a badly broken hip sustained galloping horses the year before, and he was nursing a sore attitude, snapping at just about everybody.

Last Tribute
Barn name: Alfie
Sire: Tribunal
Dam: M.S. Secret
Foal date: April 12, 2006
Earnings: $76,000, in 38 starts
“I think our story is that same old story you hear about people adopting pets because they need to feel loved and wanted, they need to take care of somebody,” she says. “I’d been an exercise rider and living independently for 10 years. But after my accident, I was taken in by my mother.”

When the chestnut gelding arrived at the shedrow, he was intimidating on the ground, and walked his legs off pacing his confined stall. Nobody else bonded with him, so Kerford offered to play groom.

Ever so slowly, Last Tribute stopped stall walking and pinning his ears, and gratefully accepted her ministrations. “It took about three months before I could (work on) his legs, but over time he calmed down and gained some weight,” she says.

The pair became so tight that when Kerford was cleared to return to riding, he was the first horse she galloped. “He was phenomenal!”

It was no small feat for her to get back in the irons. The year before, in 2008, Kerford sustained a serious injury exercising horses. She was catapulted off a Quarter Horse so fast and so hard that her femur was driven up into her torso. Fortunately it missed her organs, and caused only minor internal bleeding. But her hip sustained a serious break.

Last Tribute ended a long campaign in the arms of an exercise rider who couldn't forget him.

Last Tribute ended a long campaign in the arms of an exercise rider who couldn’t forget him.

By the time she got back in the saddle as Final Tribute’s exercise rider, she had developed such a deep bond with the horse that from the time he got claimed away after that tearful moment in the winner’s circle in July 2009, and for years after, she pined for and tracked the animal’s whereabouts.

In fact, Kerford had a brief brush with him when her trainer tried to claim him back for her, just before he embarked on a four-year campaign of claiming races.

“I was cleaning his stall and getting it ready for him to come back. It was August 2009 and I was listening to the race on the radio before I walked out to meet him after he came off the track,” she says. “On my way, I got a call on my cell telling me we’d been out shook.”

After that, Kerford carried his memory with her for four years. During that time, she entered and graduated from veterinarian school. Her life was full. She groomed great horses, including Canadian Sprinter Hollywood Hits. But she never forgot that one horse. She watched him drop in class on her virtual stable, and she talked about him to all who would listen.

Then last November; the horse mysteriously disappeared from her virtual stable.

And reappeared in a Woodbine shedrow where Kerford’s boyfriend Mike Mehak would surprise her.

“Hey, Megan, I need some help with a horse!” Mehak yelled. And as she rounded the corner and saw the thin, worn horse, she threw her arms around the animal’s neck, and sobbed tears of joy and promised to take care of him.

Please see the video of their reunion here:

SPCA gets UV-A light to ID starved broodmares

Dr. Zachary Franklin of Templeton & Franklin Veterinary Associates examines the tattoo of a mare suspected to be El Belajo.

Dr. Zachary Franklin of Templeton & Franklin Veterinary Associates examines the tattoo of a mare suspected to be El Belajo. Photo by Grace Delanoy

As the South Florida SPCA continues to restore the health of five Thoroughbred broodmares rescued in a sweep by the Miami Dade Agricultural patrol earlier this month, progress is being made toward determining identities of the starving animals.

Mare Maggie’s Shamrock was identified via her perfectly clear lip tattoo, in combination with her bodily markings. However, the remaining four mares, all described as “plain bay” and devoid of markings, have proven more difficult, says Laurie Waggoner, director of ranch operations for South Florida SPCA.

Only tentative identifications have been made of the other mares, but hope is high that confirmation of their Jockey Club names will be made through the use of technology, and even possibly DNA matching, says Waggoner.

The Jockey Club has been in contact with the South Florida SPCA, confirms Rick Bailey, registrar of the Lexington office. “We’re aware of the case, and have had phone calls back and forth,” he says, noting that DNA matching has a high degree of success in horses born in year 2001 or later.

Maggie's Shamrock was in the best condition of the mares. And one mare died a few days after her rescue. Photo by Grace Delanoy

Maggie’s Shamrock was in the best condition of the mares. And one mare died a few days after her rescue. Photo by Grace Delanoy

“We have the DNA type of every Thoroughbred born in those years on file,” he says, noting that if the broodmares gave birth to registered Thoroughbred babies, those records would also be searchable via DNA from a broodmare’s hair sample.

Before the “rare” effort to DNA match is further considered, the South Florida SPCA will first try to use a black light to try to illuminate the unreadable letters and numbers, Waggoner says. The U-VA light is arriving this week, and volunteers will try once again to get a clearer identification.

Meantime, the four mares have been tentatively identified as El Belajo, Victory Snit, The Graceful Saint and Raise Fee.

A sixth mare, who did not have a tattoo, but was identified by experts as a Thoroughbred, was euthanized shortly after she arrived at the rescue farm. Found lying down, the emaciated animal was unable to get to her feet, even after IV drugs were administered to boost her system, Waggoner says.

This beautiful mare is suspected of being either Victory Snit or Raise Fee. Photo by Grace Delanoy

This beautiful mare is suspected of being either Victory Snit or Raise Fee. Photo by Grace Delanoy

“The vet didn’t believe she had colic. She had normal gut sounds and was still passing manure,” she says. “We suspect she may have fallen in her stall and hit her head. And when it became clear to us that there was no way she would be getting up, we made the decision to humanely euthanize her.”

Though the rest of the band is slowly returning to health, it will be some weeks before slow and steady weight gain brings back a healthy appearance, Waggoner says.

“They’re all doing well,” she adds. “They holler for their food and they’re eating every bit of it. Personality wise, they are the nicest, friendliest horses.”

The cost of returning the mares to health is high, especially in the first critical month.

Anyone wishing to donate to the mares may do so by clicking this hyperlink to a South Florida SPCA fundraising campaign.