On “Q” kids, adults find bliss learning to ride

Q One For Two, on left, heads out to foxhunt in a life spent pursuing myriad post-racing disciplines.

Q One For Two, on left, heads out to foxhunt in a life spent pursuing myriad post-racing disciplines.

So quietly, the unassuming little chestnut with flaxen mane has inspired young children to ride, and older folks to grow misty. And given wings to many.

Q One For Two has taught youngsters, including the son of Barbaro’s trainer Michael Matz, and has carried his owner out foxhunting along with some of her friends; he’s made the hunter/jumper show rounds, packing all level of riders, and of late, has tried his luck at barrel racing.

“This horse has done things for people,” says his owner Kelly Conner. “His personality is just so kind and loving. He’s nurturing while he teaches.”

Thinking back on the post-race career of the flashy chestnut who her brother John Conner claimed in May 2005, Conner describes a horse who ground out 83 starts on the track, amassed more than $300,000 in earnings, and still let his hair down after the races.

Q One For Two
Sire: Lac Quimet
Dam: Vale Royale
Foal date: March 14, 1996
Earnings: $304,559, 83 starts
“We trained him at Fair Hill Training Center, and after a race, rather than cold hose him, I’d hop on him bareback and ride him out to a stream he could stand in,” she says. “He just loved the country. And he loved that stream. Even now, he loves to go with the kids who ride him to a stream on our property and let it run through his legs.”

Q, as he is nicknamed, held tight to the hearts of the Conner family, and everyone who met him.

And after his last race was run, the siblings agreed to make a forever home for a horse who had become a part of their family.

“When I first moved to my farm in November 2008, Q was one of the first horses to move in,” she says. “My brother held him at the track until I could get it ready.”

Since then, the broad-shouldered gelding who looks like a Quarter Horse, has packed adults and children around at all levels.

Q waits patiently with one of his child riders.

Q waits patiently with one of his child riders.

“Q has taught 7 year olds to ride, and last summer, Michael Matz’s wife D.D., who’s a neighbor of mine, came to me and said she wanted to find a nice, really safe horse like Q for her son to ride,” she says. “I said to D.D. that he’ll never be for sale, but that she could take him on loan.”

And when he returned to Conner’s farm sometime later on a stormy day, all his young fans and friends who had been temporarily left behind, pestered their parents to bring them to the barn. One girl only asked to put him on the cross ties and brush him.

“Everybody gets so attached to Q. When I was a little kid, all we ever had were Thoroughbreds. When I got this farm, I put in five stalls, and I’ve got five Thoroughbreds in them,” Conner says. “It’s an honor and a privilege to have this horse until the day he dies.”

Race industry steps up for T-bred event

Ken's Kitten, under the guiding hands of owner Nuno Santos, brought a smile of delight to his breeder Kenneth Ramsey. Photo courtesy of Mark Partridge

Ken’s Kitten, under the guiding hands of owner Nuno Santos, brought a smile of delight to his breeder Kenneth Ramsey. Photo courtesy of Mark Partridge

The racing and riding worlds converged with good cheer and optimism April 25 at a powerful Thoroughbreds for All event celebrating the Thoroughbred sport horse.

Six hundred people crowded into West Wind Farm to watch as a failed racehorse with impressive bloodlines did his lineage proud with a startlingly expressive dressage trot. They also listened as Olympic dressage superstar Linda Zang shared tips on how to spot a potential Dressage star among ex-racehorses. And in the end, they energized the partnership between racing and riding communities to support the Thoroughbred in post-racing careers.

“To me, one of the best part was the way both the racing and riding communities came together in an amazing show of support,” says Steuart Pittman, founder of Retired Racehorse Project, and co-host of the third-annual Thoroughbreds for All event. “There was passion from both directions flowing towards the horse. It was amazing.”

Linda Zang and Boyd Martin offer pointers and insights in the 3rd annual Thoroughbreds for All last week.

Linda Zang and Boyd Martin offer pointers and insights in the 3rd annual Thoroughbreds for All last week. Photo courtesy Amy Latka

Ken’s Kitten, a failed racehorse, strutted onto the scene all flash and fire beneath the expert hand of his new owner and trainer, Nuno Santos. (Please see an earlier interview with Santos here). As the expertly bred gelding moved through his demonstration, his former race owner and breeder Kenneth Ramsey watched with pride.

“Seeing the face of Ken Ramsey, and his reaction to this horse, was fantastic. Here you have a guy who is arguably the most successful breeder in the country, who had a horse he expected to be a star, but who was a complete failure on the track,” Pittman says. “And as that horse went dancing around the arena, (Mr. Ramsey) was just bubbling over with excitement.”

And the support of the race community continued when jockey Rosie Napravnik, admittedly nervous as she rode her T-bred Sugar, jumped the pretty gray as her every move was scrutinized by top riders Boyd Martin and Linda Zang. (Please see an earlier story about Sugar here).

“It was great to hear her say how nervous she was about riding in front of all these eventers, and she was telling everyone how she wanted to ride her horse in some events someday,” he adds.

Kentucky Oaks winning jockey Rosie Napravnik jumps her off-track Thoroughbred Sugar during Thoroughbreds for All. Photo courtesy Mark Partridge

Kentucky Oaks winning jockey Rosie Napravnik jumps her off-track Thoroughbred Sugar during Thoroughbreds for All. Photo courtesy of Meghan Stapley Photography

International riding champion and Olympian Boyd Martin was another exciting presence at the event. Injured in a fall earlier this spring, after his wife Silva also suffered a serious concussion in an accident, Martin picked up the phone. He called Pittman to offer his assistance.

“I couldn’t believe it when he called me! If I were he … the last thing I’d be thinking about would be how to help other people, but he did. And the people loved him! He has had 11 four-star horses off-the track” and was a great ambassador.

Linda Zang offered scientific observations about muscle tightness in the topline, shoulders, and behind the elbows of Thoroughbreds, and explained how through proper exercises the movement can go from pokey to stretching fluidity.

The event, co-hosted by New Vocations Thoroughbred Adoption, was the most successful yet. With more attendees and greater participation by the race community, Thoroughbreds for All demonstrated that there are great things in store for ex-racehorse Thoroughbreds.

Kentucky Oaks race honors forgotten war horse

Sgt. Reckless was a hero in the Korean War, fighting alongside fellow Marine Corps troops. She won two Purple Hearts and was officially promoted as staff sergeant. On Friday, the Kentucky Oaks runs the 8th race in her honor.

Sgt. Reckless was a hero in the Korean War, fighting alongside fellow Marine Corps troops. She won two Purple Hearts and was officially promoted as staff sergeant. On Friday, the Kentucky Oaks runs the 8th race in her honor.

Horseracing’s legendary Kentucky Derby weekend, so steeped with tall tales of fabled Thoroughbreds and the glory they brought, will pause for a moment during the Kentucky Oaks Friday to pay tribute to a race-trained mare, so famous in her day, so forgotten by history.

Reckless, a race-trained Korean filly who earned two Purple Hearts and was officially granted the rank of staff sergeant in the U.S. Marine Corps will have a race named and run in her honor during the 8th race of the Kentucky Oaks.

And her story, which author Robin Hutton hopes will take its place among the legendary tales of Seabiscuit and Secretariat, is presented in her forthcoming book, which documentary filmmaker Victoria Racimo is marketing to HBO.

“When I first came across her story eight years ago, the first thing that came to mind was why haven’t I heard of this horse before? She should have had at least three movies done about her,” Hutton says. “But when I Googled her name … there was nothing on her. It was a travesty, and I started writing a screenplay, and later, the book.”

Victoria Racimo, left, and Robin Hutton, shown next to a tribute to Sgt. Reckless, will attend the Kentucky Oaks to celebrate the war hero horse.

Victoria Racimo, left, and Robin Hutton, shown next to a tribute to Sgt. Reckless, will attend the Kentucky Oaks to celebrate the war horse.

Sgt. Reckless was a household name in the 1950s. Her heroics in the Korean War earned her media coverage that rivaled attention bestowed on other famous animals, including Lassie and Seabiscuit. And a 1990s Life Magazine listed Sgt. Reckless among 100 American heroes, alongside George Washington and Abraham Lincoln.

It was in battle, that Sgt. Reckless proved so brave, making 51 trips —on her own — through 35 miles of rice paddies to deliver ammunition and supplies to her fellow Marines. She was trained to step over communications lines, get down at the eruption of incoming fire, and ignore the sounds of battle.

She shielded fellow Marines from fire, and was twice injured in battle.

When the war ended, she was brought to the United States to live out her retirement years at Camp Pendleton in California, the site of a promotional ceremony for her in which 1,700 troops marched in her honor.

On Friday, as a short documentary of Sgt. Reckless is aired for race fans at Churchill Downs, Hutton and Racimo hope to inspire a new generation of fans for the forgotten hero. And the service of the 13-hand mare will underscore the great collaborations, throughout history, between man and horse.

Sgt. Reckless carried out 51 missions in the Korean War,  bring supplies and ammunition to her fellow soldiers.

Sgt. Reckless carried out 51 missions in the Korean War, bringing supplies and ammunition to her fellow soldiers.

“Here was a horse who was supposed to be a racehorse, and was actively training in Korea when the war broke out. The Marines bought her, trained her to carry ammunition, and she fights in a war. She wins two Purple Hearts, comes to America, and now we’re honoring her at America’s most famous racetrack,” Racimo says. “Here is a horse that has done so much for this country” and if anybody deserves to have their name up in lights, it is Sgt. Reckless.

Hutton agrees that Reckless’ name should spoken in the same breath as Secretariat and Seabiscuit.

No newcomer to the world of inspiring stories, having spent 35 years as the writing partner of Tom Laughlin (screenwriter and director of the famous 1970s Billy Jack films), Hutton says that upon hearing the Sgt. Reckless story, she got goose bumps.

“When I first mentioned the story to Bob Evans of Churchill Downs, he had never heard it. But as soon as he heard it, he was also excited by her story,” Hutton says. “Her story deserves this kind of notice. Hers is one of the true horse stories, and by the time we’re done” with the book and movie project “we’re going to make her as famous as Secretariat and Seabiscuit!”

Hutton has now written the screenplay and book Sgt. Reckless America’s War Horse, which is due out Aug. 25.