Rood & Riddle revamps Wellington hospital

Dr. Raul Bras of Rood & Riddle is among the highly skilled team offering services at the revamped facility in Wellington, Fla. Photo courtesy Lisa Lancaster

Dr. Raul Bras of Rood & Riddle is among the highly skilled team offering services at the revamped facility in Wellington, Fla. Photo courtesy Lisa Lancaster

Rood & Riddle Equine Hospital recently announce it opened the doors of its revamped Wellington facility to clients on Nov. 18.

The world-renowned equine hospital, which is in the process of updating the current facility with a new surgical center, is looking forward to supporting the equestrian community of Florida by providing emergency and elective surgical procedures, as well as advanced diagnostic imaging, internal medicine, neurology, podiatry, and ambulatory services, according to a press release. The treatment center is located on SouthShore Boulevard in Wellington.

“We are excited to expand our services to Wellington on a year round basis,” said managing partner Scott Pierce, DVM. “The addition of the Wellington property allows us to better serve our many clients who compete in Florida every year, both in sport horse activities and racing.”

Pierce added that the entire team of seasoned veterinarians and technicians are eager to bring Rood & Riddle’s world-class, reputable veterinary care to the competitive equestrian community in Wellington and south Florida.

Rood & Riddle Equine Hospital is revamping its Wellington, Fla. facility and opened its doors to clients over the weekend.

Rood & Riddle Equine Hospital is revamping its Wellington, Fla. facility and opened its doors to clients over the weekend.

And the state-of-the-art facility, which is on target to be completed in early 2017, will offer much, including five large-patient stalls, an induction and recovery stall, transfer area, surgical suite, client viewing area, and a treatment room. All of the amenities of the new facility will be climate controlled and continuously staffed. Rood & Riddle veterinarians will be performing all treatments in the existing surgical suite and induction/recovery stall while the new facility is being completed.

Board certified surgeon Jose Bras, DVM, MS, Dipl. ACVS, arrived on Nov. 18 in Wellington, ready to accept individual appointments. The team is also equipped to offer 24/7 emergency referrals.

In addition to emergencies and other horse care, the team will provide elective surgeries, and a wide range of diagnostic imaging services as well as internal medicine and neurology consultations with Steve Reed, DVM, Dipl. ACVIM and podiatry services with Scott Morrison, DVM, and Raul Bras, DVM, CJF.

Rood & Riddle Equine Hospital in Wellington is located at 5320 S. Shore Blvd. Wellington, FL 33449. To make an appointment or in the event of an emergency, please call 561-383-5437.

Pikulski: All horses matter, deserve happiness

Diana Pikulski has been a champion for the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation and its horses for decades.

Diana Pikulski has been a champion for the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation and its horses for decades.

Diana Pikulski’s unwavering commitment to 825 ex-racehorses in the care of the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation is, in part, an extension of her core belief in the sanctity of animal life, a powerful feeling dating back to childhood and a memory of lamb slaughter.

She was 12 years old when she and her family visited a farm to buy ducks, and she unexpectedly saw lambs being slaughtered.

Decades later, she vividly recalls the scene that changed her life.

“I became a vegetarian after that, because once I made the connection between what I saw that day and the food on my plate, I said, this is not food for me,” says Pikulski, the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation (TRF) vice president for external affairs.

The lifelong animal lover did not set out to become the mainstay of the nation’s oldest and largest Thoroughbred charity. Though her childhood was spent riding horses, and she rescued her first from a New Jersey auction as a teenager, Pikulski had a practical career goal. After earning a degree from Vermont Law School, she became a private-practice attorney and public defender, doing both for a decade.

Pikulski makes a friend at the TRF at James River.

Pikulski makes a friend at the TRF at James River.

In her off hours, however, Pikulski groomed Thoroughbred show horses—”That’s what everyone rode back then.” And she began volunteering for the TRF after meeting the foundation’s founder and visionary Monique S. Koehler. “I first met Monique when I was in high school,” she says. “I got a summer job in college helping her, and when I graduated law school, I became a volunteer and  joined the board. So I served 10 years as a volunteer before I decided that this was the work I wanted to do full time.”

In this week’s Clubhouse Q&A, Pikulski discusses the work and challenges in a career spent watching over the horses protected by the country’ oldest and largest Thoroughbred charity.

After volunteering for 10 years, Pikulski closed her law practice and joined the TRF in 1997. And from that day on, she has held an integral role in the organization as it serves nearly 900 retired racehorses.

What is the racing industry’s biggest challenge?

One of the many scenes of horse-human interaction that inspires Pikulski in her work at the TRF.

One of the many scenes of horse-human interaction that inspires Pikulski in her work at the TRF.

The biggest challenge with aftercare is identifying and keeping track of the horses in need. There are so many people involved in this now; awareness has really grown among people in the industry. There are many people who are making sure the horse they own, train or breed, end up in a good place. But, there are still so many horses who fall through the cracks. There’s no legal process for tracking a horse once it starts in the business, so this is a real challenge.

The racing industry has come a long way. Most racing jurisdictions now have aftercare programs.

The TRF really stepped up early to try to help.

Monique S. Koehler was a true pioneer in the Thoroughbred aftercare world. We were a real experiment. We wanted to see how ex-racehorses would do, after their careers ended, and they were turned out to live in a herd. What we found is that they do great, even the ones that are only pasture sound. They live very happily, well into their late 20s and early 30s.

The TRF herd in Vermont enjoys a little lunch.

The TRF herd in Vermont enjoys a little lunch.

The idea to save horses all goes back to Monique. She’s a total animal lover, and when she learned that there were tens of thousands of Thoroughbreds going to slaughter then, many more than end up slaughtered today, she couldn’t believe it. She read an article about a woman named Daphne Collins and her effort to try to find homes for racehorses whose racing careers had ended.

And she founded the TRF in 1982 with the mission to “save Thoroughbred horses no longer able to compete on the racetrack from possible neglect, abuse and slaughter.”

The TRF’s prison/racehorse program Second Chances is something to see. You’ve talked about how amazing it is to see inmates and OTTBs working and learning from each other.

I regularly visit our farms, and the horses and inmates are what keep me going everyday. When I’m trying to raise money for the Foundation, even though it’s hard to pick up the phone to ask sometimes, it’s these people and horses I’m thinking about when I do ask. I know there’s something really amazing taking place at these farms, and that horses who can no longer race are helping people and inmates in incredible ways.

What’s one of your best memories of watching the inmates interact with OTTBs?

A member of the TRF's Second Chances program bonds with a Thoroughbred.

A member of the TRF’s Second Chances program bonds with a Thoroughbred.

We used to have a juvenile detention center in Baltimore, and one time I was down visiting, and I looked out and saw all these young men walking around with their horses. They treated them like dogs. They’d walk them around with a lead shank on, taking them from one little spot to graze for another. Others were brushing their horses as they grazed, and the scene just struck me.

They seemed so proud of their horses, and they spoke about them like they were their personal pets. They’d tell me about the ones they needed to keep separated because they were territorial and would kick at each other, and al the while, they’d be dragging these horses around this field, and the horses were totally happy to be dragged around with these boys, just out enjoying their day.

You’ve said these relationships help make the case for the TRF’s value to donors.

One of the keys to fundraising is to show donors the amazing things their contributions make possible. I love to take them out to visit our farms, so they can see first hand what we’re doing for the horse’s life, or in the case of our prison farms, for the horse and inmates.

We’re a charity that is here for the horse’s whole life. Even if they get adopted, should anything go wrong, for instance, if the owner gets into financial trouble, or doesn’t do a good job taking care of the animal, we always take the horse back. Our commitment is to be with this horse for the rest of its life. So our costs, which includes running the entire organization, the farms, worker’s compensation, etc. makes fundraising and donations incredibly important.

Enjoying a moment with Downgoesfrazier.

Enjoying a moment with Downgoesfrazier.

Our horse-care budget alone is $2 million a year. It sounds like a lot of money, but if you divide that by the roughly 825 horses we have, that’s approximately $2,500 per horse a year. That’s not a lot of money to take care of one horse.

We try to be creative with our fundraising because there’s a thing called Sanctuary Syndrome, where people get donor fatigue. We try to make it interesting for them. This is why we’ve been offering donors a chance to sponsor an individual horse in the herd. Once people actually meet the horse they’re sponsoring, and they discover their unique, individual personalities, it gives meaning to the animal lovers who are helping our horses. We have a herd of about 825 horses. That’s 825 individuals with their own personalities. Every horse matters to us. When we get this across to people, they stay interested.

What reasons do you have for optimism?

 There have been some real positive changes in the Thoroughbred industry to help take care of the horses. The Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance, the Jockey Club and individual race tracks going back to Sam Elliott at Suffolk Downs, who accepted the reality that if the racing business is going to succeed, we have to take good care of the animals.

I talk to people in the industry daily who are committed to figuring that out. The Thoroughbred Daily News and their ownership, the sales companies like Fasig-Tipton have been helping the TRF. I just see a positive change in how aftercare is thought of now. It used to be hard to convert people in the beginning. Now just about everybody is on board, and they want to make it work. And I think meeting the horses makes you realize that all these horses matter.

—Pikulski encourages horse lovers to come and visit the herd at the TRF. Please contact them (and consider a donation!) by visiting: www.trfinc.org.

Three Angels, a horse for whom love conquers all

Three Angels and Laurie Pagliarini Tuozzolo recently appeared at Equine Affaire after a long, long road.

Three Angels and Laurie Pagliarini Tuozzolo recently appeared at Equine Affaire after a long, long road.

With funny ears and a habit of placing her muzzle on her owner’s face when being spoken to, a racemare who spent her racing years in obscurity has emerged into the spotlight.

Three Angels, a 12-year-old bay who ran primarily at Suffolk Downs in Boston before retiring together with her former groom Laurie Pagliarini Tuozzolo, recently participated in an OTTB breed demo at Equine Affaire.

In and of itself, the flatwork and the venue were hardly the stuff of the Olympics, but the path to that show ring, fraught with uncertainty and a life-threatening illness, was worth far more than medals and ribbons. And it proved to Tuozzolo that the work and worry expended to help the “gentle, elegant horse” find a post-racing place in the world, was worth every hurdle.

Three Angels
Sire: Halos and Horns
Dam: Skip’s Mystic, by Skip Trial
Foal date: March 25, 2005
Earnings: $25,732 in 44 starts
“Equine Affaire for me was so emotional,” she says. “To be there, after what we’ve been through, was just incredible. I wanted Angel to be at Equine Affaire because, to me, she is the perfect representative of the breed. She has been through so much, and overcome so many obstacles, but she never lost her heart or her passion or her drive. My goal is to show everybody what a wonderful horse you can get off the racetrack.”

Through good times and bad, Angel was a horse of a lifetime for Tuozzolo. Scooped up in 2011 after the one-time groom learned the mare had retired from racing and needed a home, the horse took sick almost immediately after arriving at Tuozzolo’s Rhode Island farm.

Recalling the nights she slept on a makeshift bed of packaged shavings placed outside Three Angel’s quarantine stall, Tuozzolo explains how the mare couldn’t catch a break, from the moment she stepped off the van.

Laurie and Three Angels started training in ernest for hunter/jumpers last year.

Laurie and Three Angels started training in ernest for hunter/jumpers last year.

“After she arrived in March 2011, I noticed that evening she wasn’t eating and she was lying down a lot in her stall. So I took her temperature with an old-school mercury thermometer, and her temp was through the roof. That’s when I packed her feet in ice to prevent laminitis and called the vet,” she says. “The vet discovered a lump under her chin, which grew to the size of an orange before it burst and finally drained.”

At the lowest point, Tuozzolo feared the mare would succumb to the illness. She slept outside her stall for two nights, and attended to the horse with round-the-clock applications of hot compresses and Epson salts to flush the open sores. “I was so afraid I was going to lose her that I lined up three bags of shavings to make a bed for myself, and slept outside her stall under one of her blankets,” she says. “When she was lying down in her stall, I would sit in there with her, and she’d put her head on my lap. It was very moving.”

It was as if the animal knew she could trust her old friend.

“I first met Angel in 2008. I noticed right away she had this gentle, elegant quality about her. She would literally put her muzzle against my mouth while I was talking to her, and just breathe,” she recalls.

Laurie was tearful after riding Three Angels for the crowd at Equine Affaire as an emcee read her story.

Laurie was tearful after riding Three Angels for the crowd at Equine Affaire as an emcee read her story.

For weeks the mare accepted her care and comfort until in May 2011, she was finally free of the Strangles. But soon after, she developed scratches on her hind legs, a common skin disease in horses.

After she was given a year off to heal, Three Angels was put into training with Kristin McCaffrey. “Kris has been our guiding light through this whole thing to get her retrained and to motivate me,” Tuozzolo says. “Kris looked right past the split ear and her bowed leg and saw Angel’s heart and soul.”

After a long slog through lessons, Angel claimed some ribbons last year at a few schooling shows. And last week, she entered the show ring at Equine Affaire with the aplomb of a show horse.

“When we entered the Coliseum I leaned forward and whispered to her, and she flicked her ear back at me, as if she said, ‘We got this.’ And in that moment I realized that after I cared for her all this time, she would take care of me,” Tuozzolo says. “This whole process has taught me that time heals the wounds and love heals the scars.”