California Chromies to turn out for OTTBs

California Chrome's connections will turn out for a fundraiser this week to benefit OTTBs. Photo courtesy Thoroughbred Charities of America

California Chrome’s connections will turn out for a fundraiser this week to benefit OTTBs. Photo courtesy Thoroughbred Charities of America

California “Chromies” will join a former major league baseball player to help raise money for Thoroughbred ex-racehorses this week during a fundraising event in California.

Luminaries connected with 2014 Horse of the Year California Chrome will join former ballplayer and TVG analyst Paul Lo Duca on Nov. 2 at Matt Denny’s Ale House in Arcadia, Calif.

“An Evening with Team California Chrome” will feature behind-the-scenes stories and good cheer in a fundraising event to benefit the Thoroughbred Charities of America (TCA).

Frank Taylor, Perry Martin, Art Sherman and Victor Espinoza will discuss the history made by the North American all-time leading earner who is loved worldwide.

Enthusiasm is building for the fundraising event.

Frank Taylor said in a press release, “I look forward to reflecting on the outstanding racing career of California Chrome while raising money for charity.” And Perry Martin added, “It will be a great opportunity to clear up all the myths and misconceptions.”

And Lo Duca, who has stepped up to host the event, added that he is excited to walk down memory lane to discuss some of the finer moments in California Chrome’s astonishing career, which has earned north of $13 million.

Limited tickets are available for $100 per person. Please visit this website: www.tca.org/tcc.html, or call 859-276-4989.

Erin Crady, executive director of the TCA, says she is thrilled to be a part of the event.

“We greatly appreciate the connections of California Chrome for making this very special event possible,” she said in the press release. “California Chrome is an incredible horse and we can’t wait to hear some of the behind the scenes details about his career all while benefitting Thoroughbred Charities of America.”

An escape-artist horse who eats with a spoon

Bridleless Wyatt ponies racehorses by day and eats treats from a spoon or fork in his off hours. Photo by Terri Cage Photography

Bridleless Wyatt ponies racehorses by day and eats treats from a spoon or fork in his off hours. Photo by Terri Cage Photography

In the 16 years since Wyatt the racehorse pony narrowly escaped the slaughterhouse, the funny, opinionated, master of stall-door locks and connoisseur of junk food has been delighting his owner, no end.

Known as Bridleless Wyatt on the tracks where he works with Texas horseman Donna Keen (sans bridle), the beautiful gray she purchased for a song brings humor and delight wherever he goes.

“Everyone knows Wyatt,” she says. “People I don’t know are always coming up and saying, ‘Hey Wyatt!’ And he pricks his ears at the sound of his name” acknowledging the greeting.

Wyatt has been nearly human over the many years they’ve been together, says Keen, who discusses the horse she bought as a 2-year-old from a meat buyer at the Weatherford Horse and Cattle Sale in Texas.

In this week’s Clubhouse Q&A, Keen discusses Wyatt’s fun quirks, strange tastes in food, and how he learned to eat from a spoon!

Q: How did Wyatt come into your life?

I bought him from the (meat buyer) as a 2-year-old. He was a pretty dappled gray with white stockings at the Weatherford Horse and Cattle Sale. The sale isn’t there anymore. Wyatt had already been purchased and was in a corral with other colts. I saw him and found out he’d already been sold for $300, and I asked if I could buy him. The kill buyer wanted to make $200, so we agreed to $500.

He’s been with me ever since. He’s 16 now.

Q: How and why did he transition into working as a bridleless track pony?

Wyatt enjoys a little carrot cake from Donna Keen's spoon.

Wyatt enjoys a little carrot cake from Donna Keen’s spoon.

I ponied on him for several years before this, and taught lessons on him. My son learned to ride on him when he was young. We did a lot together before he started working bridleless, and working as a pony was second nature to him.

I decided to take his bridle off for two reasons. The first was I really wanted to show people how smart horses are, and how easy they are to retrain. But by the time I decided to work bridleless with him, Wyatt was taking his own bridle off by rubbing his ear until it fell off. I could put the bridle on him, and the second I got off him and turned my back, I’d look again he’d have popped it right off over his ear.

Q: His knack for Houdini work also extends to the barn.

The first time I noticed it, I thought someone had forgotten to lock up the horses. I came home and all my horses were out. The next day, I was home when I looked out my window and saw Wyatt opening gates with his nose.

He used his nose to lift the latch, slide it, and then grab the gate and pull it open. He used to go into the barn and let all the horses out of the barn. This is a funny story. One time, he walked down the aisle and let five horses in a row out, before stopping outside of the stall of this one mean mare I had. The day before, the mare had whooped everybody’s asses in the field, so Wyatt stopped in front of her stall and decided not to let her out.

Q: There’s a wonderful photo of Wyatt eating from a spoon. How did he learn to use utensils?

On the job Wyatt keeps an eye on the horses and attracts fans who call to him by name.

On the job Wyatt keeps an eye on the horses and attracts fans who call to him by name.

That picture was taken at Del Mar in 2013. We were having a birthday cake for our horse Matto Mondo and Wyatt started nickering at me to give him a taste. So I gave him a piece of cake off my spoon, and that was it. He eats off a spoon, off a fork. And he’s very particular about his snacks.

Q: How so?

Well first of all, he’ll eat anything but tomatoes. He hates them. If you give him one, he’ll spit it out. For regular food, we give him alfalfa but no grain because he’s too fat. For junk food, his favorites are Nacho cheese Doritos, any kind of doughnut, and muffins. He loves muffins! There was a great agent who worked at Houston Park who used to bring him a bran muffin every morning. As soon as Wyatt heard the trainer’s golf cart, he’d start hollering because he knew he was getting his muffin.

The other day we were having a tortilla and we tried to give him a whole one. But he knows it gets all gummed up, so he handed it back so it could be torn up into bite-sized pieces for him. (Please see video below).

He communicates so well. He nickers with different pitches to let me know if he’s hungry, wants out, or there’s a loose horse on the track. We’ve all learned to pay attention to him at the track, because he’ll notice something sometimes before we do. He’s always watching and he’s great at spotting loose horses.

Q: I have to ask, does he talk?

With the different pitches of nickers and sounds, it’s almost like he talks. I know what he wants at all times.

—Those interested in watching this very special horse work may catch a glimpse of Bridleless Wyatt at the Retama Park, in San Antonia, Texas. And in January he will be working at Sam Houston. * Wyatt’s photos are courtesy Terri Cage Photography, who captured his glamorous side in a photo clinic at Remember Me Rescue in a new, annual clinic and fundraiser for the horse charity.

Mare goes from Fla. shanty to show training

Silver and Smoke has started to train under saddle for a possible show career. She's building up her fitness in 20-minute workouts, and is ridden by Brooks Chernisky.

Silver and Smoke has started to train under saddle for a possible show career. She’s building up her fitness in 20-minute workouts, and is ridden by Brooks Chernisky.

A young, gray mare who nearly died while confined in a shoddy stall in Miami-Dade Florida two years ago has blossomed with the help of her original breeder into a budding lesson pony.

After battling back from starvation that nearly claimed her life, Silver and Smoke, 6, began training two weeks ago with Long Island instructor/trainer Eileen Tobie Delgaudio, and is showing every sign of being a natural show horse.

Silver and Smoke
Sire: Mountbrook
Dam: Quiddich
Foal date: March 5, 2010
“This horse has been through a lot, but she’s damned amazing!” Delgaudio says. “I have personally rehabbed 74 Thoroughbreds off the track myself, and she is one of four who is this quiet. She falls into my hands and sit in my pocket. It took her 20 minutes to figure out what her new job is, and she picked it up immediately. I taught a beginner on her, which is almost unheard of.”

Silver and Smoke came to her new life with the help of her original breeder Danzel Brendemuel.

Silver and Smoke was rescued in 2014 from squalor in Miami-Dade Florida. Shortly after the South Florida SPCA took her in, however, her original breeder swooped in to take her back and return her to health.

Silver and Smoke was rescued in 2014 from squalor in Miami-Dade Florida. Shortly after the South Florida SPCA took her in, however, her original breeder swooped in to take her back and return her to health.

The Florida-based horseman made it her mission to restore the mare to health and find a new career for her after the animal was rescued two years ago.

Smoke was seized along with two other Thoroughbreds by the Miami-Dade police, and transported to the South Florida SPCA. Though the mare was not expected to survive, Brendemeul accepted the challenge and the responsibility. In 2014, she told Off-TrackThoroughbreds.com she was devastated the mare wound up in such a horrible situation, and she vowed the horse would be forever protected.

After regaining 300 pounds and recuperating in a paddock in front of Brendemeul’s house at Classic Bloodstock Farm, the mare’s life has turned around. In January, she gave birth to her first and only foal, Breakfast in Bed, and now she is well on her way to becoming a show horse.

“Our hope is to have her in the show ring by early spring,” Delgaudio says. “She has a home for life. She’s never going anywhere. She will never be sold. Danzel just gave her a new purpose.”

Brendemeul adds, “If it gets to the point where she’s no longer wanted, I’ll take her back. But, everyone just adores her. It’s a good ending to this story. And she looks wonderful.”