Makeover winner: ‘Any horse can do this’

Ontario nurse Lindsey Partridge and her OTTB Soar were named this year's winners of America's Most Wanted after intense competition in Kentucky.

Ontario nurse Lindsey Partridge and her OTTB Soar were named this year’s winners of America’s Most Wanted after intense competition in Kentucky.

Lindsey Partridge and her Thoroughbreds were said to be “the train nobody saw coming.”

After winning the highest honors at the TCA Thoroughbred Makeover in Kentucky this past weekend, the Ontario nurse and her two spontaneously purchased OTTBs— Soar and Lionofwallstreet—returned to Canada after a weekend spent wowing Thoroughbred fans with Freestyle routines that helped proved that an off-track Thoroughbred can do just about anything.

Her gray mare Soar, who she renamed Kahleesi, was named America’s Most Wanted Thoroughbred, after putting in a routine that included a demonstration of bridleless riding and a range of gaits and skills.

Soar
New name:Kahleesi
Sire: Trajectory
Dam: Pyrenee
Foal date: Jan. 31, 2007
Earnings: $86,626 in 45 starts
Though the mare flew under the radar and was not widely known prior to her performance at competitive trail riding and the Freestyle, she quickly caught the attention of judges who ultimately determined that she, above the nearly 200 other competitors, was among the very best.

“She’s a horse anybody can ride,” Partridge says. “She could have been anybody’s most wanted Thoroughbred. Kids can ride her. And she can do anything.”

In this week’s Clubhouse Q&A, Partridge discusses her training process, which started with two stranger OTTBs (Soar and Lionofwallstreet)—animals she purchased without taking test rides first—and concluded with victories at the Kentucky Horse Park last weekend.

Q: Why didn’t you take a test ride on your two OTTBs before you bought them?

After Soar performed two Freestyles that demonstrated a range of skills, it was the mare's ride-ability that made her most worthy of the title. Photo by Megan Stapley

After Soar performed two Freestyles that demonstrated a range of skills, it was the mare’s ride-ability that made her most worthy of the title. Photo by Megan Stapley

The way I train a horse, I build a relationship first, so it doesn’t matter how they act when I meet them. It doesn’t matter if they’re bucky or crazy. As long as they’re not emotionally damaged or dangerous, I can work with any horse because I train them to do whatever they’re comfortable doing. This is how I learned that my chestnut Lionofwallstreet wouldn’t be a good jumper. It took 15 minutes trying to cross a pole on him. It was a huge catastrophe. He also wasn’t super athletic or agile with his feet, so it wasn’t fair to try to do a 3-foot course on him. He was too slow for barrel racing. And he was wormy and emaciated when I got him, with ulcers in his mouth, so doing dressage on him didn’t seem fair either, due to the collection required. He was too sore and tight.

Then I tried working him with obstacles and he just loved it. He got to ride on a loose rein and he was curious about the obstacles and having fun.

Soar, on the other hand, could do it all. If I could have, I would have signed her up for everything (at the Makeover). She could rip around the barrels, do flying changes, counter canters, jumpers—she snaps her knees up so nicely.

I decided to put them in the same classes because it was easier to trailer them to the same event.

Q: Soar really stole the show. Please tell me about that.

Partridge and Soar join the other teammate, Lionofwallstreet, a chestnut OTTB who put in an amazing Freestyle.

Partridge and Soar join the other teammate, Lionofwallstreet, a chestnut OTTB who put in an amazing Freestyle.

The sponsors were watching her all weekend and told me afterwards that they fell in love with her watching her first freestyle. The funny thing is that my freestyle didn’t go as planned. In the first one, I didn’t get my cue before the music started, and the music cut out. In the second one, they played the wrong song, so I ran out of music before I was ready. I’d been so focused on my pattern that I didn’t notice right away that it was the wrong song!

When I realized I was running out of music I took the bridle off and we finished up. Afterwards, everybody got two minutes to talk to the crowd. And I said that she was a horse anybody could ride

Q: You’re actually a jumper rider by training, but on Soar you went Western, doing barrels and bridleless riding. This decision reflects your approach to training.

All of these Thoroughbreds can be like this, that’s the crazy thing. The real key is you have to get the horse’s mind connected to you. You actually need to build a connection to that horse. They need to know that you’re going to be kind to them, but that you’re the leader. Some people rush them, and the horse stops trying. Then there’s the flipside, with people who are too focused on loving their horse, and are afraid to ask too much of them. These riders are fearful their horse won’t love them back. But what a horse needs is a strong leader. If you’re afraid to ask your horse to do a thing, they become afraid of you.

About Lindsey Partridge: This year’s winner of America’s Most Wanted Thoroughbred is a full-time nurse and equestrian. She is a Centered Riding Level 1 coach, a Gold Level Natural Horsemanship coach/trainer, and a Parelli Level 3 graduate and an Equine Canada Rider Level 8. The 30-year-old rider published the book, Natural Horsemanship: Answering the What, Why and How.

Jan Kees: Lived 15 years in a stall, then free

Jan Kees raced 101 times and worked as a track pony before retiring from racetrack life at age 17.

Jan Kees raced 101 times and worked as a track pony before retiring from racetrack life at age 17.

Jan Kees spent nearly two decades locked in a stall, leaving only to train, race, or accompany other racehorses to the starting gate.

He ground out 101 starts in the 1990s, ending one career and promptly beginning his next as a track pony, without so much as a breather in between.

And yet, despite the toll on his body, which left his knees and ankles the size of grapefruits, Jan Kees was a prize of a horse, a “real gentleman” who entered retirement with Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation (TRF) board member Leslie Priggen roughly six years ago.

“He was the absolute shining example of the best of what we do … we take horses who don’t have another option, and that’s why I love the TRF,” Priggen says. “What amazed me most about this horse was his attitude. His life, in some ways, represented the worst case. I just couldn’t believe that by the time I adopted him, he was a 17-year-old horse who hadn’t had a life.”

Jan Kees
Sire: Broad Brush
Dam: Carrie’s Dream, by Stop the Music
Foal date: May 19, 1989
Earnings: $227,709 in 101 starts
It may not have been much of an existence, but it was during his waning years at Suffolk Downs that he found his strongest ally.

Older exercise rider and pony boy Filipe Sosa, who started off galloping the gelding for owner Michael Gill before eventually acquiring the horse for use as a pony, formed a strong bond with the horse over morning coffee and doughnuts.

When the 72-year-old horseman’s own health deteriorated, he approached Suffolk Downs trainer and Thoroughbred advocate Lorita Lindemann, and begged her to find the horse a home, Lindemann says.

“He came to me crying, with the pony’s lead rope in his hands,” she says. “He said he was sick himself and couldn’t pony anymore, and he knew that Jan Kees had nowhere to go.”

He rolled for three days after experiencing freedom from a stall for the first time.

He rolled and rolled and rolled after experiencing freedom from a stall.

After hearing his story, Priggen was moved to adopt the horse herself. He arrived at her Upstate New York farm on a blustery December night. Unfazed by the travel and the strange location, he calmly walked up the driveway and settled into his stall.

His new home featured a door that opened out onto a paddock. The first time Priggen opened that door to allow him to exit, she had to coax the confused horse with carrots.

“I remember how he looked at the stall door and he looked back at me, and it was as though he said to me: ‘you left that door open you know. You better close it.’ And he did come out … and then he went back in … I told him to go have a run, to go look around.”

When he finally figured it out he took off like a rocket. He galloped up to the fence, circled back to his new guardian, and raced off again.

He lived only three more years after that, dying after developing a nasal tumor. In his final years, he was indulged with warm mash and plain doughnuts and given the freedom to come and go as he pleased.

“The thing about Jan Kees is that he just deserved it so much. He deserved it. I felt so passionately that he should have a really wonderful time at the end of his life,” she says. “And he didn’t have any anger. I’ve seen a lot of horses come in who have real holdover issues from the track, but not him.

“He was just such a cool horse.”

—Off Track Thoroughbreds features occasional stories on the people and horses who make up the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation. To read more about this nonprofit charity, please visit: www.trfinc.org.

Goosebumps at the Kentucky Horse Park

Just one of many riders and Thoroughbreds competing last weekend at the TCA Thoroughbred Makeover. Photo by Megan Stapley and courtesy Jen Roytz

Just one of many riders and Thoroughbreds competing last weekend at the TCA Thoroughbred Makeover. Photo by Megan Stapley and courtesy Jen Roytz

The Kentucky Horse Park was transformed last weekend into an “OTTB melting pot.”

Thoroughbreds of all colors and temperaments gathered in the same arena to be put through their paces in a wide array of post-racing disciplines during the TCA Thoroughbred Makeover. It was enough to give goosebumps to Jen Roytz. The longtime horsewoman, writer and former marketing director for Three Chimneys Farm was gobsmacked.

Thoroughbred ex-racehorses converged on the Kentucky Horse Park to show off their new disciplines. Photo by Megan Stapley and courtesy Jen Roytz

Thoroughbred ex-racehorses converged on the Kentucky Horse Park to show off their new disciplines. Photo by Megan Stapley and courtesy Jen Roytz

“At one point I was sitting in the stands writing some notes for an interview and took a moment to look up and take it all in. In front of me in one arena there were horses preparing for competition in polo, jumpers, barrel racing, dressage, eventing and hunters all in one arena, and all Thoroughbred ex-racers,” Roytz says. “For someone whose career has been built on the backs of these animals (both figuratively and literally), and who is so passionate about the value of these horses beyond the track, it was quite moving.”

She describes the weekend event, which is the culmination of years of hard work by Steuart Pittman of the Retired Racehorse Project, as the “single most collaborative effort” she has witnessed between the Thoroughbred industry and the OTTB equestrian community.

“Everyone had such an upbeat and collaborative approach to the event. When we needed a few extra helping hands, people jumped to assist,” she says, adding, “Some of the biggest names in racing, from farms like Hidden Brook, Lane’s End, Darley, WinStar and more were on hand to cheer their grads.”

Read Roytz’s report on the TCA Thoroughbred Makeover here: http://www.paulickreport.com/horse-care-category/tca-thoroughbred-makeover-an-overwhelming-success/