The first equine rescue I (Kym) did was about twenty years ago
and was a Shetland Pony. My father had been talking
to a former neighbor and somehow the subject of how difficult
it was to get a farrier in the area.
The other man said something about not being able
to find anyone to do his kids' pony's feet and it set
off a bell in my father's head. He realized that this
pony probably hadn't been cared for in awhile, so he
offered to have our farrier (who came
out from Maine, she's the cousin of
my sister's husband) drop by his place and do
him.
After she did our horses, she, a friend of
mine who worked for my father at the barn (who I will call M for
now), and I all went to VT to check
out this pony. There were no people home
at all, they had left a blank check on the kitchen table
and a note for the farrier to just fill it out when she was done.
There were animals...chickens, turkeys
and we found this little, misshapen brown/black pony
hiding in the lower level of a decrepit barn.
Sure enough, his hooves were like rockers.
He was also starving to death, his little
ribs showing and his narrow chest and hips showing that he'd
probably been malnourished his whole life. He had a
halter on him which was
so tight there were groves in his face from
it. First thing the farrier did was slip knife into
the halter and cut it off. Then she took
off what she could of the hooves, but at that
point they were so long that it would take several
trimmings to be normal, the sole had to be
worked back slowly. We noted the little lumps on
the side of his face and she was very sure his
teeth were really bad and these lumps were from damage
done from inside his mouth. His hair was patchy
with rain rot and a chicken lice infestation (chicken lice
don't normally infest horses, as their skin is
normally too thick for them to bite through...this
is how poor his condition was). The little guy was docile
and sweet through the whole thing. She filled out the
check for twice her usual amount (after all, there was
twice the work), left a note that the feet would
need attention in just a couple of weeks and that the teeth
needed done, and we deposited the cut halter in
the trash, with part hanging over the edge so
they wouldn't miss it. We figured that they were
ashamed of his condition and didn't want to be
confronted...and we were frustrated that we couldn't confront
them, indeed!
We left and tried to figure out what to do.
At the time, there really weren't any rescues that
took care of horses in the area. I
don't even think the cat and dog one was around
and that was in NH anyway...that far north in VT we really weren' t
sure of anything. I was going to look into how to get
this taken care of. I later stopped by a tack
shop (which was actually in the basement of
the house I grew up in until I was 9)
just down the road from where the pony was. I did tell the
owner that the pony up the road was pretty sick,
she expressed surprise because the man had
been in and was talking about selling him as
a riding pony!
So, I called the guy and told him I wanted the pony.
He agreed to give him to me, with a saddle and bridle,
for free if we came and got him right off. So M and I went
and got him...bringing him home in the back of a truck. Got
him home, let him graze awhile and gave him a little
grain, doused him with lice powder and gave him a bath
. It was during the bath that he started
to show that maybe he wasn't really sweet and docile,
but had instead just been too sick to put up a fight.
We got the vet to check him out and float his teeth. We
built him a little pasture on his own, feeling he
was not ready for introduction to any of the herds
(yes, my family had a lot of horses at the time). And
sure enough, within a few days he was showing himself to be
mean, nasty and dangerous. Well, he would have been
more dangerous if he were bigger, but he was one to watch for.
So we named him Phoenix...not just for his recovery
but because in book I had as a child the Phoenix was
kind and gentle when old but fierce and dangerous when reborn.
We figured he was in his
late teens or even twenties when we found him, but
were never sure. That halter might have been on him
for two decades! Hey, it was nylon. He never got
a good shape, he may have been malnourished all of his life.
He may have had Cushings as well...20 years ago I had never
heard of the disease. However, while he was
as wild as could be, he seemed happy and
healthy and ate, well, like a horse.
If I had been into Natural Horsemanship at the
time, I might have been able to sweeten him up to people.
But I didn't get him with the intent to do anything with
him, I got him to save him, and he seemed happy just hanging
out in the field. So we let him just hang out. Due
to his small size and mean nature, he never did get
accepted by any of the horses. That is except
for my mother's Lippitt Morgan Stallion, Letterman, who he
just took to. He had gotten lose and
ended up in Letterman's pen, and ate all of
Letterman's food. I think it was
because Letterman let him do this, that he
decided he could like him. We think Letterman
thought he was a foal and figured he
better be nice to him so that when his momma showed up he
might have a chance with her (a stallion that is pastured with a
mare and foal for breeding, rather than "hand
bred," usually learns quickly that being nice to the
foal was imperative if he wanted to have
a chance to breed the mare). They lived
together, being separated at meal times so Letterman could have
a chance to eat, until Letterman's death a few years
later due to impaction (which he had
suffered before...it's rather like bloat in a dog).
Phoenix later started to fade himself. He was put up
in the upper pasture, near the other horse but able
to keep away from them. As his health was bad and his
ability to walk was becoming limited, we realized
we'd have to have him put away and it would have to be
in the upper field. I wished he could be buried
next to Letterman, but making him walk the quarter mile
or loading him into a trailer seemed to be too cruel
in his state. My father and I went to look at him and assess that
we needed to call the vet and I noted I wished we had moved
him earlier. We drove down the hill and the next
thing we know, Phoenix is trotting behind us, just as
fast as his failing legs could carry him. He actually seemed
to have his old life back in him! We took him to
the barn and I was hopeful that
maybe he had been temporarily ill and now he'd
recover. But we soon realized he was worse than ever. It
seems that he too wanted to be near his buddy and
used the last of his strength to get
himself there. And so, he was buried next to
Letterman, after all.
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With Saoradh it's obvious that I got a great horse
out of the deal, but some might wonder why bother with a pony
like Phoenix who never learned to be a companion to me
and was too sickly to have ever been of any "use." But
his happiness in just being able to roam free and eat
all he wanted...instead of being in a little pen
next to a crumbling barn with poor quality hay that he couldn't
even chew. That was enough for me. He also woke me up
to something I hadn't really realized before then, that
some people will let horses suffer. I knew this
to be true of other animals, but
somehow I didn't realize the problems horses faced as
well. It never occurred to me. Phoenix
has offered a lot to my life and is indirectly
responsible for me finding Saoradh...I might never
have gotten involved in horse rescue
(volunteering or looking for one to rescue) if it weren't
for Phoenix.
End All Horse
Slaughter NOW!
Contents and design, except where noted otherwise, copyright ©
2003 Kym ní
Dhoireann and Aaron
Miller
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