Snorting, Blowing Fire Dragons

This is when rescue is the most rewarding for me.

They get to play with one another

They don’t have to stand in a stall

They can enjoy the sunshine

They have friends….

They are in a herd

They are safe

They get to snort and do everything they couldn’t before

They don’t have constant demands and can express themselves in all sorts of ways

OTTB’S just wanna have fun.

Racehorses being racehorses

I shook the bag of hay cookies. The horse’s heads shot up, ears turned towards me, noses flared, and it started. They raced each other towards me. Their hooves hit the ground with a thunderous roar as they flew over the ground. Clods of dirt flew everywhere. Each horse contended for the lead refusing to surrender.

“What did I do?” I ask myself.

Weather Wiz maneuvered in a way that cut Harley and Sueño off. It was now between Dulce and Wiz as to who would cross through the gate first. Dulce lowered his head and fought on. His nostrils were breathing fire, and that’s when it happened. Wiz turned his head towards Dulce and tried to ravage Dulce! I couldn’t believe what I saw!

“No way!” I yelled.

Dulce did not let it distract him for a second as he dug in. Wiz dug in next to him as they hit the gate at the same time. A dead heat!

They were so proud of themselves trotting around with their necks in a beautiful arch.

If you’re worried about Dulce, there is no need. All Wiz did was slobber all over his neck.

Wiz Is In

I open the gate, and the horses lazily walk up. Their heads immediately drop to the ground as they begin snatching grass. Above five minutes later Sueño lifts his head, collects himself and begins trotting circles around Weather Wiz. Wiz accepts the challenge and off they go racing one another, doing a few laps when Dulce jumps in bucking a few times. After a few laps around the pasture, Harley pins his ears back telling them to stop. Dulce and Sueño immediately stop, while Wiz is reluctant to give in. Dulce lets him know it is time to stop with a tossing of his head towards Wiz. Back to the arduous task of eating grass. These are our mornings.

It took a lot of work to get them to this point. I am not one to turn a horse out into a herd without support. Two of my friends that did it that way each lost one of their horses. One horse broke a leg trying to run away from the other horses that were relentlessly chasing him, and another’s leg was broken when kicked by another horse. I know a lot of people do it that way, but I do not. The new horse and I take our time, and Wiz kept telling me he needed to go slow.

When a horse lives and races on the track for several years, there is a delicate dance, or maybe a tightrope you walk with the horse when he is first retired. Their movements up until retirement are controlled as much as possible by humans 24/7. They don’t get to run and around and play with their buddies. Instead, it is all about training for the sport. When they leave their stall, a human hand is always with them.

When they leave the track, they suddenly have room to run and do as they please, and all sorts of trouble can happen. They haven’t had that kind of freedom since they were yearlings. Weather Wiz is an unbelievably playful horse, so transitioning him to be a part of the herd and retirement life was exciting and a bit scary at the same time.

Does he love retirement? Yes! He was ready for it. Wiz loves being an OTTB. With that said, easing him into it had its challenges.

Besides wading through Winter, and sweating through a ridiculously hot summer, Wiz is doing great and loves his herd. When he first arrived, the first month was about him adjusting to his new life. He was nervous around the other horses even though he was in his own area, he would step back into the barn if another horse got too close to him that wasn’t Sueño. I spent time watching him that first month, and I figured it would take some time to introduce him.

I always start out with a new horse on one side of the fence and the others on the other side. This way they can get to know one another in a safe way. I put piles of hay all along the fence on both sides, so they can start eating together. Eating together is the key that begins to open the door.

After about a month, which is what Wiz needed to rebound from everything, he seemed ready to integrate with the boys.

Then, one day, he came out of his shell, and he began playing with the horses over the fence in a very acrobatic way. Up until then I either hand grazed him, or I let him graze on his own after I brought the other horses down. He always spent his mornings with Chaco who I believe taught him how to play over the fence. It was his specialty. Act sweet, pretend like you’re falling asleep, and when they least expect it, lunge over the fence to land the perfect nibble on the neck.

The morning arrived that I decided it was time to introduce Wiz to the other horses up on the pasture. After taking Chaco for his hand graze, I took Wiz up to the pasture. There is no walking slow with Wiz due to his long stride. He walked and I basically trotted alongside him. The first thing I realized was he didn’t understand the body language of the other horses. They would tell him to back away from them, and for him that meant get even closer. First lesson was how to respond to the horse’s body queues.

How? I had Wiz on a rope, and I would let him walk wherever he wanted with me right by him. When Harley would pin his ears at Wiz if he got too close, I would yell, “Run!” and he and I would move away quick to where Harley felt comfortable. When Dulce walked straight at him with his head low, we would turn around and walk in the direction that Dulce was pushing us towards. Over and over with all the different signals, I helped him understand how to respond.

When Wiz showed he understood, I began introducing him to each horse on the pasture individually. He stayed as far away from Harley as he possibly could, which is not such a bad idea. Dulce was a bit different. One time Dulce was trying to get him to trot around with him when Wiz turned and slow trotted into Dulce’s neck. I was about to panic when Dulce turned and looked at me as if to say, “What’s up with this guy?” Dulce then began to push Wiz forward when Wiz bucked trying to land a hoof on him. Dulce knew it was coming, turned his head to the side and continued to move him. That was that. They’ve been best buddies since then.

When I turned Wiz out with Sueño, they played way too hard. I decided to bring Dulce into the mix sooner than later. Whenever things seemed to be getting out of hand, I would start to walk in to break it up when Dulce would masterfully put them in a time out…. literally. He would drive Wiz down to the dirt paddock while keeping Sueño on the pasture, and Dulce stood in between them not allowing either one of them to engage with each other until they calmed down. After that, all I would have to do is call out Dulce’s name, and he would put them in time out. Dulce is the Passive Leader of the herd, and I learned so much from him each time he decided to step in.

Dulce became Wiz’s teacher, and you rarely found Wiz too far away from him. Still, to this day, he stays close to him, and you usually will find that Dulce will be in between Wiz and Sueño.

One day Wiz decided to challenge Harley, who is the leader of the herd. Nobody really messes with Harley, which is maybe why Wiz decided to take him on? I have no idea what brought this on, but when I heard the sounds horses make when a challenge is on, I dropped everything and ran up to the field. This is when I witnessed something performed brilliantly. Dulce and Sueño trotted over to the two of them. Dulce scooped up Harley guiding him away from Wiz, while Sueño herded Wiz away from Harley. They all ate separately for about ten minutes before all four horses came together once again. Wiz was in.