Each one of the horses at our rescue & sanctuary, has a story to tell.... They have been through so much.... We are here to help them recover mentally and physically, and become healthy and happy again. Please take some time to get to know our rescued horses. Please consider a donation to help us provide for the needs of these horses in our care.
1-16-2023
Miss Beauty is growing up beautifully. It is such a shame she never regained soundness in her hip. She does not look to be in any pain but there is a definite shortness of gait and she has learned to compensate for it. Once she gets going, she can run and play with the others. The vet does not see any evidence of pain and no swelling after activity. We have put Beauty on Hyaluronic Acid, MSM, Chondroitin and Glucosamine supplements to help her stay comfortable as she ages. Beauty will remain with us as a Sanctuary horse.
9-04-2021
Sweet miss Beauty is still limping.....she will still sit up and pivot to her good hip to get up when she has been laying down. At this point, the only way to tell if her limping is from habit or from poor healing, would be to perform a very expensive MRI. It does not appear to be hurting her any, but she is far from being sound. This sweet girl will be staying with us in sanctuary if she remains unsound.
7-06-2021
The veterinarian gave us the okay to start letting beauty out of her extra large stall and start to exercise her leg for the first time since her hip fracture. S he was pretty sore on her leg at first, but still wanted to kick up her heels some when we let her loose in the front yard. She spent the first week alone in the front yard, to discourage possible playfulness with herd mates. This week we let her go into a paddock with Ray, Liberty and Gracie, for some companionship and she was accepted into their little herd right away. She is still walking with a limp, but the vet said that until the leg and hip develop more muscle from use, we will not know if she can be sound or not. It is okay if she remains unsound....we still value her very much, we all have flaws, nobody is perfect. We are happy to see her active and playing again.
5-21-2021
Sadly, Beauty is still on stall rest. We are holding out hope that her leg will heal completely and she will be sound again. She has been wonderful in the stall, and has become very friendly. She enjoys her grooming sessions and extra attention from us. Dr. Niblett says to give Beauty another month of stall rest. Please continue with healing prayers for her.
3-7-2021
We are sad to report that we called the vet out to take a look at Beauty. We found her down in the stall and having difficulty trying to stand up. We have no idea how she hurt herself. Dr Niblett regretfully informed us that her hip has been fractured. Poor baby girl! He told us to put down a foot of shavings for cushion in the stall and to leave her on full stall rest for 6 weeks and then take radiographs and reevaluate. Meanwhile, she is learning to slowly but surely trust us.
1-4-2021
We decided to put Beauty in with a herd of horses that is very friendly, to include Tamsin and Bam. We wanted this scared, unhandled filly to see us interact with our overly friendly horses and learn that we are not going to harm anyone. She mostly observed everyone else getting loved on and treats.
11-30-2020
Beauty arrived at our rescue from Witherspoon Ranch quarantine today. This little girl came to us traumatized. She has been through too much. She had the misfortune of being dumped by her owner, just a baby, not equipped for auctions and kill pens. She is thin, having clearly missed too many meals. She got sick at the kill pen and had to recover from the sickness in quarantine. We have her now....and her healing of mind, body and soul are beginning. We will let her settle, eat as much as she wants to eat, and get as much rest as she needs. We will not put any pressure on her, just provide for her needs for a while. We feel so badly for her.
10-25-2020
Beauty continues to do well at quarantine. Her appetite is still good and her runny nose has not become worse. Thankfully no other symptoms have presented themselves. She is still frightened and does not want to be touched, but we will work on gaining her trust when she arrives after her quarantine stay.
10-15-2020
Beauty is doing well. Her appetite is strong and she is eating well at quarantine. Melanie said she still has a runny nose but it has not become worse. No coughing or other symptoms yet, which is really good!
10-13-2020
Beauty is reportedly quite scared. Melanie is leaving her alone and letting her get used to her stall at quarantine. Beauty came from the kill pen with a runny nose, we are hoping she is not going to come down with Strangles. Melanie will keep a close eye on her to see if she needs to call the vet.
10-12-2020
Little unhandled weanling Beauty was dumped by her owner at auction and had the misfortune of being bought by a kill buyer who took her to Kaufman Kill Pen. The wonderful Melanie Witherspoon saw Beauty and started an immediate fundraiser to save her.
Melanie contacted us and let us know we needed little Beauty at our rescue.
Melanie was able to get the funds raised for bail to get this little girl out of the kill pen. mMelanie went and picked up Beauty and took her to Melanie's Witherspoon Ranch Quarantine.
*Not for Adoption, due to unsoundness from a hip fracture. Sanctuary horse.
Emmett continues to do well, he compensates well for his shoulder injury that has now been determined is permanent. He will never be sound for riding and just be a pasture pet, but that is okay.....He has bonded very strongly with us and is such a joy, Emmett will be with us permanently in Sanctuary.
Emmett sustained an unfortunate injury to his shoulder. Radiographs show a fracture and soft tissue injury. We don't know if he sustained a kick or fell in the pasture. The vet ordered stall rest for 8 weeks and evaluation afterward. There is a good chance Emmett may never be sound for riding, but we are prepared for that outcome and will keep Emmett as a permanent Sanctuary horse if needed.
5-14-2019
Emmett is a special boy! Little Emmett was saved from the East Texas feedlot by Gayle Schneider and given to our rescue. We absolutely love the babies, and Emmett is one of the special ones. Emmett came to us frightened and unhandled, but has warmed up to us and become such a sweetheart! Emmett is best friends with little Beethoven, the two of them are inseparable. Both babies are the youngest of the group and spend their time in the barn at night and in our front yard where they can get frequent meals and Beethoven can be fed his milk replacer meals. Emmett comes to us when he sees us; it is so wonderful to experience how bonded he has become with us. In caring for these babies.....being their lifeline, they give us back so much in return....they are truly precious.
"""Not for adoption, due to a fractured shoulder. Sanctuary horse.
Fancy was purchased at Elkhart horse auction. She is double bred Shining Spark and also Weiscamp bred.
Privately purchased, not fundraised for.
She has a lot of mental scars from someone being very cruel to her and she does not trust people at all. Physically, she bucks with a saddle placed on her and kicks if we touch mid way down her body. She came with a large, swollen front knee that had a large gash on it. We are rehabbing the knee. It is unknown if she will be sound on that knee. Fancy is going to need a lot of time to forget what has happened to her in her past, before she will be receptive to letting people handle her willingly. We will let her take as much time as she needs. Sometimes I am glad they can't talk...i'm not sure I could handle what they would tell me if they could.
*Not for rehoming at this time.
FANCY HAD A BABY!!!!!
What a pleasant and shocking surprise!! Fancy did not look pregnant at all, and today we woke up to a brand new baby being guarded by our herd leader gelding and Fancy obliviously eating on the round bale. Thank God for Hollywood's parental instinct to guard the baby from the 20 other horses in the pasture! We swooped the baby up and managed to capture the highly food motivated Fancy with a bucket of grain. Unfortunately as with some other rescued mares, Fancy is not accepting the foal as her own. We have forced Fancy to allow us to help her foal nurse. Fancy was protesting by trying to bite and kick her foal. There is a "Love Cocktail" of hormones that can be given to a mare to force her to sweat and then get feelings of maternal instinct. It involves the mare sweating from the lutalyse injection that quasi simulates labor pains. Next, you rub the mare's sweat all over the baby. Then you give oxytocin to the mare. The 2 drugs working together and the sweat from the mare on the foal has made all the other mares we have had, kinda wake up and realize it is their baby and start being a mom to the baby. We did lunge Fancy for a few minutes to see if we could get her to sweat enough to rub on the baby and the small amount of sweat we could get from Fancy seems to have made Fancy quiet down and be more accepting of the foal. The last time we brought the baby to Fancy to nurse after putting sweat on the baby, Fancy did not try to kick at the baby. Baby still can't suckle by herself so we need to assist. We are taking turns sitting in the stall with Fancy and her baby to assist and to keep the baby safe. We would appreciate your prayers that Fancy accepts her baby and she can latch on and nurse on her own very soon.
Fancy was found at Elkhart Horse Auction. She had a bad cut on her knee and it was noticeably swollen. She was said to be double bred Shining Spark. They put a saddle on her and attempted to ride her. It was obvious she had not been ridden before and the rider got off quickly. No other information was really given about her. Bidding was only us and kill buyers. We won the bid that night, it was run up high and one of our members paid for her.
We don't know what has happened to Fancy, but she is very frightened and distrusting of people. It is going to take some time and slow, gentle handling to get Fancy to overcome whatever she has been through with humans. She does have a brand on each hip and a brand next to her tail which ranches do to identify their breeding stock. It appeared that Fancy has had at least 1 foal before and her teeth say she is 8 years old. The wound on her knee has left permanent hardened swelling, but it does not seem to affect her any. Possibly with a lot of exercise we may see limping.
FANCY HAD A BABY!!!!!
This precious little baby was a complete surprise to us! Her mother, Fancy, did not look pregnant to us. She is a little miracle. Sabrina heard a commotion in the paddock where 4 round bales and 21 horses are. Instead of Fancy sneaking away and having her baby out in the big adjacent pasture, she chose to deliver her foal right next to a round bale where all the horses were. By some miracle, this baby was not killed. Sabrina saw our senior gelding Hollywood guarding the foal and several of the other horses trying to get to the foal. Thank God for Hollywood's parental instinct to guard the baby! A quick survey of mares in the pasture showed blood down the legs of Fancy, so we knew she was the mother. Fancy had no interest at all in the baby, she was busy eating on a round bale with a couple other horses. Sabrina quickly ran and grabbed the foal from Hollywood and took her out of the paddock and assessed her. Baby was dry, someone had cleaned her off, probably Hollywood. He began running the fence and calling out to the foal. We believe he saved her life, but not before she sustained some injuries that looked to be minor, but we kept a close eye on her. She had a scrape on her lip and chin and some little scrapes on her legs. She also had a swelling on her abdomen that hung low and was about the size of a plum which felt like fluid. She was not tender anywhere but her chin. We took baby to a stall and proceeded to chase all the horses out of the paddock except Fancy. Fancy did not want to be caught, until we brought a bucket of grain. This mare is highly food motivated! Lol. We took Fancy to the stall and she immediately pinned her ears at the baby and tried to nip her. We had a stern talking with Fancy and told her this baby is somehow still strong and desperately needs her colostrum. Judging by the completely dry blood on Fancy's legs and no presence of any fluid coming out of her, we guessed it had been at least 4 hours or more since the baby had been born. There was no sign of suckling and disturbingly, there was no more colostrum, just milk, making us concerned about passive transfer of life saving antibodies that foals need. With some threats of bites and kicks, we were able to convince Fancy that she needed to let her baby nurse. She still was not taking to the baby, so I began to think about getting the "Love Potion" protocol for Fancy, where you give banamine, lutalyse and oxytocin to make the mare feel like she is in labor. When the mare sweats, the mare's sweat is rubbed all over the baby so the baby smells like the mom. The oxytocin then makes the mare feel accepting of the baby. It works in many cases. We decided to lunge Fancy to see if we could induce a sweat. Once she sweated, we rubbed Fancy's sweat all over the foal. It worked beautifully! Fancy started allowing her foal to nurse and started licking her foal lovingly. All seemed to be okay until late in the afternoon, baby Surprise started laboring to urinate or deficate and defication was difficult and urination was not seen. By early evening, the swelling of fluid started to get bigger all of a sudden and it appeared painful to the touch for the first time. By late evening we were concerned for the foal so much that our discomfort about transporting a newborn baby to a vet hospital where sick horses are, was overpowered with a sense of urgency to get her to a good vet. Although we live in a heavily populated area, it is becoming increasingly difficult to find a good vet for horses even though our area has a large horse population. In our hurry to get this baby to a vet hospital, we never imagined that all 3 emergency equine hospitals would be closed with No doctors to help horses. We found Brazos Valley Equine Hospital in Salado, almost halfway to Dallas, and we made the 2 hour drive with this precious, now lethargic and in pain baby in the back seat of our truck and her momma yelling for her in the trailer we were towing. Thankfully baby Surprise slept the whole way, as it probably isn't the safest way to transport a big foal in the back seat of a truck, but there was no way we were putting her in the slant load trailer. Newborns need a safe box stall in a trailer without drafts. We arrived at the vet hospital and were greeted by not vet techs, but 2 veterinarians who were waiting for us to arrive. They carried baby into the hospital and immediately examined her.
The swelling and associated pain and lethargy were alarming. Tests were run and ultrasounds. The standby surgeon and Dr Kate determined a CT was needed to get a better look at the possible tear in the abdomen, check the organs for injury and locate the source of the fluid. Thankfully the CT showed that it was blunt force trauma and her organs all looked good! Baby Surprise is staying under observation with Dr Kate and is being given antibiotics to guard against infection. All the tests and care given to this precious baby are needed but the bill that is being racked up is daunting. We desperately need your help to pay for it. We need another $1500 to pay it. Please help if you can.
UPDATE:
Baby Surprise is doing very well. She is home with us at the rescue and getting lots of attention. She is still on forced stall rest, where she will remain for another 5 days to allow her little body to heal better. Antibiotic administration has become difficult because this little girl has learned how to let the medicine pool in her mouth even though we see and feel her swallow, and she spits out part of it. She is too smart! We have several more days of antibiotics to give unfortunately, with twice daily restling matches. Lol! She is strong! The swelling in her abdomen is still there, but it has not become worse as the vet said normally happens around the 5th day after blunt force injury. Surprise has grown already, her long legs are now even longer. She is nursing a lot, drawing her mom down in weight, so we have increased Fancy's feed intake by a lot. We are thankful both mom and baby are doing well and Surprise has such a good appetite and is well hydrated.
We want to thank everyone from the bottom of our hearts who helped us pay the vet bill. We are more grateful than words can adequately express. You literally keep our rescue going.
4-16-23 Baby Surprise is doing very well. She reached her two week mark and was given the green light to finally leave the stall. She is enjoying her turnout time in their private paddock and learning to use those long legs of hers. The lump of hardened fluid is still on her torso and still bothers her, but we were told it would be quite a while before it reabsorbs completely. She is otherwise happy and healthy. Surprise is nursing a lot, and drawing down her mother. We have greatly increased the amount of feed and alfalfa that Fancy is being fed to help her continue to meet Surprise's nutritional needs.
UPDATE:
Baby Surprise is doing very well. She is home with us at the rescue and getting lots of attention. She is still on forced stall rest, where she will remain for another 5 days to allow her little body to heal better. Antibiotic administration has become difficult because this little girl has learned how to let the medicine pool in her mouth even though we see and feel her swallow, and she spits out part of it. She is too smart! We have several more days of antibiotics to give unfortunately, with twice daily restling matches. Lol! She is strong! The swelling in her abdomen is still there, but it has not become worse as the vet said normally happens around the 5th day after blunt force injury. Surprise has grown already, her long legs are now even longer. She is nursing a lot, drawing her mom down in weight, so we have increased Fancy's feed intake by a lot. We are thankful both mom and baby are doing well and Surprise has such a good appetite and is well hydrated.
We want to thank everyone from the bottom of our hearts who helped us pay the vet bill. We are more grateful than words can adequately express. You literally keep our rescue going.
5-30-2023 If there is a way for a horse to get injured, they will find it..... As if our baby Surprise has not had enough happen to her in her short life, she has managed to injure herself. What are the odds of the corner of Sabrina's truck tailgate becoming an object for Surprise to run into before Sabrina could finish unloading her grain at the barn and close the tailgate? It appears to be 100%. Horses have a way of changing your plans in an instant. Tonight we thought we would make a nice dinner and maybe watch a movie, but instead Surprise ran into the corner of the tailgate and gashed the side of her left hip open and through the muscle. A quick call to the vets offices to see who was available and we found Dr Colt DIetz at Sunset Canyon Veterinary Clinic there and willing to help Surprise. We loaded up Fancy and Surprise and headed to Dripping Springs for stitches for Surprise. It was a traumatic ordeal for Surprise and it hurt her a lot, as she showed us she hurt by protesting the cleaning and the stitching. Sabrina and I held her as still as we could while Dr Dietz cleaned her wound and stitched it closed as Holly watched and became queasy, lol!. Surprise was given a shot of Excede for infection control and a second dose to take home and administer 4 days later. She was also given banamine for pain and inflammation. Because it was a deep cut in a highly mobile area, poor Surprise and Fancy were ordered to be on stall rest for 14 days to allow the wound to heal without having the chance of her stitches tearing out. We arrived back home at about 1am with a very tired and thirsty baby Surprise who was quite eager to get into the stall and nurse.
We want to thank all of you for rising to the need of Surprise and donating to pay her vet bill. We are beyond grateful for each and every one of you who helped. We also want to thank Dr Dietz for staying later and waiting for us to arrive and taking care of our precious baby.
Surprise and Fancy have spent 1 week in the stall now and they are handling the 10' by 20' stall they are confined in quite well. The wound is healing up well except for 1 deeper punctured place that is draining, as Dr Dietz said it would. One more week of stall rest to go and we can release the Kracken! Lol. We know baby will run and run as soon as she is let out of the stall.
Baby Simon was rescued in August 2022 with his mother Anya frrom the Lockhart auction. He is one of the youngest horses we have ever seen exploited so badly by thr slaughter pipeline, We had to pay an obscene amount of money to keep him and his mother together and keep them from going to the kill buyer who delighted in running up his bidding so high. Simon was under 2 weeks old when he was dumped at the auction.
Simon and Anya were placed next to Coro and Lark where he and Coro could get to know each other but not be able to touch each other. Since Simon had been at an auction, we had to protect Coro's health but they still ran and played together from a distance.
We are very fortunate Simon bonded up with Coro, because little did we know, he would need her so badly. After just turning 4 months old, Simon suddenly and tragically lost his mom.
Anya was a product of over-breeding where a mare is bred year after year with no resting of their body, and their abdomens get very large and distended and out of shape, making them look very pregnant when they are not. Our vet said that horses that have this type of distension are very prone to having their intestines flop around and twist in all the extra space. That is what happened to Anya, her intestines flipped over her kidney and her spleen and wer3e strangulating them. She was in extreme pain, the doctor flipped the intestines back over where they are supposed to be, and they just flipped back strangulating the kidney and spleen again. There was nothing more that could be done for Anya, the doctor had tried everything to save her ad said she needed to be euthanized. Anya was a wonderful horse and a wonderful , loving mother. We enjoyed our time with her, although short. We were very upset this kind mare never got the opportunity to be loved and cherished more before she died. She deserved a long, happy life. It just wasn't God's Will.
Simon was very upset about his mom disappearing for the first 2 days. We weaned Coro when Simon was orphaned to help Simon. It was the right decision to make, Simon and Coro have been doing very well together, they are very bonded and are enjoying each other. Both Simon and Coro are the sweetest babies, they love attention and are pure joy.
This little 5 month old filly was found at the Cleburne horse auction in February 2022. There were several weanlings there that day. There were far too many needing rescuing from the slaughter pipeline. We saw a familiar brand on one of the weanlings that we knew. We decided to bid on her that night and get her out of the slaughter pipeline.
It sickens us that her breeder sells their weanling horses at a production sale, way up in South Dakota and this filly along with many other unfortunate ones, get bought by slaughter pipeline traders who take them to multiple auctions trying to get the big bucks until they end up down in Texas auctions, just a leap from the border where the ones who don't get saved end up getting slaughtered.
We rescued another young filly with this brand before Christmas 2021 and unfortunately we were too late. Despite our every effort, she had been starved down too much before she made it to a Texas auction and we saw her badly in need of help. She died from organ failure from sickness and starvation. She only knew 6 days of love, that is all the time we had with her, but at least she was finally loved, no longer used as a tool for greed, for money.
Treasure was brought to the rescue and placed into isolation/quarantine. Her very thick, long winter coat was hiding hundreds of ticks embedded all over her! There were so many ticks, we worried she may not love through the anemia and blood loss! It was life threatening to leave the ticks on her and life threatening to use insecticide to kill them. Daily, she stood still patiently as we picked ticks off of her body and dabbed iodine over the area where the tick heads were imbedded. We picked ticks off of her for what seemed like an entire month, as more hatched. She developed a snotty nose 2 days after arrival and became very sick. Now she had to deal with infection in her body from sickness and the tick infestation that left her anemic and low on blood. We were treating her anemia and feeding her Red Cell to boost her immune system. Thankfully she still had good body weight and could afford to lose weight while being off of feed and hay. They get so sick, their throats hurt like ours do when we have strep throat and horses can't breathe through their mouth, so when their noses fill up with purulent snot, it is really hard for them to breathe and to eat. We could not entice her with any type of grain to eat, which was really strange. Most of the horses we rescue have never had any feed or grain before, but it smells good so they try to eat it. It is the funniest thing to watch a horse try to eat grain for the first time. They don't know how to pick it up and how to chew it. They make the funniest faces and bounce their heads up and down and to the side. This little girl just had no interest in trying. We tried several different kinds of grain and different feeds, she wouldn't even eat sweet feed, We kept alfalfa in front of her to help her not lose too much weight while being sick, since she refused grain. Treasure lost a lot of weight, her sickness hung on longer, and our damp cooler days did not help any. She was such a good girl through all her antibiotic treatments and nose cleanings and tick removal, she seemed to know we were just trying to help her. We named her Treasure, because that is what she is.
Three courses of antibiotics and 3 months later and Treasure finally was able to leave quarantine and join the other weanlings at the rescue in the weanlings paddock.
Today Treasure is enjoying her life with the other horses her age, happy, without a worry and with a full belly. Through peer pressure, she finally learned to eat grain and loves it now. She is very special to us, it is likely she will stay at the rescue at least for the near future. Sabrina has her eye on Treasure for a future barrel racer. ;)