New Vocations Launches Florida Facility

New Vocations Racehorse Adoption Program has opened a satellite facility near Ocala, Florida as it continues to expand its aftercare efforts. The nation's oldest and largest racehorse adoption charity now has nine facilities in six states.

“Part of our long-term plan has been to open a facility near Ocala,” said New Vocations' Program Director Anna Ford. “Three years ago, we were looking into it but then we got the call to open a facility in Louisiana. We put Florida on pause because the need was greater in Louisiana at that point.”

Their search for a Florida site was delayed again due to the pandemic in 2020, but scouting continued last year until they landed on a facility based at Trillium Sport Horses in Anthony, just a few miles outside of Ocala.

Ford said that in the past, Florida-based horses donated to New Vocations would be sent to their Lexington location. She noted that on average, 60 horses were shipped each year more than 700 miles from Florida to New Vocations' Lexington facility.

“Horses coming from Florida racetracks and training centers will now have a much shorter travel distance and duration as they start their new chapters,” she explained. “This will also allow our Lexington division to expand as well.”

Erin MacDonald, an international three-day eventing rider with years of experience restarting off-track Thoroughbreds in new careers, will oversee the horses' rehabilitation and training.

“We were thrilled to find Erin,” Ford said. “She does such a good job and is everything we were looking for in a trainer. She has been a great addition to our team and we're really excited about the partnership.”

Erin MacDonald (right) with the first horse to arrive to and depart from the Florida facility, Ranger Up, and adopter Melissa Lundberg. | New Vocations

“It is so gratifying to help a Thoroughbred smoothly transition into a second career after the races,” MacDonald added. “I am honored to be working with such an outstanding aftercare organization and join their efforts to provide Florida-based horses and their connections with a quality rehabilitation and retraining program. Everyone has been wonderful to work with and it's really cool to be a part of an organization that already feels like a family.”

A native of Ontario, MacDonald represented Canada on various junior eventing teams before moving to Ocala to start her own business six years ago.  Her primary 10-stall facility sits on 11 acres and she recently opened a second location with an additional five stalls.

“[My business] is actually called Trillium Sport Horses,” she said. “Being from Ontario, Trillium is our provincial flower. My dad started a shipping company that was mainly out of Woodbine Racetrack and he was called Trillium Equine Trailering. I ran with that and started Trillium Sport Horses. My dad passed away in 2011, so it's nice to have his logo in my logo.”

MacDonald has been retraining off-the-track racehorses for over a decade.

“They are incredibly athletic, as anyone who has worked with them would know, and they have so much try,” she said. “As soon as they have that relationship with their person, it's 110% every day. In any discipline, from trail riding to anything competitive, that's all you can ask from your partner.”

MacDonald said there is a great need for an accredited aftercare organization like New Vocations in Ocala.

“A lot of people don't really have a place to go other than to those of us who have been doing it quietly,” she explained. “There are very few organizations handling not just the Ocala area, but the state in general. It's nice to have such a large organization stepping in because we do have so many horses down here that are looking for new homes. New Vocations is very up-front about any limitations, whereas you don't always get the full story with private operations.”

She added that the demand for sport horses in Florida has increased even since she first moved to Ocala.

“I think so many more people are staying here year-round,” she said. “Now 12 months of the year we have people looking for their new partners. I get hundreds of messages from people who are shopping for anything from a trail riding horse to an upper-level event horse, which is nice because the horses we get have a pretty wide range of abilities coming into the program.”

Incubator (pictured), a 7-year-old gelding by Stephen Got Even, was recently adopted from New Vocations' Florida facility |Katie Petrunyak

The first horse arrived at New Vocations' Ocala site in October of 2021. Ranger Up (First Samuari) had been competing at the claiming level at Gulfstream Park throughout 2021 when he was purchased by a collaborative group that joined forces to retire the gelding. Starlight Racing and Spendthrift Farm, who originally purchased Ranger Up as a yearling in 2017, as well as breeder Stone Farm, partnered together to ensure his retirement and reached out to New Vocations about donating him to their program.

“At the time we were just finalizing everything with Erin, so he was able to be our first horse in Florida,” Ford said. “It was cool that the first horse that came through was actually purchased to be retired by prominent people in the industry doing the right thing by the horse.”

“Starlight has bought horses for retirement in the past, but this one was brought to our attention by Stone Farm, who bred the horse,” said Starlight Racing Founder Jack Wolf. “We partnered with them and Spendthrift to retire him and send him to New Vocations. I'm excited for everything that New Vocations is doing and how well the horses turn out from there. We've been sending them horses for 20 years and are big supporters of their program.

Ranger Up thrived in his retraining and was recently adopted. Two additional horses have already completed the program and gone to experienced homes while several more are making progress in various stages of rehab and training and will be available for adoption soon.

“Before we officially open a facility, we will go through the training process with a few horses to go over how we run everything,” Ford explained. “We've already developed some new relationships with trainers and owners in Florida who we have never received horses from before. I think that once we get the word out that we're here and able to take horses, we will meet even more new people who might not have known this was an option.”

For information on donating a horse to the Florida facility or supporting its efforts, visit newvocation.org/donate_a_horse, call (859) 252-9574 or e-mail anna@horseadoption.com.

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New Vocations Adds Florida Facility

New Vocations Racehorse Adoption Program has opened a satellite facility at Trillium Sport Horses near Ocala, Florida. Erin MacDonald, an international three-day eventing rider, will oversee the facility's focus on rehabbing, retraining, and rehoming retiring Thoroughbred racehorses.

“On average, 60 horses each year are shipped more than 700 miles from Florida to our Lexington facility,” said Anna Ford, the program director for New Vocations. “Horses coming from Florida racetracks and training centers will now have a much shorter travel distance and duration as they start their next chapters.”

New Vocations, the nation's oldest and largest racehorse adoption charity, now has nine facilities in six states. Ford said a Florida location near Ocala had been in the plan for some time, but was delayed by the pandemic.

According to New Vocations, MacDonald has years of experience restarting off-track Thoroughbreds. She said, “It is so gratifying to help a Thoroughbred smoothly transition into a second career after the races. I am honored to be working with such an outstanding aftercare organization and to join in their efforts to provide Florida-based horses and their connections with a quality rehabilitation and retraining program.”

The first horses arrived at the Florida facility in late 2021. Three have already been adopted with several more making progress in various stages of rehab and training. For information on donating a horse to the Florida facility or supporting its efforts, click here, call (859) 252-9574, or e-mail anna@horseadoption.com.

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Medal Count Pensioned From Stud Duty, Offered For Adoption At New Vocations

The 10-year-old Medal Count has been pensioned from stud duty and now appears on the website of Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance-accredited rehoming group New Vocations. The now-gelded son of Dynaformer earned just shy of half a million dollars on the racetrack, and was retired to stand at Spendthrift Farm in 2016. He has stood the past two seasons in Ohio at Mapleton Thoroughbred Farm.

Medal Count's oldest foals are 4-year-olds of 2021. His leading earner is the Arkansas-bred filly Hissy Missy, a winner in two of her 13 career starts for earnings of $175,532.

His advertisement on the New Vocations website reads: “Of a gold standard indeed, Medal Count is ready for his next career in his forever home! This well-traveled gelding earned nearly half a million dollars during his successful racing career, which included a Grade 3 stakes win and finishing in the money in several Grade 1 and Grade 2 stakes, including the Belmont Stakes (G1)! He stood at stud for several years before being gelded and entering our program to start his third career.

“One of Medal Count's first transitions in our program was figuring out turnout with a buddy! He's done well with this task and goes out during the day with our resident babysitter, Ranger. He loves to stretch his legs and enjoys some snacking, but he's overall quite relaxed and content outside.

“Around the barn, you can often find Medal Count sticking his head out of his stall, taking in all the action, or resting quietly. He can be shy and aloof at first, but he is happy to get one-on-one time when he gets individualized attention. Medal Count has spent some time getting used to new environments and building his confidence with us; he can be a bit of a cowardly lion at times!

“Under saddle, Medal Count is a bit nervous as he is figuring out his new job in the ring. We see loads of potential in him (check out his free lunge video!), but he is just working on relaxing under saddle at the moment. He will do best with an advanced rider who is confident and can guide Medal Count through the process as he learns to relax and get back into shape with his next career.”

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New Vocations’ Anna Ford, Randy Moss Join TDN Writers’ Room

As the Thoroughbred Program Director for New Vocations, the nation's largest racehorse adoption program, Anna Ford knows how important it is for a horse-related charity to find creative ways to raise money. And Ford and her team might just have landed on a winning idea.

It was announced this week that New Vocations and DJ Stable have joined forces for a Giving Tuesday campaign. DJ Stable will match all donations up to $25,000.

That was among the subjects discussed when Ford joined ths week's Thoroughbred Daily News Writers' Room podcast brought to you by Keeneland as the Green Group Guest of the Week. Ford's appearance coincided with Randy Moss' debut as one of the panelists on the podcast. Moss filled in for the vacationing Joe Bianca.

“We're really excited about this because, first, it's our first annual Giving Tuesday campaign,” Ford said. “To have Jon (Green) and his family step up and make this match is really going to boost the whole campaign. Hopefully, we can raise 50 or more thousand dollars.”

Jon Green, the general manager of his family's DJ Stable and a regular on the TDN Writers' Room, summed up why it is so important for owners to accept the responsibilities involved when it comes to properly retiring their horses.

“As our stable has gotten bigger it's more important for us to make sure that the horses that we have a good home after they are done racing,” Green said “The most important thing we can do as owners is recognize our responsibility. And when we raise our hand at an auction and buy a horse, or we decide to breed a horse and foal it out and have it run in our colors, it's our responsibility to ensure that those horses are cared for once their racing careers are over.”

Ford also spoke to changing attitudes in a sport that once attempted to sweep the problem of what to do with retirees under the rug. Ford said that the advent of social media has made her job a lot easier.

“We first saw a big change with Facebook,” she said. “Once there was more awareness of the issues people started asking questions. We started to see a shift around 2009, 2010. That's when more people started wanting to send us horses and more people wanted to fund our efforts because they saw the value in our efforts. I really feel like it was a matter of raising awareness and getting people educated on what was going on.”

In addition to Giving Tuesday, New Vocations relies heavily on its Breeders' Cup Pledge program, in which owners, trainers and others involved with Breeders' Cup starters pledge a portion of their winning to New Vocations. This year, there were eight Breeders' Cup winners who were part of the pledge, which raised $140,000.

Elsewhere on the show, which is also sponsored by West Point Thoroughbreds, Coolmore, Legacy Bloodstock and XBTV, the writers focused on the ongoing problems the sport is having accurately timing races. The times of several Breeders' Cup races had to be recalculated after the races were run. Moss, who is part of the Beyer speed figure team, was particularly critical of the Gmax timing system now in place at several tracks, among them Del Mar, the home of this year's Breeders' Cup.

“It amazing that it's 2021 and this sport is doing a worse job of timing races now than it did in 1971,” said Bill Finley.

“It's doing a worse job than it did in 1941,” Moss said.

Other topics under discussion included Peter Miller's decision to step away from racing and the debate over who should be the 3-year-old male champion. Moss threw his support behind Medina Spirit (Protonico), while Green and Finley supported Essential Quality (Tapit).

Click here to watch the podcast; click here for the audio-only version or find it on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

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