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Oh, man, I must be nuts. I'm adopting Go Geta Job, new pics post 133

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  • #81
    I purchased my OTTB through the trainer listings on the CANTER website in the spring (Luv Of The Century). I believe Go Geta Job was listed right after I purchased my filly. I thought he was a very nice looking horse and hoped he found a good home. While reading the discussion boards on another fourm several weeks ago, I found out what had happened to GGJ. I am so happy that you now own him and it sounds like he will have a great forever home. Just a hint, spend A LOT of time just bonding with him over the winter. I have done this with my filly, and she is now a 17 hand puppy dog that will do anything I ask of her (she even packs my 3year old neice around!). Again, congrats on your new boy and I'm sure you will love him. GOOD LUCK!!!

    Oh, and just another note, its rather concerning that the trainer who previously had GGJ listed on the CANTER website now has another horse listed on the CANTER site. Poor horse, I hope he is able to find a home fast through CANTER!

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    • #82
      Hey Tiki

      I was the one who helped Stacy the night they came in from NH. I cleaned up "Bravo Boy" as I called GGaJ and bandaged all his wounds. He was sweet but definitely the sole one who needed a chain shank that night. Course if I had been beaten up by everyone, I would have been a bit anxious also!!

      Glad to hear you guys took Flanked in Gold also. I called him "Barack" (It was the night before the election) He's a very nicely bred horse and I had one on my track string that was also sired by his dad. He was a neat horse.

      Can't wait to hear updates.

      If you need any advice for how to pack pounds on an OTTB gimme a shout or ask here.

      ~Emily
      "Courage is not the absence of fear but rather the judgment that something is more important than fear. The brave may not live forever but the cautious do not live at all." ~2001 The Princess Diaries

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      • #83
        Doesn't everyone who has horses doubt their sanity at one point or another (or all the time?) Welcome to the nuthouse!





        I also thought I saw that the trainer had another horse listed on CANTER, but I wasn't sure if it was the same guy. At first I thought they shouldn't deal with him, but the more I thought about it, the more I figured CANTER should try to step in and help with that one before it turned out like GGJ.


        I can't wait to see GGJ all fat and shiny and bite mark-free!

        Comment


        • #84
          Home Sweet Home

          We have the two boys home after a horrific drive yesterday. They settled right in for the night and seemed no worse for the drive this morning. Flanked in Gold (new barn name: Isaac) has become fast friends with my retired event horse (also OTTB). He enjoyed his turn out and was much better behaved then his new big brother coming in for the evening. He is adorable and I can't wait to get on him for the first time!!

          Go Geta Job (Storm) was more than slightly confused by the size of the field and spent most of the day in the top half of the field by the gate. I hope he starts to make friends with his new pasture mates soon. I think his confidence in himself is totally shot (can you blame him) and he has much more physical and mental healing to do.


          Thank you to everyone involved in rescueing these two horses...they are both more than worth it.
          Brae Mont Farm
          www.braemontfarm.weebly.com

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          • #85
            I have been watching your thread. You have done a wonderful thing. Just slow your mind down, and think things out carefully as you go along. Good rehab takes time and patience. If you have a blanket, hay, water and feed, you are on your way. Slow and steady wins the race. The rest will come in time.

            I am sending you the link to the AAEP rescue/rehab guidelines. Perhaps there will be something in it to help you and your new horse along the way.
            http://www.aaep.org/pdfs/rescue_reti...guidelines.pdf

            Congratulations and kudos to you on the adoption. I'm sure your horse is already grateful and will be a wonderful addition to your family. Good luck!
            "The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." Albert Einstein

            http://s1098.photobucket.com/albums/...2011%20Photos/

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            • Original Poster

              #86
              Chief, thanks for the guidelines, I will try to get through them over the next few days. Looks quite helpful.

              I think GGJ has settled in pretty well. The farrier is coming out today or tomorrow and he will get a trim. Other than the typical track trim (long toes, short heels), his feet look decent. He was a bit stocked up in the back before we brought him home but that seems to have pretty much resolved with turnout. His back legs were a bit more beat up than his front, so he is not thrilled with having them messed with, but does OK with a little patience.

              I was pleasantly surprised with how easy he is to handle. When I went to the pasture to bring him in to groom, he saw me and immediately started walking to the gate. He stood like a gentleman for haltering and when I was closing the gate after leading him out. He is pretty sensitive to grooming but with the hundreds of healing cuts and bites and scrapes all over him (I am not exaggerating when I say hundreds), who can blame him? As long as I was slow and gentle, he does OK.

              As I learn what a sweet horse he is, the inhumane treatment he has endured pisses me off even more. I know, it's not uncommon. But this is the first time I have been closely involved with this type of case, and it just boggles my mind.

              I will continue to post updates on his progress on his website at tinygoats.com/9.html, for those who are interested in following it. I posted a couple more pictures from yesterday and plan to put up pictures every week.

              Comment


              • #87
                Hooray for you, tiki. So glad to know he is in good hands after this harrowing year for him. (I will NEVER forget the story of his rescue from NH. shudder.)
                I tolerate all kinds of animal idiosyncrasies.
                I've found that I don't tolerate people idiosyncrasies as well. - Casey09

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                • Original Poster

                  #88
                  Just another little update. Storm (his barn name) is doing pretty well. He's still skinny of course (he has a lot to gain) but is eating well. He learned to cross tie very quickly. Seemed a bit nervous at first but now he seems to relax in the cross ties and stands like a complete gentleman.

                  I suspect he has had some round pen or lungeline experience because he caught on so quickly. We are not doing any real exercise on the lunge, just more a mental exercise than anything, but he does very well and seems to enjoy having a job. I want him to put on a bunch more weight before we start doing anything in the way of conditioning.

                  He still seems sort of confused out in the pasture. He does not venture out very far, even when his pasturemates go to the other end of the large field, whcih takes them over a hill and out of sight. He was sold at a yearling sale, so I wonder if he has even seen a pasture since weaning.

                  His cuts and bruises are healing well, although he is still covered with little scabs, which are slowly falling off. He still tends to get stocked up in his right hind after a night in the stall, which appears to have had a pretty significant laceration that has healed. But he does not seem at all sore on it and the swelling goes away after a few hours outside walking around.

                  His personality is still somewhat hesitant, like he is still worried, but he is getting better, and seems to enjoy human attention. He no longer has the panicked look in his eye that he arrived with.

                  A pic from today:

                  Last edited by tikidoc; Dec. 12, 2008, 08:37 PM.

                  Comment


                  • #89
                    That was the most interesting thing I noticed about my ottb. He had such a defensive, "What are you going to do to me?" look on his face for the first several months. He has turned into a complete mooshball who makes more goofy faces than I could ever imagine an equine contorting now...

                    Comment


                    • #90
                      Tiki, this horse will come around for you. I can feel it, and see it in the pics!

                      I'm rehabbing a big gray OTTB too... except mine is 17 years off the track!

                      Anyway good luck, and serious kudos to you for taking him on.
                      We couldn't all be cowboys, so some of us are clowns.

                      Comment


                      • #91
                        He looks soooo much better already. Such a sweet eye. In 6 months he will be a love bunny.

                        Comment


                        • #92
                          He looks SO much better already! Well Done!!

                          And I'll echo what others have already said... give him about 6 months, and suddenly you'll come out to the barn one morning, and his eyes will be soft and open and glad to see you because YOU are his person

                          Thank you for the update. You should be very proud.
                          -Jessica

                          Comment


                          • #93
                            congrats he's so cute...i saw him and thought for a minute he was one of my ottbs i rescued!

                            I have Storms half brother!! They have the same daddy. I'll have to find some pictures of him. My guy's really great...im sure yours will be too!!

                            Comment


                            • #94
                              He looks so much better already!!!
                              www.specialhorses.org
                              a 501(c)3 organization helping 501(c)3 equine rescues

                              Comment

                              • Original Poster

                                #95
                                Thanks everyone! We still have a long way to go, but I think he is looking better. A minor thing, but I think trimming his mane made a big difference instantaneously...

                                Paris, please do post pics of your Wekiva Springs baby! What do you do with him?

                                Comment


                                • #96
                                  tikidoc,
                                  You have done such a kind thing. What a handsome boy! It is so good of you to hang in there with him. Please keep us up to date on his progress.

                                  Comment


                                  • #97
                                    Well...the plan was to hopefully put him in the hunter ring when I first looked at him...but then after we got him home (there was NO way I was going to leave him in the conditions he was in) the vet x-rayed his knees and he's a mess.

                                    So bad, the vet didn't even think operating would help anything. His guess was, he fell or did something during a race, and instead of taking the time to heal him, they just injected the heck out of him, and kept him running. He won quite a bit and then suddenly started losing, and his condition just seemed to go down hill from there. He said he should be fine for flat work and maybe small-ish jumping until early arthritis sets in.

                                    Right now, he's just hanging out with another of my ottb mares and they are in love lol

                                    We had to give him a full year to get over one of the worst cases of rain rot Ive ever seen and to gain weight, he was skin and bones.

                                    Nows he's happy and healthy...and will probably just live with me forever as a pasture puff unless I feel he's comfortable enough to be ridden.

                                    What are the plans for your guy once he's all settled in?

                                    Comment

                                    • Original Poster

                                      #98
                                      I'd like to event him. But I have another horse that I compete - I didn't need another horse. So if he can jump, great. If not, he can be a trail pony.

                                      Please post some pics of your guy.

                                      Comment


                                      • #99
                                        He looks about a hundred times better than his rescue photo already. Good job, tikidoc. He's going to be a real showstopper, innee?
                                        I'm not ignoring the rules. I'm interpreting the rules. Tamal, The Great British Baking Show

                                        Comment


                                        • Apparently I don't have any updated pictures of him. I can't believe he's going to be eight already, I got him when he was three going on four!

                                          I have some pictures of him the first day I got him. It's funny he was pretty white...in the summer time he's completely silver and dappled.
                                          sorry these are blurry






                                          sometime that spring after a bath...

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