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Our filly is on FUGLY!

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  • Our filly is on FUGLY!

    as an example of a horse that was much too nice to fall in between the cracks

    http://fuglyhorseoftheday.blogspot.com/

    You can see another picture of her on our homepage:
    http://www.coloradotbrescue.org/

    How'd I get that picture? Just threw decorations on Peggy. She is the kindest, quietest filly there ever could be. She LOVED the attention. And I can't get anyone out to ever look at her.

    I was emailing with someone locally, who emailed pictures of her new farm (with white PVC fencing). She had trained many babies, so she said. Eventually she said she had no references (from a vet, farrier, neighbors... nothing) and wondered if there *really* was an adoption fee. Sigh.

    I am a bit prejudice, but the tiny adoption fee we're hopeful to get to cover only a fraction of the expenses incurred (which is negotiable to a home that has to ship Peggy far away) is a drop in the bucket. I'd challenge anyone to find a kinder, easier to train, sweeter filly. It just won't happen.

    Oh, and she's sound with no issues. At ALL. She loads, blankets, ponies, ties, feet picked, gets along with other horses, stays in by herself.....

    She even takes treats very nicely, not that "give me everything you have in your pockets otherwise the dog gets it" style.

    Pictures of Peg when we first spotted her:
    http://www.coloradotbrescue.org/available_horses.html

    If she doesn't get a home by the time she should get started under saddle, I'll gladly start her under saddle and hopefully find a local kid to lease and show her when she's broke. Maybe she'll be a top hunter....

    (hint, hint: grab her while you can!)

  • #2
    It's shameful

    Fancy doing this to a dumb animal. She looks positively embarrassed!

    Originally posted by FatPalomino View Post
    You can see another picture of her on our homepage:
    http://www.coloradotbrescue.org/
    Did I say "Bump" and....

    You're doing a great job and she definitely needs a nice home for the New year.

    Comment


    • #3
      She's is a very nice horse, and any fee you are asking is reasonable I am sure.

      The cheapest part of owning a horse is the purchase price/adoption fee. Anyone who quibbles over that initial, negligible cost worries me.
      Yo/Yousolong April 23rd, 1985- April 15th, 2014

      http://notesfromadogwalker.com/2012/...m-a-sanctuary/

      Comment


      • #4
        I LOVE your filly! Honestly, if I could get her to VA I'd take her. She does more than the 6 yr old gelding I'm buying.

        She is beautiful and seems so calm and relaxed with you. I really love seeing horses like this, and I am sure the adoption fee you are asking for is reasonable.
        Visit My Craft Blog!

        http://www.sarasdailycrafts.blogspot.com

        Comment


        • #5
          Fabuleux, I'm glad you said that, cause I have a colt coming from CO to PA and was thinking...hmm not that I ever need any other horses but that filly is nice. So now, she can just hitch a ride and go to VA!

          Originally posted by fabuleux View Post
          I LOVE your filly! Honestly, if I could get her to VA I'd take her. She does more than the 6 yr old gelding I'm buying.

          She is beautiful and seems so calm and relaxed with you. I really love seeing horses like this, and I am sure the adoption fee you are asking for is reasonable.
          Maria Hayes-Frosty Oak Stables
          Home to All Eyez On Me, 1998 16.2 Cleveland Bay Sporthorse Stallion
          & FrostyOak Hampton 2008 Pure Cleveland Bay Colt
          www.frostyoaks.com

          Comment


          • #6
            Congratulations!

            Hopefully the exposure will help to find her a permanent and happy home!

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by aspenlucas View Post
              Fabuleux, I'm glad you said that, cause I have a colt coming from CO to PA and was thinking...hmm not that I ever need any other horses but that filly is nice. So now, she can just hitch a ride and go to VA!
              Aw, see? There you go. A ride for her to PA. I can personally attest that she is one quiet, sweet filly, and she deserves her own person.

              Comment


              • #8
                What a beauty!

                Comment


                • #9
                  You got her dam, too, right? How did the dam turn out? Was she TB or APHA? Looked like high white but I have seen that on some TB's.

                  Comment

                  • Original Poster

                    #10
                    Originally posted by catknsn View Post
                    You got her dam, too, right? How did the dam turn out? Was she TB or APHA? Looked like high white but I have seen that on some TB's.
                    The Dam looked like a crop-out Paint. She has probably been pretty well-abused at some point. She wasn't halter broke, was lame on a hind leg, hadn't had feet trimmed in a year or two, and had ugly conformation. Actually, she is the definition of a Fugly horse that should have never been bred.
                    http://i72.photobucket.com/albums/i1...arefoal013.jpg
                    http://i72.photobucket.com/albums/i1...arefoal014.jpg

                    We used Peggy, as a weanling, to catch her dam
                    http://i72.photobucket.com/albums/i1...arefoal031.jpg

                    The dam was very close to the line of being out-of-control dangerous. Someone took a chance on her, and got her halterbroke and her feet trimmed. They are trying to make her a riding horse... I wished them the best of luck with that. They agreed to our no-sale, no-breeding contract and I gladly waived any adoption fee on the dam (now named :
                    Cinnabun).

                    Peg, this filly, was nice as can be from day one, even alongside her witch of a mother at the auction.
                    http://i72.photobucket.com/albums/i1...arefoal017.jpg
                    Peg is put together world's better than her mom. I can only imagine that the sire was darn nice... or this is one of those 'freak' events.

                    We bought another mare/foal set the same day. That foal is an Appaloosa which is extremely special and just a good filly. The mom rode like an old reining horse. They are both adopted to a friend who owns a 300 acre farm in the mountains. His horses (26 and 29 years old 2 years ago when he adopted the set) were "getting up there" and "almost ready to be retired"


                    Oh, and shipping her to the East Coast? Not a problem. That's my old stomping grounds We have a very nice rescued horse hopefully heading to central NJ to live with a vet I know, and I am sure there is room for sweet ole Peggy on the truck We are still looking for bids for shipping... anyone interested?? Honestly, whoever winds up with Peggy is one of the luckiest people I know. If hay was cheap (or money grew on trees, or if I was going to be done with vet school before 2011) we would never let this filly go...
                    Last edited by FatPalomino; Jan. 3, 2009, 09:54 AM.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      I saw her on Fugly and LOVED her. Trouble is...I'm in New England. ;( I'm sure with that exposure you'll get someone out to give her a nice home in no time.

                      ps...as a casual observer..I do have to ask, why would you guys name a rescue horse Peg Leg? It makes me wonder if there was a conformational reason?
                      "We're still right, they're still wrong" James Carville

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Wow she is stunning!!

                        *I do not need another horse*
                        www.simplicityweimaraners.ca

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          That is a strikingly lovely filly! Surely she will find a good home soon.
                          --o0o--

                          Comment

                          • Original Poster

                            #14
                            Originally posted by chism View Post

                            ps...as a casual observer..I do have to ask, why would you guys name a rescue horse Peg Leg? It makes me wonder if there was a conformational reason?
                            Long story short.

                            Another rescue *highly* recommended a foster home. References checked out. Peg went there.

                            In 8 weeks she was starved, struck with pneumonia, and hanging on by a thread. And Then sold (illegally... and technically stolen according to our contracts).

                            The new 'owners' fed her straight alfalfa hay to "fatten her up", didn't trim her feet, etc. The kind little filly developed physitis (which they 'didn't notice'). Thanks to LarkspurCO, a friend that lent me a truck, 500 miles of driving dirt roads, 2 weekends, and one good sheriff officer (not 3 lousy sheriff departments or the state brand inspector), and friends ready to bail me out of jail or pay my first hospital bill for getting shot... we found and "repo'd" the filly.

                            We hauled her to Larkspur's farm (3 hours closer to the poor filly than my farm is). The vet was due out 12 hours later in the morning, but the filly's hind leg was "gnarly" as I would say.

                            Larkspur's DH suggested: Eye eye Peg Leg.
                            After all the frustrations, it was the first time I had laughed in 2 weeks. So, Peg Leg stuck.

                            Initial vet was not very concerned about the physitis, knowing Larkspur's nutritional knowledge. We consulted with our wonderful lameness vet about nutrition, and also got Peg Leg a second opinion at one of the best equine clinics in the country (Littleton Large). They were much more worried about the sand that had accumulated... they radiographed her belly, not her leg With proper care and a close eye, Peg leg recovered just fine and shows no long term effects from her ordeal. If Peggy would talk, I know she would forgive everyone who did harm to her. She's just that nice.

                            I am horrible for naming horses, so blame it on me. Larkspur's big red horse got a smelly name from me the night we tried to load him at the feedlot and he wanted nothing to do with the trailer (in the rain, on a Monday night, with a crippled Champion Lodge waiting alongside).

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