Please ignore the owners' declarations of love and protests of “we care.” Horseracing is simple, base exploitation – and the horses suffer and die for it.
(This post was made possible by the invaluable work of our vice
president and chief cruelty investigator, Joy Aten.)
Bred by Homer Noble & Gayno Stable, Puxa Saco (below) began her
“career” back in 2002, at the tender age of two. By all measures,
she was a “successful” racehorse: 10 of her 24 races were stakes
races, including two Grade 1s. She “won” 6 of those 24, and in all
“earned” a not-untidy sum of $400,000. Her final race came in 2005,
finishing 6th and just out of the money in a $300,000 Grade 3 at
Keeneland, one of America’s most illustrious tracks. Her owner, from
beginning to end, was Richard Rowan. Her trainer over her final 21
races was Jenine Sahadi.
After that last race, Puxa Saco was sold to Northwest Farms at the
Keeneland Association 2005 November Breeding Stock Sale for
$875,000, and consigned by Hinkle Farms. In 2015, she was sold again
at that same Keeneland sale, this time to Alastar Thoroughbred for
$75,000. And then once more, at the ’17 Sale to Tom Young – at this
point, the now-17-year-old fetched a mere $5,000. During this period
of her servitude, she birthed at least nine foals for use by the
racing industry.
On June 30 of this year, Puxa Saco, 20, was in a kill pen (below).
Yes, this former “winner” and “producer” was headed to equine hell –
the slaughterhouse.
As one of the fortunate few who was noticed, fundraising for her rescue began on July 1: “[she] is available for $850.” While she was eventually “bailed out” – the vile term for when the kill-buyer’s ransom is met – the words of her former trainer, Ms. Sahadi, are instructive. On February 16 of this year, Sahadi, who personally banked multiple thousands off Puxa, tweeted the following:
In another tweet, she says, “We are activists for this sport, our
horses and their caretakers. I for one am not interested in the
extremists’ ignorant rhetoric.”
When Puxa’s situation came to light, someone on FB asked, “Anyone
contact Jenine Sahadi?” The answer: “She knows, she was really
helpful with confirming her id.” To which, another asked, “But not
her bail?” The response:
So upon hearing her former (lucrative, I remind) charge was in a
kill pen, the best Ms. Sahadi could offer was an identification?
Beyond that, where was she in 2017 when Puxa’s stock had dropped to
what everyone in racing knows to be an ominous level? “Complete and
total devotion” – as defined by the horse people.
Of course, the rot goes much deeper than Jenine Sahadi. Where were
you, Homer Noble & Gayno Stable? Where were you, Richard Rowan?
Where were you, Northwest Farms? Where were you, Hinkle Farms? Where
were you, Alastar Thoroughbred? Where were you, Tom Young (who may
be the one who ultimately sold Puxa to slaughter)? And finally,
where were the “thousands of men and women who would take a bullet
for their horses”? Obscenities, all.
As a postscript, one of the commenters on the rescue thread suggested Puxa, because she is 20, be “kindly” euthanized. First, we at HW fully support euthanasia 1), if a life without pain/chronic illness/neglect is beyond reach and/or 2), in lieu of putting the horse on a slaughterhouse-bound truck. But as far as we know, Puxa is relatively healthy. So euthanasia would not have been the kind choice if (of course) a loving home could be found. So who was this person calling for euthanasia? Carrie Brogden, owner of Machmer Hall Farm, a Thoroughbred breeding operation (or, as they call it, a “livestock farm”). Here is Brogden talking about one of her recent products – “#44”:
“Paid for our kids school, my house, etc.” – that about sums it up. Racehorses, to the racers, are assets to be expended, resources to be mined, means to an end. (The specific end – a paycheck for the likes of Brogden and Sahadi or glory for the already-wealthy – is irrelevant.) So please ignore their declarations of love and protests of “we care.” Horseracing is simple, base exploitation – and the horses suffer and die for it.