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Help Wanted, HORSE TRAINER: We are also looking for a trainer that can also help in the office as an executive assistant at times (emails, calls, matching people with horses and vise versa, showing horses to adopters, working with adopters and their horses, possibly taking adopter horses for training, talking to donors, escorting visitors, helping with the website, some of the special care of horses... wrapping/shots/hand walking and some training of adopters/interns). Knowledge of all the riding and driving disciplines and all breeds of horses is helpful but a good quiet seat is a must. Salary is starting at $500. a month with free room and board but if the person is a good worker and a good rider, it will go up to $750. a month at 6 months and if they are good at placing horses into homes and a good consistent worker. The work is 7 days a week with every other weekend off (but the weekend hours are usually pretty slow, (just feeding/turn out and taking care of the barn/stalls) unless adopters or donors are visiting), some barn work (feeding, grooming/cooling out and turn out) but mostly just training and office work, some horse transport if you can drive a trailer. We can probably work the hours so if someone wants to go college or grad school on line we will make every attempt to work it in but work hours are around the normal work day and the best hours to ride (dependent upon weather). Some travel may be involved with this job to go check on program horses in homes, help adopters with training with horses and guidance and possibly some pick up and delivery of horses in the program (with the program vehicle/trailer of course) and potentially setting up displays and tables at some of the big horse shows and events. I hate to say it but I'm much more interested in a lady/girl that is more interested in horses and helping them than boys or making a fortune. email secondwindadopt@aol.com or call 304-873-3532. Some one has been going into our pasture and barn and cutting horses tails and manes off, ruining their natural fly swatter right before fly season. If we see anyone in our pasture or barn that is not suppose to be there you will be shot on sight. That is not a threat, its a promise. We have no trespassing signs up everywhere so this is a criminal offense and vandalism. Criminal complaints have already been filed. |
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A special thank you to Erin Burnside of Elkins High School and all the riders that came to the benefit trail ride for SWAP. As her Senior project Erin raised over $400. for SWAP. Kudos Erin. If we had 100 kids do this as their senior project or even just as a fund raiser, they could pay to feed all our horses for a year!! Please consider us kids when you are doing your volunteer projects for school or if you want to do a fund raiser this summer. One kid with the desire to help can make a huge difference, just like Erin did. Bravo for a job well done!!
Congratulations to our Executor for her selection and award for the International Who's Who of Professional and Business Women for 2006/2007. Kudos!! Yehaa, Kudos again to our Executor for her selection to receive the National Leadership Award by the Republican Party. Click here to put a horse into our adoption program Click here to see what we have learned over the years and with thousands of horses.
If you can't adopt, think about a gift to one or all of our horses: supplies, tack, dewormers, a donation, fly spray, or a new halter. Click here to be a sponsor to one of our horses
Great Goals for 2008: 1. Spend an hour a day with your horses, not just feeding, training and turning out, but real quality time doing something that is enjoyable for the both of you. Grooming or hand walking is a great way to bond with your horse and good for both you and the horse. 2. Get your loved ones more involved in your horses. Divorce is the biggest reason we see horses coming back to us. Don't just share the work, share the fun too and find something they really enjoy doing with horses. 3. Learn a new discipline, go to a clinic, a horse show, or equine affaire. Come to one of our clinics or watch a training video. If you are an adopter you can check out books and video's from SWAP's Library for just shipping costs. Take a lesson at least once a month or Bring your adoption horse here and we will help you. The better you are, the more fun you will have. 4. Make a plan for your horse after you are gone or if you have a major injury, let your will executor know your plans. Make a plan for emergencies or financial bumps along the way for your horse. Have a plan if you or your horse gets injured, even for the tough times of year like winter (or summer down south). Ask friends, family and neighbors to be part of your plan. Most people can not resist someone when they are asking for help for the welfare of an innocent animal. 5. Get yourself healthy and in better shape to prevent injury, to live a long life and to more enjoy your horses. Eat 1-1-1 (one ounce of dark chocolate, one ounce of fresh walnuts, one glass of red wine daily) and 2-2-2 (2 servings of fresh vegis, 2 of fresh fruit and get 2 sources of fat free calcium). Drink 100 ounces of spring water a day, get a whole house water filter. Change over to Sea-salt. Take one teaspoon of apple cider vinegar every morning to keep your body alkaline (cancer and disease can not grow in an alkaline body). Eat more fish and chicken and less red meat. Get a good air cleaner and do daily deep breathing exercises, get outside in the fresh air and sunshine for at least 1/2 hour every day. Get away from high fat food, processed foods, fast food, can or boxed food, sugar or artificial sweeteners, soda and don't eat anything if you can't read all the ingredients and know exactly what is in it. Clean all vegis and fruits thoroughly, buy organic, buy ocean caught fish, not farm raised, buy fresh meat and raw milk, not packed or processed. Eat only natural carbs (potatoes, rice, oats) bake/broil or steam everything. Use your microwave for only heating water, it kills the nutrition value in food. Get 8 hours of sleep, reduce stress/risk (reduce commuting by car pooling, tight schedules, cell phone use in the car, watch or read the news only once a day or better yet once a week, stay clear of negative people and those very negative chat rooms and bulletin boards). Stop Complaining and be Thankful for what we each have. Do one hour of walking, yoga or weight training every day and it will make you strong, lean, look great and you'll get wonderful complements from friends, coworkers and loved ones and the horse work will be easier and more enjoyable. 6. Read at least one book on training your horse and one on care each year, if for nothing else but just inspiration. SWAP has a great library of books/videos that adopters can check out for just the cost of mailing it. Click here to see our Library 7. Get carrots/apples every time you go to the store, your horses will love you for it and always come running when you call. Don't feed candy or anything sweeter. Carrots are sweet enough. Get rid of the sweet feeds and you'll get rid of the hot horse once and for all. 8. Realize that if you are having a problem with your horse, more likely than not, the problem is you. Learn more, practice more, ask in a different way, be patient, change their environment or daily schedule to better suit them. Taking better care of a horse always brings out the best in that horse. Good feed/hay, time to rest in a quiet stall out of the elements, lots of fresh water, time to be with you and time to just be a horse, time with their buddies, farrier and vet care always done is a good start. The biggest part of this relationship puzzle is you, not the horse. If you are struggling, then you need to learn more and get better. 9. Ride at least once a week, regardless of weather. Use this time as your down time for healing, your therapy, your time to relieve stress and the pressures of daily life. Even if you don't ride, go sit and read a book in the pasture with the horses or sit in the barn and listen to them munch on dinner, away from the crowd and noise of your day. Enjoy the peace and quiet, enjoy hearing happy horses eating dinner or grass in the pasture. 10. Spend time leisurely grooming your horse once a week. Rubber curries are shine makers. You will have a beautiful horse and a very loyal friend who will do anything for you. 11. Come and spend a week at SWAP HQ, volunteering and focusing on helping a horse and giving will change your life plus it will be the best vacation you ever had. Help an animal in need, whether fostering, being one of our state reps that goes out to check on our horses in their homes or helps us approve adopters in their area. Find horses in need and help us find them homes. Buy a horse at a slaughter auction, get it fat and trained and we'll help you place it into a good home. Foster and volunteer for your local small animal adoption program. I promise, the good things you do will come back to you a hundred times over. Every person has a talent they can offer and if you help one horse or one dog or cat find a good home, you have changed their life forever. 12. Know that every goal is obtainable and it starts with a single step. Take that first step today!! No matter what it is or how big, YOU CAN DO IT!! Every goal that is written down will come true (really!). Every famous person, every great or notable scientist, author, trainer/rider, parent or friend started out as just a thought, just a goal. Remember to take one step today to reach your goals. 13. Start every day with thinking about, what is the most important thing I can do today to change my life and make it better. Do that one thing and in 30 days your life will be totally different. Can you imagine what your life would be like if you did that for 60, 90 or even 365 days a year. The opportunities are endless. 14. Want to keep your horse sound for life? (That should be every horse owners number one goal) do a long slow warm up (cold muscle is easy to injure, a warm one is nearly impossible to injure). The very best cool down is hand walking your horse for 1 hour after every work out. Yes, get off the horse and walk with it. Its great exercise for you and a good time for you to bond. Stop riding your horse during cool downs and stop using a hot walker, do something good for you and the horse, hand walking. Its also the best rehab for over work and injuries, the only thing better is hydro therapy and swimming your horse. Allow soft tissue and hard tissue to become more conditioned before going into any training program... that usually means 3 months of at least 3 days a week for soft tissues and 10 months of work for bones to become strong enough to jump or do any strenuous training program. Don't start any upper level work, jumping or extensive training until the horse is fit and at least between age 4 and 6 and has been conditioned for at least 10 months (especially if the horse has never been jumped/worked or not been jumped or worked in the last year). 15. Appreciate what you have and be thankful. Instead of looking at what you don't have, look at what you do. Thank those people who have helped you and supported you. The more you give, the more that will come back to you. When you give something away or give something to someone/something in need, you make space in your life for something good to come to you. We are all very blessed, if we just take a moment to look around and enjoy those things. 16. Get used to using favorite mantra's and visualizations every day, simple ones that are easy to remember, like 'I can do this, I will do this', 'this isn't going to get the best of me' or even, 'I deserve the best' or 'the gift of love, caring, and support always comes back' and take two minutes every morning as you wake and at night as you go to sleep to visualize the life you want, the you you want to be, Our thoughts become things, what you see is what you get, if you expect the best, the best will happen, change your self-talk from negative to positive and I promise your life will change for the better.. 17. Each person is put on this earth for a reason, each of us has a mission. What is yours? Seek and you shall find, finding is a journey ... in the journey and the search you'll find your life purpose. If you died in your sleep tonight is there something you haven't done that you need to do or want to do? Someone you need to mend fences with, burnt bridges to fix? People you need to tell them how much you love them? Have you fulfilled your purpose in your life? Ask yourself, Why am I here? How can I make this better? Who do I want to be? Who am I suppose to be? What reason was I put on this earth? What is my purpose? 18. Be an inspiration to your family, co workers and friends. We all fall on our face, we all make mistakes, we all get discouraged, most times we all get up and try again.... sometimes we need a nudge. Instead of being negative or doing negative things, be their inspiration. You do believe they can do it, so why not tell them. If their self talk is negative, then you be their positive self talk.... eventually they will start to say it and believe it too. Life is self fulfilling, failure feeds on itself or causes more failure, achieving does as well. So if you or your love ones are in a negative cycle, break the cycle by changing your thoughts, your self talk, achieve something small to get yourself and your family back into the cycle of achievement. 19. We all file a flight plan every single day for our life. Where is your flight going today? Just like a pilot flying, the winds, the gravitational pull will change your flight plan and take you off course, so you must make small corrections along the way to make sure you make your destination. Have you selected your destination? Have you picked the steps in your flight plan to get there? Every goal is really that easy, pick the goal and figure out how to get there. The easiest way to pick your flight path/plan is find someone who has done it before you, then do what they did. Its all baby steps you know. Just keep an eye on that destination and keep saying...."here is my destination, this is where I'm going, this is where I am now, this is how I'm going to get there.... I will arrive at this time on this day. You can do it..... its just like getting in your car to go to the store, its just deciding where you want to go and how to get there, then take that first step. You can do it!! No matter how big or how outlandish you may think your dream to be... it is obtainable. 20. Laugh every day and try (as hard as it is sometimes) to find the positive and the humor in each situation (and have at least one bite of a truly decadent desert once a week). Life is just too short to not enjoy it thoroughly. 21. We learn the most and do our best work when we have fallen on our face, when we are struggling, when we are worried, scared or frustrated, when we anguishing over something or troubled by it. It is then that you have true motivation, when you think clearer. The most brilliant ideas come to people when they feel lost, frustrated, or at the bottom, helpless or hopeless. Cherish these times because its when you can come up with your best ideas to your biggest problems and challenges. You see, there is a reason for the rainy days. 22. You can't make everyone happy, its useless to try and wasted energy to think you can. 50% of all people will not agree with you at any given time, don't worry about it and don't let it stop you. 50% becomes a lot of people when you are in the public eye. As long as you are not hurting anyone and you believe you are doing the right thing, then go ahead and do it. If you are wondering what is the right thing to do, its usually the harder thing to do, the toughest path to take. The easy way out is rarely the right thing to do. Instead of worrying over what someone thinks of you or says about you, do something amazing and outstanding to inspire them or at least have them sitting on the side lines being jealous, secretly saying, "wow, she has guts". One person with purpose becomes the majority, one way or another. This should probably be taped to your bathroom mirror where one could read it every day. 1. There are at least two people in this world that you would die for. 2. At least 15 people in this world love you in some way. 3. The only reason anyone would ever hate you is because they want to be just like you 4. A smile from you can bring happiness to anyone, even if they don't like you. 5. Every night, SOMEONE thinks about you before they go to sleep. 6. You mean the world to someone. 7. You are special and unique. 8. Someone that you don't even know exists loves you. 9. When you make the biggest mistake ever, something good comes from it. 10 When you think the world has turned its back on you take another look. 11 Always remember the compliments you received. Forget about the rude remarks. Good friends are like stars....... You don't always see them, But you know they are always there. "Whenever God Closes One Door He Always Opens Another, I would rather have one rose and a kind word from a friend while I'm here than a whole truck load when I'm gone. Always in hope and admiration, Celeita
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We understand that selling, giving away or even the idea of donating your horse, your child, your loyal friend and companion is one of the hardest decisions that anyone has to make. Its even worse when you are in our situation because we unfortunately get to see all the terrible, horrific things that happen to horses because of bad decisions made by owners. SWAP does provide services for owners who do not want to donate their horse but want to board and specifically rehabilitate horses and maintain ownership. We also have brokering services for owners who are looking to sell their horse and to sell their horse using our safe selling agreement, that will protect your horse for life. Over 3 million visitors come to our web site each month so your horse will be looked at an average of 10,500 times before adoption or a sale. All fees provided go to taking care of the horse in question and the rest goes to SWAP to help and care for adoption horses. Click here to see a list of Services to horse owners that may need boarding, training or rehabilitation (either for training issues, from overwork, neglect or an injury situation, this is our specialty and many times owners can find out they can keep their horse with rehabilitation). All these services are rarely offered as a convenient package by any facility. Also If you are maintaining ownership but thinking of selling, we will also help you sell your horse while he is with us, for 10% of his sale price, which will go to SWAP to help other horses in their program. Donating A Horse To Second Wind Adoption ProgramCosts Associated with donating your horse: Paramount to all of us at Second Wind is the desire to provide not only the best permanent home but also the best care for the horse while in our program. We not only want every opportunity to make sure they get the best homes but that they are successful in them, as well.
1. Our Fees: To donate a horse to SWAP it costs the donor $1500. plus the
cost of getting current shots/coggins and the transport to get the horse to
us. That can be paid in a lump sum and sent with the donor form to SWAP HQ
or you can pay that in monthly payments. If you pay in monthly payments a
promissory note is signed along with the donor forms that basically says you
will pay and all post dated checks for the payments are sent to SWAP with
the donor forms up front in advance to the horse, this saves us from having
to do billing and saves the donor having to remember the payment. We secure
all checks until the date on the check and then deposit it. Checks should be
numbered at #500 or above and have the donors name and address on the
checks. The first payment is dated for the date we get the donor forms with
all follow on payments dated 30 days after the previous payment. The monthly
payments can be set up for as low as $100. a month but more can be paid
monthly, its the donors choice as long as the $1500. is paid in full in the
end. Any horses that either have the breeding, age, soundness, upper
level training, temperament or experience level to help SWAP by using their
adoption fee to take care of other horses, SWAP will accept that horse at no
cost to the owner, the only cost to the donor is the transportation/shots
and coggins to come to SWAP HQ.
2. SWAP may accept waivers for hardship for boarding fees in cases where
the owner can show cause that they have to move the horse to SWAP and can
not pay board, many times this is done for prosecuting attorneys and for
racing professions as many times it can mean the life or death of the horse
in question. This is on a case by case basis and very dependent upon the
time of year, the financial stability of the program at the time, the number
of horses in the program and the personnel available to take care of the
horses. We can not do that for companion horses that can not be ridden
because of the length of time it takes to place a companion horse into a
home and the extreme costs associated with it.
3. If the donor is looking for a permanent retirement home for a
companion horse we request a one time fee of $5000. to defray those costs (which can
be broken down into monthly payments using post dated checks).
This is only a service, an option but is not a requirement of donating your
horse. Without this fee, SWAP has the option of releasing full
ownership of the horse to the adopters that have proven themselves worthy of
horse ownership after 2 to 5 years. That does not mean all horses will be
sold to adopters after that probationary period. All adopters and
subsequent buyers of the horse will sign a safe selling agreement that
governs care, facilities, use and resale, if ownership is released to the
adopter. Selling the horse to the adopter is the total discretion of SWAP
and the decision is based on what is best for the individual horse.
4. You can choose to place the horse from your facility as long
as you can do the following: Commit to answering questions about the horse,
give us updates and nice pictures of the horse on a monthly basis (cleaned
up in hand and tacked up in sunshine outside, riding if a ride able horse), have the horse
cleaned up and available for visitors, be available by email or phone and
have the insurance so if the visitor wants to try the horse and appropriate
riding rings, safe equipment and helmets.
5.
Transportation to SWAP depends on the transporter that you choose, paid at
pick up in cash. (we can also recommend safe viable transporters who may be
able to offer a good price and that we trust). Do not go with anyone that
charges over a dollar a mile because we have transporters that will do it
for much less and still do a good job for you.
Click here to see the
recommended transporters.
Details: if the donor breaks the contract at anytime, misrepresents the horse or does not pay the board bill that it forfeits all contractual requirements by SWAP regarding the donated horse. It is critical to understand that once the horse is donated he is no longer owned by the donor and they will never be able to get the horse back (unless the horse is available and is adopted by the original owner). Read the donor contract carefully and understand that we have no contractual requirements or reporting requirements to you as the owner and that this form just basically states that you are donating the horse. We do update owners about the horse out of concern for the owners feelings but it is not a contractual requirement. We are strict about this because our adopters have to have complete assurance that the horse will be available BEFORE they fill out a 11 page application and once the many questions, contracts and fees are done. We would never want to ask anyone to go through our adoption process just to find out the horse they had their heart set on is no longer available. Why donate to SWAP (The Benefits to donating to SWAP) At Second Wind we believe adoption is "rescue prevention" and we work to prevent abuse, neglect and wrongful death before it occurs. Donating your horse to SWAP is the closest thing to knowing your horse will never be abused, go to slaughter or be sold at auction. We pride ourselves in providing safe and loving homes for life! Sadly, there is no guarantee for the complete safety of any horse (even in your own backyard) because bad things happen to good horses and there are bad people always trying to get around and get over and unfortunately horses are often the target. I mean if the police and government can not find murderers to prosecute them when they killed people, there is no way SWAP can promise to find a horse that is sold or know every time when a horse has been hurt by the adopter but we can assist the state/county to prosecute the adopter or we can sue them in a civil court. Horses are first and foremost to us. We match your horse with an adopter and match the adopter to your horse! Your horse can go on to another profession, one he or she is physically and mentally suited for. We've placed over thousands of horses since 1998. That includes 65 different breeds from all over the continental United States and Canada! Over 32 million people visited our web site last year from 103 different countries and all continents of the world. Literally thousands of people will see your horse on our website every day. On an average each horses page is viewed around 2500 times each month and some horses page is viewed at much as 9500 times each month until its placed into a home. We have over 250 approved adopters waiting for their horse to come into the program! Contractually the adopter is obligated to never sell or transfer the horse and if they can't, it comes back to SWAP and we place the horse into another home with the same requirements. All adopters fill out a 11 page application that looks at everything from their desire to have a horse and long term companion, their personal, home, professional and financial stability (employment, debt and financial responsibility, credit, past criminal, civil and bankruptcy history), their knowledge of horses (with a written test), their facilities (with a pictures or a visit to the farm) and time available for the horse. Once the application is approved, we match the adopter to the horse and vise versa, matching capabilities, experience, the horses ability to do the job and the adopter's ability to meet the horses needs. The protection that SWAP offers your horse is probably 80% more effective for knowing that your horse will be safe and in a good home for life. This is a much safer than selling or giving away the horse (even to close friends and neighbors who say they will keep the horse forever and give you first rights), thousands of verbal contracts concerning horses are broken daily. The only safer thing than our program is to keep the horse yourself. See mistakes owners make in looking for a home (listed below) We can usually take your horse immediately and save you hundreds of dollars in boarding, feed, farrier and vet bills. We also save you the time and frustration it takes to sell a horse and find it a quality home. We disclose all the information you give us about your horse to ensure it's placed in the best home.
Things To Know About Donating your Horse to SWAP All breeds of horses are accepted into the program from all over the US and Canada. SWAP accepts mares and geldings, weanlings through age 20. We will assist owners who have horses over age 20 as long as they keep their horse at their facility until we place it into a home. Stallions need to be castrated and given a few weeks healing time before arrival. If this is unreasonable an attempt will be made to place a stallion directly from the donors facility. Stallions can be taken at SWAP if the owner is willing to pay board of $400. a month until the horse is adopted (for a maximum of 6 months). Horses must have a current coggins (within 6 months to come to SWAP HQ) and be up to date on worming (within 90 days) and vaccinations done the spring of the year donated (eee/wee/rabies/tetanus/west nile/flu and botulism) . Donor forms that give details of the horse’s disposition, injuries (old and new), limitations, habits, and any joint injections or illnesses should be sent to SWAP HQ to be considered by SWAP. The executor can usually tell you on the phone upfront if the horse can be accepted into the program before the forms are filled out (call or email Celeita at 304-873-3532, secondwindadopt@aol.com) Donors have the option of keeping the horse at their facility to be placed into the home or provide transportation for the horse to our facilities in West Virginia or to one of our many foster homes if the horse is located on west of the Mississippi and beyond the owners financial capability to ship. SWAP can help arrange commercial shipping if needed but shipping is the financial responsibility of the donor. Horses coming to SWAP need to be adoptable for us to be able to accept them. They must be sound at all gaits (without drugs or injections or special shoeing) and able to be turned out (each horse will have a stall). SWAP offers the owner of companion horses (horses that no longer able to be ridden or driven or horses that need rehab to be sound) services in finding them a home from your facility or ours, at our facility if the owner can pay board for one year with the understanding that it takes usually a year to find a suitable, safe home that will make a long term commitment to a companion horse or horse that needs rehabilitation. We will cover all the horses costs beyond that time and anything else the horse needs. SWAP follows up on each horse for every year for the rest of the horses life or until ownership is transferred to the adopter but this is not done with every horse. The owner has the option of having us protect the horse for life. Mandatory annual updates required of adopters are shared with the former owners who also may correspond if they wish.
We have put together a list of things to beware of when selecting your horses next home. These are tried and true lessons learned from our program over the years and after placing thousands of horses into homes in 45 states and Canada and hearing thousands of stories about sales, leases, give aways, and donations that have gone very wrong. Things We strongly recommend against when you can't keep your horse, These are major mistakes often made by horse owners: Mistake # 1. Thinking that anyone can find him a better home than your home. Regardless of what any program tells you, the safest place for your horse is in your barn or pasture. There is never a guarantee even when you keep your horse but keeping it is safer than doing anything else. The person who loves him the most right now is you. This is a tough thing to understand but if you are not willing to keep him through his problems, his health issues, his age, his lameness, your training weaknesses and the cost then do you think that someone else will? The best reason to sell, give away or donate a horse is because it is the best thing for the horse,... but its important to remember that no one will care for him or her like you do. Mistake # 2. Giving the horse away with only a verbal agreement and not a written contract signed by both parties that covers all the details of care, facilities, sale, etc is a huge mistake. Most horse verbal agreements are broken, horses are sold to abusive/neglectful homes that over use or miss use horses or just inappropriate homes that have no horse knowledge even though they have a big heart. Many are sold to slaughter, even by so called "best friends, rescues or even neighbors". Beware doing any transfers of your horse without a written contract and clear understanding of care, use, facilities, transfer agreements, feeding, shelter, turn out, vet/farrier care, shots and dental work, selling or transferring the animal. etc. Never allow someone to have, lease or buy your horse without a clear written down and signed understanding of minimum care, exact criteria of use and limits of use, transfer requirements, and facilities required. We always offer our adoption contract to people who are selling or giving away their horse, just change the letter head and change the areas to fit your sale or gift. This is critical to know... Most states do not have laws governing minimum care, use and over use of large animals so if a person "owns" a horse they can literally do anything to it according to the law, that includes starving it, even shooting or beating the horse if you give them ownership. Mistake # 3. Donating your horse to a college or university riding program. As much as an education advocate as we are we still can't recommend this. Coming from a university program myself I have seen this too much. If the horse can be ridden by 100 different kids, they are worked to death by riders who bounce on their back and pull on their mouth for potentially hours each day or if they can't be ridden by the majority of students they sit in their stall with very little quality time with one person and very little time turned out. When the horse no longer can do the job, it is sold to any person that has the money to buy the horse because that is also how they keep the university program going by selling the donated horses (which can be done legally after 2 years for horses appraised over 5k and immediately if the horse is appraised under $5000.) Mistake # 4. Donating your horse for a research program or vet study program. Again, education is critical and the need for good vets is huge but its important to remember that these horses are injected with disease, have lameness forced upon them, they are poked, prodded, dissected and studied for the purpose of learning. Yes, learning is critical but why can't it happen on an animal already dead? Most live horses end up dieing in these research programs with their last days being worse than anything that could have ever happened their entire life. To me this is almost worse than slaughter. I promise if you as the horse owner could see what we have seen, you would never sell your horse to anyone with just a bill of sale again because it leaves your horse open to so so many cruel things, that are all legal according to our laws that do nothing to protect your horse. So its on the responsibility of the individual owner to protect their horses, even the ones they are selling or donating. Mistake # 5. Donating to a program similar to ours that only protects the horse for 2 years and then releases the horse to be sold. These are nothing but glorified horse traders and I am amazed the IRS gives them non profit status as a animal welfare program because after two years they release complete ownership of the horse, putting the horse back into the same cycle of abuse, neglect, sales being done for money's sake only, slaughter and ending up in the endless cycle of going from home to home, many not good homes with no one protecting them. This promotes and invites every evil person that is looking to make a buck to adopt because they know there is a huge profit at the end of the two years, especially when most of these programs are placing horses for $500. or less, the money grubber could make as much as $20,000. or more at the end of the two years. Even though its much more work, the good program bites the bullet and signs up to protect the animal for life and never releases it for sale. If an owner cares about their horse at all they will stay away from programs like this who are just pretending to protect horses but don't want to do the tough work of long term follow up and having horses coming in and out of their program several times to be placed again. Look for programs that will protect your horse for life or at least sign up to not releasing ownership for at least 5 or 10 years and if they do it for less there is a written agreement and strong stipulations about all areas of care, selling, use, mis use and over use, which will keep the horse protected for most of its life. Mistake # 6: Giving ownership to anyone without examining their financial stability and employment, personal stability and family stability, emotional stability, reference checks from their vet and farrier, criminal record, credit rating, their facilities and their planned use of the horse. No state in the US has minimum care laws for large animals so the law does not even protect your horse. When you give ownership to someone, according to the law, they can do any to it and it won't be against the law. Let us say that again, If you give ownership to the person, they can literally do anything to it or with it and there is no law to protect it. This is a very sad fact but what that means is that you as the owner have to do your homework on where your horse is going. Some people complain that we go overboard in looking at our adopters but people who lie for a living are very good at it, they've practiced it for years. If you are not looking at all these things then there is a good chance your horse will end up abused, neglected, miss-used or over used. Some have said they got their mortgage easier than they got a horse from us but we think these horses are much more important than a mortgage, additionally by the time the bank is about to foreclose on a person that does not pay their mortgage, you're horse could be dead or have suffered years of abuse or neglect. We check all these things and still run into professional liars, people that have the money but don't want to spend it on a horse, to people who give up too easily, to people who will sign a contract one day and break it the next without thought, to people who are personally very unstable ie. living from one paycheck to paycheck with no cushion, who mismanage their money, who are on the verge of being laid off or divorced, people who will do anything to get a horse just to lie again to sell it to anyone that has the big money they are looking for. Our application covers a whole lot and will weed out most of the problems just because we do look at things like bankruptcies, criminal records, employment, references, the facilities, the planned use of the horse and even credit at times. We even put in writing the restrictions about what the horse can do and can not do. Click here and read our adoption contract that every adopter signs and I think you will see that with the exception of putting your horse in your back yard, this is the most protected your horse will ever be. Mistake # 7. Donating your horse to a program that depends solely on foster homes for the care of their adoption horses. Yes a large farm like ours does have a big overhead and we wish that were different but it costs a lot of money to give quality care to horses and we can guarantee their care while they are with us. We know all the horses are in stalls, have shelter during bad weather, all horses are in 12 x 12 or 12 x 16 stalls, we know they are getting regular turn out, we know someone is around them at least 8 hours a day, we know they have fresh water and we know they are wearing rugs during the winter months. There is strong continuity of care and communications about the horses. Many of the programs that depend on foster homes still request board be paid by the donor and most times it's as much as we ask for here with no guarantee in care or facilities or even education level of foster but we will give donors waivers for our fees, many programs fosters will not take horses unless they are paid. Mistake # 8. The common myth is that good or great horses never end up in bad situations but that is so far from the truth, we have endless counts of great horses, even famous horses ending up in the worst situations. It only takes one bad owner, one uneducated owner, or one owner who losses their job or their husband walks out to ruin the entire life of the horse. Remember Ferdinand, the Kentucky Derby Winner that died in a Japanese Slaughter.... Mistake # 9. The myth that all adoption and rescue programs are the same. Programs like this are popping up on every corner today and most need rescued themselves because of the lack of financial stability, experience and lack of facilities. Some programs just ask for money and a name and address of their adopter and in reality they are no more than a glorified horse trader. Mistake # 10. Don't be mistaken about this, good horses do go to slaughter, good horses go to unknowledgeable people making them susceptible to the person thinking the horse is bad. Good horses get old and go lame, they get starved by one person making everyone think the horse is worthless which makes them a target to end up in bad homes and going to slaughter. Mistake # 11. Divorce and family instability, job instability, loss of the family farm, credit problems, over spending problems, debt problems, criminal and civil charges, arrest, lack of knowledge and even owing back taxes can and will negatively affect your horse and could put them into a slaughter situation or a 'for sale' for money only situation where no consideration is given to the home. How do you check all these things when you sell or give away your horse??? Think about it, if you give your horse to your neighbor and she divorces, her husband could require she sell your horse as an asset, he could even get your horse and may not know anything about a horse. If the person you sell your horse to owes back taxes or ends up in civil court, your horse could be taken as an asset and sold to anyone, regardless if they have the money or knowledge to care for the horse or the facilities to protect the horse. Anytime your horse becomes the property or asset of someone else it can and will be taken as an asset for unpaid bills, debt, civil and criminal charges. My question to horse owners is how do you check these things?? SWAP does, its part of what we do. Here's the questions you should ask and carefully look at with any program you are considering donating your horse to (we can easy answer all these things for every donor because we do them): 1. How many horses have they put into homes total. How many horses do they put into homes each year, you don't want that number to really be more than about 150 and they should really be doing more than 50 each year if they are doing it full time (which they should be). How many people are on their paid staff? Volunteer staff? A good ratio of people to horses is at least one for every 5 horses at their facility or less. Do they have full time barn help and trainers, exercise people, help to do rehab and general care. How much land do they own and how many horses do they have on their property and in the program at one time. Ask for their financial statements for the last 5 years, see where they spend their money. 2. Look at the adopters application and contract. Do they make farm visits, do they require photos, do they do background checks, credit checks, employment checks, do they confirm that the adopter owns their farm. Do they get a signed agreement with the boarding facility so that the facility can not take the horse if the adopter does not pay their board bill or any other bill. Have they tracked down horses that are lost, moved, sold and recovered them? Have they been involved in criminal prosecution of adopters of horses that have been starved, have they entered litigation on behalf of their horses when adopters have breached their contract. 3. Ask where your horse will go while its waiting to go to its new home, exact location and ask to visit, ask for pictures, daily schedules, the experience and training of the foster parent, feed details, turn out, blanketing, farrier and vet details, minimum care and will the horse be in a stall on a daily basis. 4. Does the program have its own farm, if so, go visit on a day when they are not expecting you. Absolutely necessary to have any stability for all their horses. Fosters are sometimes untrained, sometimes unknowledgeable people just looking for a free horse to ride with substandard facilities. Your horse depends on you to be smart and to make sure they are going some place safe. 5. What are the services they promise in writing to give to your horse. Ask such things like will they take adopters into litigation if they break the adoption contract. Do they have a lawyer on the programs staff to do those things. 6. Make sure they protect your horse for life. If they completely release the horse after so many years or sell the horse, stay clear of them. 7. Will you as the donor have all the contact information for the adopter and can you contact them? If the program says no, they could be hiding something. 8. Do they require automatic formal follow ups from the adopters on a regular basis? Something that shows the horse is up to date on all health care and in good flesh and good health and signed by a vet and farrier. 9. Ask for references from donors who have placed their horse into a home with this program. Talk to those donors and see if they stay in contact with their adopter and have they received pictures from the adopter? Having all the horses come into one farm does the following for the horse and owner: -With a central facility or main facility, you can know and see the exact facilities and people that your horse is going to while its being placed into a home. Many programs only say that your horse is going to a foster but do you see the facilities? Are they shown on their web site? Are all the foster homes listed, with facilities and personnel qualifications? Do you know their level of training because programs like this do not have the money to train foster parents? Are they professional horse people with training and the appropriate facilities or are they families with no training that just throw the horse out on pasture? Do you know the level of care they are getting? Most foster homes aren't even professional horse people that do fostering full time, they have families, jobs, husbands, children, etc. so most times your horse ends up rarely seeing people, being turned out and sometimes forgotten until he's placed by someone who hasn't even met him or handled him. These were tough lessons learned by our program (after having foster horses neglected, never ridden, never exercised, even starved and us not getting regular input, regular pictures or regular information about the horse in order to place him appropriately) and now the only horses that go into fosters with our program are horses that have already been to the Headquarters facility, been evaluated, the people making the decision about the home knows the horse and has handled the horse on a daily basis. Additionally they are only fostered with approved adopters that already have one of our horses and have proven their level of care. This adopter knows we will take all their adoption horses if the foster horse is not cared for. Currently we are going through a program revision that will probably end up requiring all horses to come to or return to SWAP HQ before being placed because of the downsides of using foster homes. Now this is not to say that Foster homes don't have all the love in the world and all the good intentions but what we finally realized was we were asking people who were not doing this full time to attempt to give as much as the staff at SWAP HQ who were doing this full time. It was just an unfair request and impossible for them to fulfill. -With a central facility, a complete initial evaluation can be done on all the horses coming into the program by the same people that selects the home for the horse. We see first hand how the horses are in turn out, in a group, with the farrier, the vet, while being ridden, out on a trail ride, when being taken away from the group, in their stalls, in cross ties and many times while traveling or after traveling and settling in. From our past very hard lessons learned, we realized that the horse had to be in the same hands of the person that is reviewing and approving the adoption applications and the person that is ultimately making the decision about who will adopt the horse. If one person has the horse and another person is approving and selecting the adopter that is a major misconnect and most often than not, it will result in a mismatch, no matter how good the reports are, how good the communication is and how good the horse is evaluated by the foster home. For the most part this is because all horse related communication is "relative" to a persons experience and background. Terms like "green broke, beginners horse, easy keeper, hard keeper, even riding terms such as beginner, intermediate and advanced" mean something different to different people. For example, a hard keeper to one person might mean the horse needs 3 lbs of grain a day to stay fat but to someone in racing a hard keeper is a horse that maybe gets 15 lbs a feeding, 4 times a day. There is a vast difference between those two. All those things must be defined objectively and we have found that the more people involved in the care and placement of the horse in varies locations all over the country, the more likely for potential confusion. Confusion and differences in training, care and understanding of basic concepts means horses will be ill fitted most of the time. -With a central facility, the care of the horse, training and evaluations done at one central location which works better for each horse, provides consistency and insurance of a level of care. Additionally it gives the adopters one central place to go see all the horses in the program which is economy of time and personnel in matching a horse to the adopter. Let's face it, trying to manage a horse's care and training from 3 states away is like trying to manage your children from that distance. It just doesn't work. You certainly can not decide which home would be best for a horse when you are in West Virginia, the horse is in Florida and the adopter is in Iowa. Certainly you can check on a horses care but evaluating, training or selecting the best home for a horse is a different story and we feel that requires a hands on approach by the person selecting the adopter. Certainly donating to SWAP is not the solution for every horse and every owner but if we can't take the horse or if owners want to look at other avenues, we just ask that each owner be smart about it, for the sake of their horse and its future. Let's face it. The story is Black Beauty is painfully true, most horses will change homes numerous times through out their life and as of no fault of their own. We've seen absolutely wonderful horses that have been owned by as many as 17 people by age 6. Lifestyles today are unstable, people move more, they change jobs more, divorce happens to 50% of all marriages and all these things will leave horses up for sale or looking for a new home even in our program. The family farm of our parents and grand parents is a thing of the past and because of these lifestyle changes things have become even more unstable for horses. When people selling are driven by money and not the home or they are pressured to sell because of lack of time or money then the horse could end up in any situation. Many could be and will be bad homes that could kill them, make them lame for life, sometimes dieing a slow painful death of being starved, over used or mis-used, abused or neglected by not providing proper vet and farrier care. Some are even shot by unknowledgeable people who think just because they can't handle the horse, no one can, which is so painfully untrue. All we are trying to do at SWAP is make sure that if a horse has to be moved or let go, that they always go into the best homes. Personally, of my 5 personal horses, its the only option I would ever consider for them. Good Luck!!!
All Forms needed to adopt or donate a horse, to foster, printable directions to Crossed Sabers (SWAP HQ) and even forms used by Adopters to send in updates on their adoption horses are all in pdf format. To open or print these forms you will need Adobe Acrobat Reader. if you are having any problems downloading forms to adopt or donate a horse, please contact us at secondwindadopt@aol.com and we can either fax them to you or attach them to an email
Reasons Horses Come To Second Wind Adoption The one thing all owners and trainers who put a horse in our program have in common is they all could sell the horse, some for large sums of money, but they care more for the horse than they do the money and want their horse to have a good home for life. Although the Second Wind Adoption Program is not a rescue, we do our best to accept every horse in need. We have, and will take, horses that are considered rescue horses when the need arises. Rescues are defined as horses that have been taken by authorities for abuse, neglect, misuse, overuse or lack of care and abandoned by their owner. Other reasons horses come to SWAP:
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