A Little History of Triple R
In her heyday, Bonita was a trained, prized Paso Fino.
But on the hot summer day that volunteers from Triple R Horse Rescue found her at a Wakulla County home, she looked bedraggled, her mane was matted, she was hungry — and she looked more like a walking skeleton than a high priced horse. Even so, she still nickered when her name was called, sidling up to the fence for a little love.
Bonita was a victim of owner neglect, living in a paddock filled with sand and manure — and no shade. On the other side of the fence was lush green grass, but she couldn’t reach it.
Today she wanders a 100¬-acre pasture, is more than pleasantly plump (actually, she looks more like a butterball), gets groomed and ridden regularly and is loved by the woman who adopted her.
“I remember the day she and Mo (Bonita’s herd mate) were unloaded at their foster home, Spoon Blue Stables. They were emaciated and I remember thinking, ‘How can they even walk in that condition?’” said Sue Hitt of the horse she adopted. “Things are very different now. She is healthy, happy and living the high life.”
Bonita (now affectionately known as “Bo”) is one of the dozens of neglected and abandoned horses that have found their way to Triple R (formally known as Equine Rescue and Rehabilitation Ranch Inc.), a group of local volunteers who have banded together to help horses. Founded in 2009, it is one of the last resources for abused and hungry horses in the Tallahassee area. The rescues come mostly from a six-county area of North Florida and are housed in a network of foster homes that stretch across Leon, Gadsden, Wakulla and Jefferson counties, as well as into South Georgia.
There are a variety of ways a horse can find itself in the care of Triple R. Some, like Bonita and three of her herd mates, will be voluntarily surrendered by their owners — and sometimes that will only happen after Triple R has been asked to intervene at the urging of a family member or a friend. Other owners sign over the animals under pressure from local animal control or law enforcement officials. Some horses are simply abandoned, left to make it on their own survival instincts.
Or then there was the case of Thor, who was found tied to a tree outside the home of a Jefferson County volunteer fire chief. No one knew where he came from or how old he was. (A few days later that same fire chief got another, similar delivery — a mare he named Gypsy.)
After Triple R took in Thor, veteran trainer Marsha Hartford Sapp, coach of the Florida State University dressage team since 2004, volunteered to take on his training pro bono.
“Horses that have good training, good behaviors are much easier to place,” Sapp said. “They are also more likely to stay in their newly adopted home. For me to take Thor is my way of insuring he will find a good home.”
Sapp, who runs Southern Oaks Equestrian Center, is no stranger to untrained horses. She’s been part of the Extreme Mustang Makeover since 2009, a program that gives chosen trainers 100 days to work with never before handled wild horses and then present them at a competition. She’s finished in the top five at two competitions.
She said the rescue is an important part of the Tallahassee equestrian community because “we don’t have government facilities for horses like we have the shelter for domestic dogs and cats. There has to be a place for horses to go.”
While the Tallahassee region is home to many lush horse farms and their well-fed equines, horses in need are spread throughout the community. Some are hidden in walled-in backyards, others in pastures not visible from the road, some in open view. The history of each rescue is often hard to determine.
Ninja, a 26-year-old Quarter Horse found starving in a sandy lot in Gadsden County, was once a barrel racer. But the owner who had been forced to sign him over to Triple R never passed on that tidbit of information. It came from someone who had viewed the rescue’s website and recognized the name and the horse. She had raced him when he was young. On Jan. 1, 2019, he turned 34 and was still boss of a herd of younger horses and enjoying treats of apples and bananas after dinner every night at his forever home.
Some of the rescues are retired racehorses whose stories can at least be partly traced through the Jockey Club because of their tattoos. One such horse is Hummer, an emaciated gelding who was living in the backyard of a Woodville home. His racing name is Diamonds and Notes — and he was worth $25,000 as a two-year-old. Hummer started 36 races and won more than $160,000, then stopped racing when he was six years old. What happened in the intervening 10 years? No one knows.
David Rigdon said the best and worst day he has experienced as a Triple R volunteer came when at the request of the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office he went to pick up Seminole, an emaciated mare who had been found wandering the streets of Lloyd.
“This horse was literally nothing but walking bones,” he remembered. But then he delivered her to her foster family “where I was met by a brother and sister who immediately provided her with food, water and shelter. With help from kids like this, I predict nothing but good things for Seminole’s future.”
It was the children who decided on the name Seminole for the mare because of its meaning — runaway.
There have been many successful adoptions, with some of the rescue’s horses going as far afield as New York and Illinois. Yet there has also been sadness, the loss of horses that were too far gone to help.
“It’s tragic that some horses cannot recover from the ills they have suffered at the hands of the people who were supposed to be caring for them,” said Eric Pelletier, a founder of Triple R. “Of the dozens of horses we have taken into Triple R, we have lost some while they were in the rescue. We take comfort in knowing that at least they knew love and weren’t going hungry for the last part of their lives.”
Triple R raises money to care for the horses by running food concessions at local horse shows and through its once-a-year fundraiser, Have A Heart 4 Horses. The funds help care for the horses in foster homes and are sometimes used to help families that have run into a financial bind and need temporary help to buy feed for their horses or get vaccines that will help their horses fend off deadly diseases like West Nile and Eastern Equine Encephalitis.
“We’re trying to help these horses that are dependent on their owners for a meal,” said Dr. Tom Bevis, who has provided veterinary services for the rescue for many years. “I feel like we’re providing a much needed service to the community.”