Comments on: 4 Types of Equine Rescues https://www.horseillustrated.com/horse-resources-4-types-of-equine-rescues/ Fri, 28 Nov 2014 12:56:45 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 By: AnnMarie, President, Crosswinds Equine Rescue Inc https://www.horseillustrated.com/horse-resources-4-types-of-equine-rescues/#comment-391752 Fri, 28 Nov 2014 12:56:45 +0000 /horse-resources/4-types-of-equine-rescues.aspx#comment-391752 Usually your articles are helpful and enjoyable. Unfortunately, this one makes poor generalizations and overlaps. If I were an average horseman considering rescue, your introduction would be offputting and your article does little to help ease that concern.
FIRST – many, many sanctuaries are 501c3. A sanctuary provides a place to finish out an animal’s life, and is not looking to adopt. Those animals do NOT have to be able to find a future career or “potential for adoption.”
SECOND – GFAS acknowledged rescues must first be 501c3. THIS adds credibility to a facility – it shows you meet some VERY high standards, although I wish annual inspection were part of the process. A 501c3 simply says you are willing/able to be run as a charitable business – it provides NO info on level of care, salaries paid to employees, pro or anti-slaughter stance or any of dozens of other things assumed by many but actually not at all accurate.
If you were to break out rescues into types, there are so many better ways to do so, such as…
sanctuaries that provide lifelong shelter;
case-specific rescues such as PMU and OTTB only facilities;
breed specific which care for only certain types, with or without help from the breed registries;
skill focused such as rescues that focus upon horses capable of going on to careers in therapy, western showing, etc;
training-focused rescues which work with difficult cases, rehab, retrain and rehome them;
rehab-focused rescues whose strength is in taking severe neglect cases and make them well but may or may not have any focus on training/preparing horses for new lives.
Again thank you for your efforts to promote and support rescues. Please consider visiting some of the many fantastic facilities or at least speakign with them and write a new article that will give your readers more help and detail in really making a consideration of what rescue best fits their needs and what to watch for regarding rescues that might be less than reputable.

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By: PKL https://www.horseillustrated.com/horse-resources-4-types-of-equine-rescues/#comment-391699 Thu, 27 Nov 2014 07:07:30 +0000 /horse-resources/4-types-of-equine-rescues.aspx#comment-391699 Well, I learn a few new things today. Thank You HC, for the information.

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By: Galadriel https://www.horseillustrated.com/horse-resources-4-types-of-equine-rescues/#comment-391684 Wed, 26 Nov 2014 23:54:06 +0000 /horse-resources/4-types-of-equine-rescues.aspx#comment-391684 Great resources.

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By: Pat https://www.horseillustrated.com/horse-resources-4-types-of-equine-rescues/#comment-391674 Wed, 26 Nov 2014 21:53:48 +0000 /horse-resources/4-types-of-equine-rescues.aspx#comment-391674 Rolling Dog/Horse is no longer in Mt…. at least that’s what I learned from this.

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By: l https://www.horseillustrated.com/horse-resources-4-types-of-equine-rescues/#comment-391659 Wed, 26 Nov 2014 15:21:12 +0000 /horse-resources/4-types-of-equine-rescues.aspx#comment-391659 cool

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