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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Abused
horses find new homes For more than
a hundred abused horses, an existence of torment and uncertainty finally
came to an end last Saturday, March 1.
Nearly all of the horses seized
by the Deschutes County Sheriff last December were auctioned off to a
gathering of carefully screened bidders who pledged to provide good homes
for the mistreated animals.
"Lots of people bought more
than one horse," said Sheriff's Advisory Council member Liz Wunder. "We
only had 15 that didn't sell, and some of those may yet sell."
She explained that some of
the approved bidders had expressed an interest in the remaining horses.
The animals were seized late
last year when they were discovered being held in deplorable conditions
east of Bend near Brothers.
Many of the horses were diseased,
injured, blind and otherwise not cared for.
A major rescue operation was
mounted to remove the animals from the site where they were held. Most
were kept at the Deschutes County Fairgrounds or local veterinary clinics.
Their chief protector and
provider for the last three months was Lt. Marc Mills of the Deschutes
County Sheriff's Office, who was genuinely pleased to see his charges
heading off to healthy new living situations.
"There were some very excited
people who got the horses they'd been looking at for weeks," said Mills.
He was particularly pleased
that some of the ones with the worst disabilities were intentionally taken
by people whose only goal was to care for them and give them the better
lives that they had been denied for so long.
"Most of the horses with special
needs that people knew about were taken," Mills said. "I felt really good
about that."
All bidders were required
to pass close scrutiny by the Sheriff's Office and several conditions
were attached to the sale to insure that the animals would not end up
in another bad situation.
One of the conditions was
that all new owners were required to permit Sheriff's Office inspections
over the next year to check on the horses' welfare.
"It was great to see the turnout,"
said Andy Andrews, another council member who was active in looking out
for the horses' welfare.
"There were a lot of happy
people," he said.
"The nicest thing for me was
seeing the community come together."
Andrews credited the Central
Oregon community with reaching out to help solve a problem.
Wunder said that the highest
bid was made on a mare who recently given birth to a young filly. The
pair went for $1,200.
Mills also commented on "two
stallions that were really nice looking horses" that went for around $500
each.
In all, about $26,000 was
raised, although that was nowhere close to the cost of providing for the
animals' interim care and getting them on the road to better health.
Most of that cost, however,
was borne by donations from concerned citizens.
The proceeds of the sale will
be disbursed to public agencies in accordance with state laws applicable
to seized property.
"The horses that weren't bought
will probably go to local rescue facilities," said Wunder.
Mills said that the relatively
small number of remaining animals would not be difficult to deal with.
"This was my best case scenario,"
he said.
One rescue facility in Texas
was being considered to take some of the animals, but the auction was
such a success that Mills expects to find foster care for all the remaining
horses inside Oregon.
Employees of the Sheriff's
Office and a busy corps of volunteers heaved a collective sigh of relief
when their equine charges were safely on their way to new homes.
On Saturday night, the workers
were tired, but they were happy.
Really happy.
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