EQUAMORE FOUNDATION


Update


from December 29 Rescue

Jackson County Asks Equamore to Help

When called by a concerned family member regarding two starving horses belonging to her ill and aged relative in White City, the Jackson County Sherriff’s Department, overwhelmed with other calls, contacted Executive Director Linda Davis, who responded to the scene with volunteer Bonnie McDonald. Unable to care for her animals, the aged owner surrendered them voluntarily, and rescue began.

You Can Help by . . .

by pledging a monthly amount

www. equamore.org

or by making a one-time donation.

 

 

Contributions are tax deductible as provided by law; please contact your tax professional.

A Difficult Situation . . .

Sassy lay exhausted after having negotiated a ditch between her paddock and the trailer. Rescuers finally encouraged her to stand. With their help she joined Chance, her paddock mate, for the brief trip to Eden Farm in Ashland.

. . . Improves Considerably

Still very weak, Sassy is nonetheless  interested in food and apparently oblivious to having her feet cared for by Becca Thomason, who happened to be trimming at the farm when the rescues arrived.

Chance, too, takes advantage of the hay as Dugan, always on guard, oversees and gives advice.

Become a Friend

Equamore’s mission is to be a safety net for horses without alternatives for their care. These two certainly qualify. Their rescue was the easy part. Now the more difficult process of rehabilitation and life-long maintenance begins. We are in need of donations and foster care facilities for rescued horses whose rehabilitiation has been completed. If you think you can qualify as an Equamore satellite, please contact us for more information. If you can contribute, please consider becoming One in a Thousand, A Friend of Equamore. Horses like this need all the friends they can get.