The Maker's Mark Secretariat Center is a non profit facility located in the Kentucky Horse Park in Lexington, KY. We are dedicated to reschooling, and showcasing the athleticism of the off track Thoroughbred so that they can go on and become ambassadors for the breed in second careers. We are also committed to educating the public about these wonderful horses: We welcome visitors of all ages, interns, and volunters . This blog publicizes unofficial updates on our horses and our programs. For more information, visit www,secretariatcenter.org or www.facebook.com/makersmarksecretariatcenter
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Picture Day!
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
The 1st Intern Adventure
The first stop on our journey was KESMARC, an equine rehabilitation facility located in Versailles, KY. Taking any type of horse, from mini to Clydesdale, the facility is well-equipped to address most any equine injury. They have a pool with a depth of 16 feet, an aqua-tread, a hot-walker, an indoor track, a vibrating platform, and a hyperbaric chamber. With this type of rehab arsenal, KESMARC has made a name for itself in the equine world. While we were there, touring the facility with Victor Torres, we saw them swim a horse in the pool. This allows the horse to exercise and maintain muscle without stressing injured tendons. We also saw them walk a horse on the aqua-tread. This also takes pressure off of injured joints while allowing the horse to exercise and work muscles. This is a rehab method often preferred for dressage horse. Because of the resistance provided by the water, the horse develops leg muscles and movements that result in a light and animated trot. The hyperbaric chamber was another interesting element of our tour. Though it was under maintenance, Victor explained to us the benefits of using a hyperbaric chamber. By using 99% pure oxygen, the chamber helps facilitate healing. All in all, it was an exciting and informative stop on our journey. Now armed, not only with new companions, but also with new information in our equine arsenal, we started on the second and final leg of our journey.

Friday, February 17, 2012
Welcome to the Family: Communal
Did you ever dream of meeting someone tall, dark, and handsome? Well, here’s your chance! Communal will be joining the MMSC crew on campus this spring. This 9-year-old bay gelding is the epitome of Mr. Tall-Dark-and-Handsome. He was retired by his former owner, Mr. Bill March, without injury at 9-years-old. This is an impressive feat for a mature guy who raced 63 times and won over $1000. With all this, Communal has shown that he’s no slouch when it comes to the hard stuff.

Though he’s no slouch, this handsome guy is also ready to kick back and have some fun. With a whimsical star and straightforward snip, along with his beautiful bay coloring, this guy is dressed to impress, no matter the occasion. Not only dashing in his appearance, Communal has spent some time dashing between the states, having raced in Louisiana, Texas, Indiana, Ohio, and Kentucky; he’s a pretty well-traveled guy.
No guy is without his vice. Communal is a slight cribber, but only when his home is new and scary. Once he gets settled in, he should be fine.
To recap, this guy is tall, dark, handsome, mature, rich, and fun. His foster-Mom, Dr. Fernanda Camargo, wrote in an email to the MMSC that “the Giant (I call him Giant…he is huge) is so sweet. And polite. And docile.” With this sweet personality, a healthy body, and a good track record, this guy is bound to steal someone’s heart!
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
New Faces
Mine is not the only new face at the MMSC. Cole is another newbie to the MMSC family. Unlike the rest of us (all college interns), Cole is an EBC student at Tate’s Creek High School. He informed me that EBC stands for “experience basic career education.” This program allows students to job-shadow someone in an area that interests them. Cole chose the MMSC over any other location because he likes horses. (Who wouldn’t?!) Having worked on horse farms for the past few years, Cole has decided to try his hand at another aspect of the equine industry.
This semester promises new introductions (of both people and horses), new knowledge, and new adventures. I can’t wait!
Friday, January 6, 2012
"Sea Lord Rules as Racehorse Dressage Star" by Susan Salk
"Sea Lord rules as racehorse dressage star
By Susan Salk on August 30, 2011
The harder the audience clapped, the higher he stepped.
Lofting his exceptionally long legs so enthusiastically that each step seemed more animated, more look at me, than the one before, he danced with all his heart to a movie soundtrack from Secretariat.
And Sea Lord was great that day. Not as a racehorse, he never raced.
But in the hands of top-level dressage rider Silva Martin he was a virtuoso in the dressage ring performing a Freestyle that displayed their talent and connection, while reminding everyone who watched that this was no Warmblood.
This was an ex-racehorse Thoroughbred who became a Grand Prix dressage horse!
Outfitted in the silks and goggles customarily worn on the track, Martin cantered them into the show ring of the PVDA Ride For Life Dancing Horse Challenge June 25 to the sound of a bugler announcing the start of a race.
Race name: Sea Lord
Sire: Sea Salute
Dam: Graceful Glory
Foal date: 2001The idea to honor Sea Lord’s heritage came to Martin and the Thoroughbred’s owner Charish Campbell once it was decided that he would be the horse they would bring to the benefit show for the Johns Hopkins Avon Foundation Breast Center, Martin says in a recent interview with OffTrackThoroughbreds.com.
“Charish and I were throwing ideas around, and I said, ‘There’s really no question. We’ll have to go as a jockey and racehorse.’ He’s an American Thoroughbred and we should honor that,” she says.
“A good friend of mine sewed my silks and he wore goggles for the first time in his life. The whole idea that he was off the racetrack in Virginia was fantastic. The audience loved it. And the more they clapped the better he went for them.”
Martin and her husband Boyd Martin, a US Eventing Team A-List member, love Thoroughbreds.
“Boyd has always purchased Thoroughbreds off the track and has been a big fan of them. He has tended to prefer them to Warmbloods because they’re so smart and they have a good energy—they never wear out,” she says.
And Sea Lord was evented by both Boyd and Olympian Phillip Dutton before Martin moved him into a dressage career in 2007.
She still remembers what she said the first time she saw Sea Lord. “I met him in July 2007 and Phil Dutton was eventing him and Boyd was also riding him, doing some novice work,” she says. “I used to look at him and think that this was a really nice horse. You could just see it.”
At the time, his jumping skills were not meeting expectations, so she offered to sit on him.
“I remember telling his owner at the time, Shannon Simpson, that he could be something really good. Then he developed into this freak that he is now.”
The pair has quickly climbed levels, and is now at Grand Prix. Most recently, Sea Lord won Reserve Champion in the last Regionals at Prix St. George and has achieved many other successes, including wins at multiple Prix St. George shows.
In a Dressage Daily.com article, he is described as a “well developed Grand Prix” horse who has achieved one tempi changes and piaffe-passage. The article notes: “He is a dream to ride, very soft, forward thinking, and loves to please.”
His personality and his ability were deciding factors guiding Martin’s decision to take him to the show.
“Sea Lord loves to make a grand entrance and he thrives in the big atmosphere at a dressage show, with all the lights, music and people,” Martin says. “A lot of horses can get scared in an atmosphere like that. But this horse is way less hot than some of my Warmbloods, and when he’s in the ring, all he does is try for you.”
And he has made a big impression on many of the people in his circle.
Shannon Stimson, his first owner, recalls how impressed she was with the horse nicknamed Big Bird because of his resemblance to the Sesame Street character.
“He was so gangly and his neck and legs were so unusually long at 17.1 hands that he was called Big Bird by the stable guys caring for him,” Stimson says. Skinny and out of shape, he had a “huge suspension” and his trot “was like velvet,” she adds.
She purchased the horse and put him in a program with Phillip Dutton. But, as the horse advanced it became clear that he was not as careful over rails as they would have liked, and that upper-level jumping was probably not in the cards for him.
But Martin saw something special in him, and grabbed the opportunity to teach the large, constitutionally uphill mount to perform dressage.
Stimson recalls how well they fit each other when Martin finally gave him a try.
“From the first moment Silva sat on him and I watched them work together, it was clear that dressage was what he was born to do,” Stimson says. “Silva’s personality matches Birdy’s perfectly, and he will do anything for her.”
He was always a big mover with a bold personality, she adds.
“His personality was always exceptionally sweet and laid back, not that he didn’t have his opinions,” Stimson recalls. “He has huge self-confidence, and there is absolute no ‘No!’ in him. I take this to be basic to his Thoroughbred temperament and excellent blood lines.”
Among the greats in his family tree are Native Dancer, Nashua, and Seattle Slew.
Although Sea Lord is “still learning collection,” he’s young yet, and full of promise, Martin says.
His owner has watched the video of his debut Freestyle over and over again.
“The performance is a tribute to the American Thoroughbred,” Campbell says. “Watching this in person has been the highlight of my career.”
And for one more ex-racehorse performing at the highest echelons, the performance in honor of great Thoroughbred athletes helped underscore what so many top riders know: Thoroughbreds can do anything.
“If you get them on your side,” Martin says, “they’ll do anything for you.”"
Saturday, December 3, 2011
Becoming a Horseman... or Horsewoman
Thursday, December 1, 2011
Ferdy's Next Adventure
Ferdy’s new home is Old Friends, a Thoroughbred “retirement home.” The facility offers tours to admirers of the breed the chance to visit former champions. Ferdy loves his admirers and his new home is a bit more his style than Blackburn, where visitation is limited.
Our day started picking up Ferdy, with Alberto, our wonderful Brook Ledge driver. As the inmates said their goodbyes to a favorite, this playful, affectionate chestnut gelding took his final bows (a trick he learned at MMSC) from the trailer. He was sent on his way with one last peppermint from his most adoring fan, a grizzled man with a friendly smile for his favorite horse. Upon arrival at Old Friends, Ferdy caused quite the stir. Aside from his new four legged companions stretching over fences to greet him, there was a camera crew filming a documentary on Old Friends, capturing his arrival into his new home.
As Ferdy pranced down the lane, he was greeted by many former champions, eagerly welcoming him to his final forever home. Ferdy’s new neighbor is his half-brother, Bull inthe Heather. Though they share a famous sire, his handsome grey sibling does not share any family resemblance to our striking chestnut former mascot.
Ferdy’s new pasture mates, He Loves Me Not and Wallace Station, waited at the gate to welcome him to their field. As Ferdy was set free in the field, all three horses danced and raced around the field. Watching him run, it was easy to see why he wasn’t meant to be a racehorse. Though he took off in the lead, with his staccato stride his speedier new friends quickly overtook him with their lengthy lopes. Michael Blowen, founder of Old Friends, watched his newest horse get acclimated to the new environment. As Ferdy’s nameplate was put on the fence, Michael told us how that sign had been made in 2003, when he thought Ferdy might come to Old Friends after completing his racing career. Instead, Ferdy enjoyed his second career as a lower level dressage and pleasure horse until his owner was to sick to keep him. Concerned that her beloved horse would have a loving home, Ferdy was donated to us to be our mascot and reminder of his sire’s tragic end. Eight years later, after a life of appearances, school trips and riding lessons, Ferdy has finally settled down into his final forever home, to live out his days with his new friends and adoring fans.

