Site search
sponsored by
The News Review - NRtoday.com | Roseburg Oregon
 
The News Review - NRtoday.com | Roseburg Oregon
avatar
Welcome,
Guest
 
advertisement | your ad here
 
Event Calendar
 
 
Top Jobs
 
advertisement | your ad here
Send us your news
<< back
Friday, December 11, 2009

Roseburg woman cares for unwanted horses



Susan Pohlman gives a kiss Wednesday to one of her rescued horses at Whispering Winds Equine Rescue on Clarks Branch Road near Roseburg.
Susan Pohlman gives a kiss Wednesday to one of her rescued horses at Whispering Winds Equine Rescue on Clarks Branch Road near Roseburg.ENLARGE
Susan Pohlman gives a kiss Wednesday to one of her rescued horses at Whispering Winds Equine Rescue on Clarks Branch Road near Roseburg.
ROBIN LOZNAK/The News-Review
A horse needs Susan Pohlman's help.

Opening a metal pasture gate, Pohlman walks across uneven, frozen mud toward a chestnut horse lying on its side, limbs taut.

She meets up with her husband, Tom, and the two try their best to get the downed horse, named R.C., to stand.

“Come on pumpkin, come on bud,” Pohlman says, pushing against R.C.'s back.

“Come on, let's get your feet up,” she said, lifting up the 2-year-old horse's legs

Finally, after continued encouragement from the Pohlmans, R.C. gets up onto his feet.

“There you go, that's my boy,” Tom Pohlman tells him before leading the horse back to a barn on the couple's 160-acre property south of Roseburg.

It's just another day in the life of a horse rescuer.

“Some people say, ‘What are you doing tomorrow?' I say I never know until the sun comes up,” Pohlman remarks as she leaves the pasture.

Taking care of horses like R.C., who was relinquished by owners who had fallen on hard times, has been a part of Pohlman's daily life for more than 20 years. She and her husband run the nonprofit Whispering Winds Equine Rescue, where 63 rescued horses make themselves at home.

Pohlman said she rescued her first horse in 1988. She was able to expand her horse rescue operation about a year ago when the Pohlmans moved to Roseburg from Portland, where they only had two acres of property.

Along with horses whose former owners could no longer afford them — a number that is increasing due to the economy, Pohlman said — the horse rescue facility also takes in horses with special needs. The Pohlmans also find room for wild horses that would otherwise be taken out of the country to be slaughtered.

According to the Humane Society of the United States Web site, tens of thousands of horses are transported to Mexico and Canada for slaughter each year, now that U.S. horse slaughter plants are closed.

The horses at Whispering Winds mostly come from Oregon, Washington, Nevada, and Utah.

Several herds of wild horses roam 140 acres on the Pohlmans' property. These include horses gathered off Bureau of Land Management lands and ones that came from the Paiute Indian Reservation and Sheldon National Wildlife Range in Nevada, Pohlman said.

Horses aren't the only animals to seek refuge with the Pohlmans. Susan Pohlman said she's also taken in dogs, cats, llamas and cows.

Funded mostly by donations, Whispering Winds recently received several grants, including one from the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals to buy hay for the winter.

Pohlman said she always appreciates help from volunteers to help with grooming and other tasks. Otherwise, Whispering Winds work is done by Pohlman and her husband, who recently retired.

One of the most spoiled horses on the place is also the youngest, 8-month old Carson. Carson was orphaned after his mother rejected him at birth. Pohlman and her husband bottle-fed and nursed him back to health in their tack room. Now the horse follows her around like a puppy.

“He came in the house once, took all the stuff of the coffee table, then came into the kitchen to see what I was doing,” Pohlman said.

Carson is part of another group of horses from Nevada that Whispering Winds rescued about a year ago. The 33 horses that were part of a fertility drug study done in an effort to control wild horse populations. Of the 33 horses, 10 were foals and the rest were mares, some of them pregnant.

Two of the mares have since died, three foals were aborted, one was stillborn and another only survived a week, Pohlman said. She attributes the deaths to adverse effects of the drugs.

Pohlman said she believes the drugs passed some sort of toxin into Carson's blood stream that made his mother reject him and all the other mares try to kill him.

Regardless of what caused the horses' medical problems, Pohlman said she just cares for them as best she can.

Horses roam freely around Pohlman as she gives a tour of the ranch, which was a former dairy farm. Carson isn't ever far behind, of course. At one point he butts his way in and Pohlman scolds him playfully.

“You are just a monster,” she said before planting a big kiss on his head.

A white and gray horse saunters past. At 31, Sir is Whispering Winds' oldest horse, Pohlman said. She said she took him in after Sir's owner was murdered.

“I said, ‘Sure.' How can I say no?”

• You can reach reporter Inka Bajandas at 957-4202 or by e-mail at ibajandas@nrtoday.com.


facebook Print
Comments
Previous Guide Line
Next Guide Line

© 2005 - 2010 Swift Communications, Inc.