Old Friends Thoroughbred retirement farm makes fundraising push

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The Old Friends' fundraiser is helping the program pay off loansOld Friends, a retirement home for Thoroughbred racehorses, has sent out an emergency fundraising call to its supporters after a banking error resulted in a substantial bill for the Georgetown, Kentucky facility.

In an email to supporters, Old Friends founder and president Michael Blowen wrote, “About three years ago, I went to our bank and asked them to re-write our mortgage so we would have payments due biannually. They would be due after our big fundraisers in the spring and fall. They concurred and re-wrote the loan. We continued to make payments on time through our bookkeeper.

“A couple of months ago, I was visited by two bank representatives and their attorney. They explained the bank had made a clerical error. While they had re-written the loan, they had failed to increase the payments. Consequently, the bi-annual payments we made were the same monthly payments and we were in arrears for more than $200,000.

“This is humiliating. Frankly, if I had any money left, Diane and I would do it ourselves. But, we’ve already done that. I resolved many years ago, to not expect people to do what they could do or should do or ask them for money. Today, I’m breaking all three of those resolutions. It’s frustrating because of what all these great athletes have accomplished.”

Blowen, former film critic for the Boston Globe, was inspired to build a Thoroughbred retirement facility after learning about the many racehorses being sent to slaughter. When news broke that the 1986 Kentucky Derby winner, Ferdinand, had been slaughtered after his breeding career ended in Japan, it fortified Blowen’s resolve to provide a home for horses that could no longer race or breed and had nowhere else to go.

Old Friends is one of the few rescue operations that will accept stallions, and as a result, several notable Thoroughbred stallions are enjoying their retirement there after their racing and breeding careers have ended. To see the current residents, click here.

To learn more, visit OldFriendsEquine.org or call 502-863-1775.

9 COMMENTS

  1. What a good idea for helping our “OLD FRIENDS”, Bbut I also think that the bank should help out here, since it was their err that caused this.

  2. That is horrendous….but why don’t they still have the money if they weren’t paying the biannual rate? They still should have had enough to cover the mortgage if they had been paying it monthly, right? Where did that money go?

  3. old friends is the most wonderful place in the world the horses are great and it so beautiful and im sure they will get all the money they need.

  4. I’m with Elizabeth/Ky, where’s the money they would have had to pay on a monthly basis? Yes, the bank should make a separate loan for their mistake. It all doesn’t make sense.

  5. This is a strange situation and I hope they can pull through. But a bell should have rung when the biannual payments ended up being the same as the monthly!
    Since it is the bank’s mistake it seems that they could work out a payment plan over the next few years.

  6. I want to say, Good luck!!!! i want to grow up and have a retirement farm for horses that are no longer wanted because they can’t run as far or breed as many mares as they wanted. sometimes it makes me wonder what runs through some people’s heads as they send their beloved animals to a slaughter house in Mexico. Do they care that their animals last moments will be spent terrified and undernourished, probably disgusting and filthy? Once again, good luck! if i could i would donate my entire live’s savings to your farm! keep the dream alive!

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