Milbank Equine

Milbank Equine **Equine training services for sport horses and racing thoroughbreds at all stages**

21/08/2025

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We want to talk openly about what’s happening behind the scenes with thoroughbreds leaving racing in New Zealand β€” and why the current system isn’t working.

Every week we see more horses come in, and the reality is tough:
β€’ A number of horses arrive with issues that need time and careful management.
β€’ It’s almost impossible to rehome horses under 3 years or over 7 years, yet these ages are sent to us.
β€’ We struggle with transparency from owners and trainers, which makes planning for each horse harder.
β€’ Behavioural or physical issues which deem them unsuitable for rehoming.

The truth is, most thoroughbreds need:
β€’ At least 3 months of spell/let-down after racing.
β€’ Then 3 months of retraining before they are ready for new homes.
β€’ Honesty around horses not suitable for rehoming.

But there is no financial support to keep them this long. At present, we’re only funded a small $300 arrival fee which covers for a week intake β€” and that doesn’t even scratch the surface of what they actually need.
We do receive a $200 fee for traceability once the horse is β€œRehomed” - after paperwork is done. I pay someone to do my office work as im busy with the farm and horses.

The Bigger Picture
β€’ The market value of a retrained thoroughbred is next to nothing in New Zealand, despite the huge time and costs involved.
β€’ There are very few homes available, and even fewer riders who have the skillset to take on a thoroughbred straight out of racing.
β€’ Once rehomed, there is almost no support for new owners, and many struggle with behavioural or soundness issues months later. Sadly, we can’t keep taking horses back β€” we are already overwhelmed.
β€’ On top of that, we have to put safety first for our team. These are sensitive animals, and without proper resourcing it’s increasingly hard to find staff willing (or able) to do this work.

Why We Still Do It

Because we love the horses. 🐎
We know they deserve a future beyond racing. We are trying our best to help, and to push for meaningful change in the way thoroughbreds are transitioned in New Zealand.

But we can’t do it alone. We need a system that values quality retraining, transparency, welfare, and long-term support β€” not just quick turnover.

We’re sharing this not to discourage, but to raise awareness. These horses deserve better, and with the right change, we believe they can get it.

We are open to suggestions on how to improved.

21/07/2025

β€œFalse” ground lines on jumps----A discussion

Imagine coming at the jump in this photo from the landing side to get a better grasp on what is meant by a false ground line. You can see that the top of the jump would be closer to the horse than the bottom of the jump, where it meets the ground.

Horses judge their takeoff spots by where they think the bottom of the jump is, and if the bottom is farther away than the top, it is deceptive to the horse’s vision, and can cause the horse to misjudge its take off point and get too close, This can lead to a knocked down rail if the rails are in cups, but on cross country, where the rails are solid, it can lead to a fall, even to a deadly rotational fall where the horse somersaults over the fence and crashes to the ground from high in the air.

It is highly irresponsible of a course designer or builder to not use generous ground lines. Anything helps, a log in front, or some brush, some hay or straw bales, some pine straw, but some cross country course designers either do not understand this, or leave out ground lines on purpose to add to the challenge.

At Rolex one year they had a fence like this one in the photo called a pheasant feeder, and the approach side wasn’t filled in. I was standing there when a young girl missed her distance, got flipped on, and killed.

Eventing is dangerous enough done right. Done wrong it can be fatal. When you walk your course, and you see a fence with an insufficient ground line, say something to the technical delegate. Usually, if the TD is competent, she will fix it.

Don’t expect others to save you. Often they do not know despite their credentials.

Address

Taupo

Telephone

+64220694845

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