Refuge Staff Goes All Out for ‘A Celebration of Migration’

By Robert Boswell

Publisher, Wild Pony Tales

This is the time of year when the outstanding work of the biologists and park rangers at the Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge and the National Park Service is showcased, helped along of course by the arrival of the snow geese and other migrating waterfowl.

I sometimes worry that the year-long fallout from the alternative beach parking controversy will overshadow all that is good about having the Refuge so close, about having a place we can go where it is quiet and we can, at least for a few hours, give our minds a break.

No matter what our views are on the future of beach parking and refuge management let’s not forget to give credit to the highly qualified and dedicated staff members who keep the place running every day of the year. I do not say this tritely or lightly.

I have taken our writers to Assateague many times to gather information for the stories on this website and I cannot recall an instance when our sources – I mean Lou Hinds, his managers, the biologists and park rangers – were not helpful and knowledgeable. Most of the people at the Refuge have degrees it took them years to obtain.

When I was teaching journalism in middle school I would sometimes have a student working on a class assignment call Amanda Daisy, the wildlife biologist, right from class, a real life interview by a 6th or 7th grader.

On a sad note I want to mention a park ranger who was especially helpful to us, Barry Brookshire. Barry was at the Refuge for 16 months until his contract ran out and then he returned to his home in Texas. But soon after he was found to have a malignant tumor in his colon. Doctors were successful in treating Barry but he has been unable to return to work. While at the Refuge he answered many questions for our young writers with all the patience of the teacher that he once was. At the Refuge Barry was what he called a “roving ranger,” moving around the pathways, talking to people, answering questions. If he didn’t know the answer he would go and find it.

Waterfowl Week is a special time at the Refuge. We have the event highlights in another story but what follows are more details, the times, places and descriptions of the activities coming up over Thanksgiving. Every single event is worth attending.

One of the big issues I have with the whole Assateague show is how easy it is to come here and never see a pony, or see them only at a great distance. When our niece, Marcy, was little I don’t think we got to see any ponies, except the ones at McDonalds for which I was thankful, until her third visit. And she only made it here once a year. We did see plenty of evidence, but few ponies.

A Better Life Now for Rescued Chincoteague Ponies

By Robert Boswell
Publisher, Wild Pony Tales

The three Chincoteague ponies who were rescued by Debbie Ober and her husband, Tom, from an auction barn in Pennsylvania in September are nearly back to full health. As a result of our stories some donations have come in and so have requests for adoption.


More donations are needed though. See the information at the end of the story.


The moment the three Chincoteague ponies she had rescued from near slaughter came out of the trailer Debbie had sent to get them is not a time she will ever forget. She still can’t talk about it without her voice breaking up.


Saturday, November 5, with our writer/photographers Misty Thornton and Kate White, we traveled the two hours from near Chincoteague to the Ober’s Hawkeye Stables in Ridgely, Maryland. There was more to the story, we knew, of what goes on at the Ober horse farm where Debbie cares for 20 ponies. Some of them are Misty of Chincoteague descendants and most are closely connected to the famous Chincoteague wild ponies.

The three rescues were all bought at the 2001 Chincoteague pony auction but little is known about where they spent their years until now. All three are registered Chincoteague ponies, sired by island stallions.

Debbie had earlier described what confronted her when the rescued ponies arrived at her place. There was Clipper, a small bay gelding, who had no hair from under his jaw to his chin with pus oozing from a dozen sores. When he came out of the trailer he laid down, unable to get up.

Ginger, a big chestnut mare, was very thin and weak from starvation and parasites. And Captain, a bay pinto gelding, was very thin too. He had the worst parasite problem of the three, so bad he had stopped eating.

From communicating with Debbie, we knew they were much better but we didn’t really know what to expect. Because they had all come down with strangles, a pneumonia-like illness the rescue ponies had been quarantined in their own pasture and shelter.

Upon arrival we followed Debbie from the barn area to the rescues’ pasture with her pulling a small wagon with hay, grain buckets, brushes and, if needed, halters.

As we neared the fence she asked, “Are you ready?” In a minute we had climbed through the fence and set up cameras. The ponies, however, were nowhere in sight. But with a call from Debbie, three specks in a distance, actually three pastures away, began moving toward us at a gallop. It was the three rescues, who did not slow up until they reached us.

Two things were obvious. They were ready to eat and they were glad to see Debbie.

Debbie spends several hours each day hugging and caring for her horses. She is devoted to them, spending more time with them than she does with people, more time outside with them, she says, than inside her house.

She has a routine.

“I check all of them daily from head to tail. Making sure there are no kicks, cuts, etc. Also, I make sure they eat their grain in a reasonable time. If they don’t eat, I know I have a problem. I always check noses, especially this time of year. The foals tend to get a runny nose, but unless they run a fever, my vet suggests that I let it run its course without interference to build immunity. I always check halters on the young stock. They can be fine one day and too tight the next as they seem to grow in spurts.”

Imagine this and she left out mucking stalls, driving two hours for hay every few weeks, and of course her house work.

When Captain, Ginger and Clipper arrived they were in poor shape. Debbie spent most of the next three nights with these Chincoteagues, making a bed for herself under the shelter and wrapping up in a horse blanket to stay warm. Debbie changed her clothes several times a day to keep strangles from spreading to her other horses.

Who knows what the three ponies think has happened to them, but they have to know someone now cares. Since coming to the Ober home they have not been a day without proper food, medications, and lots of hugs and kindness. They can thank Debbie and Tom, but also others who helped put up money for their rescue, including Debbie Elliott-Fisk and other members of the Buyback Babes, friends and family.

While our time with the rescues has its special memories, they were not the only ones we brought back from the Ober farm.

One pony rehabilitated by Debbie is the majestic Tornado which has sired many foals born on Assateague Island. Tornado is the sire of Prince, bought by the Buyback Babes in 2007 for $17,500, the most ever paid for a pony at the Chincoteague auction.

In 2008 Tornado was injured while on the Assateague range and the Chincoteague Volunteer Fire Company, which owns the Virginia herd, decided to remove him from the herd and arranged with the Obers to care for him the rest of his life. In an article that ran in the Caroline Review in July 2010 the Obers wrote, “Though he inhabited the sandy beaches of Assateague made famous by “Misty of Chincoteague” Tornado became a legend of his own. He is one of the most photographed stallions on the island.”

Tornado is a buckskin pinto stallion born in 1988. He might have been a wild stallion for 20 years, but around us he was just another friendly head to pat, nose to rub. Or maybe he just wanted Kate to take his picture again. She was clearly his favorite visitor on this day.

The other memory we will have forever was provided by Tornado’s newest offspring, one of four now with the Obers. She is a nine day old filly Debbie calls Freckles due to her red leopard coloring. We have video of this baby making her second trip outside her stall, trying to make up her mind how far to venture. It is precious and we will share it with you soon.

Meanwhile, Debbie is in need of financial help for these rescues and future ones. “We would be grateful for donations to go toward feed and care,” Debbie said. She said if anyone knows of a Chincoteague pony in need, she can be reached at hawkeye@goeaston.net. Her cell is 410-829-3026 and messages may be left on her Facebook page. The mailing address is P.O. Box 125, Ridgely, MD 21660.

The Obers are looking for personal and corporate sponsorships for the ponies and the rescue organization. Corporate sponsors will be listed on the horse trailer and elsewhere, she said. A new website will be chincoteagueponyrescue.org and it is expected to be up and running soon.

The writer is publisher of www.wildponytales.info, a web magazine that covers Chincoteague and Assateague Islands in Virginia. 

Editor’s note: A photo gallery and video clips will be posted with this story soon.
 





Rescue Saves 3 Chincoteague Ponies from Slaughter

By Robert Boswell

Publisher, Wild Pony Tales

See “Life Better Now for Rescued Chincoteague Ponies,” under Recent Posts

Clipper, a small bay gelding, had no hair from under his jaw to his chin with pus oozing from a dozen sores. 

Ginger, a big chestnut mare, was very thin and weak from starvation and parasites.

Captain, a bay pinto gelding, was very thin too. He had the worst parasite problem of the three, so bad he had stopped eating.

All three ponies were several hundred pounds under weight. All had cuts on their faces from ill fitting halters. All three were covered in dry, caked on feces from laying in a dirty stall for days without clean bedding.

All three are registered Chincoteague ponies, sired by island stallions, and they were all bought at the July 2001 wild pony auction on Chincoteague Island.

The three are safe now, thanks to the kindness and courageous work of Debbie Ober who rounded up money to rescue the three ponies. She provides a home for some 15 Chincoteague ponies with her husband, Tom, on a 30 acre farm in Ridgely, Maryland.

Debbie stays on the lookout for Chincoteague ponies no longer wanted and are headed to sales barns where horses are sold only to be sent to slaughter, some for human consumption and some as dog food. She had already noticed the three ponies in a Pennsylvania holding barn, but then she got about 15 emails from people letting her know what was happening.

Friends with Debbie Elliott-Fisk from California, a member of the Buyback Babes who are known for buying ponies at the Chincoteague auction, the two women knew they had to move fast when Deb Ober discovered the three registered Chincoteagues in a “kill pen” that were going to slaughter if not purchased by that coming Saturday night, Sept. 10.

“I had the means to transport them and care for them, but not the bail money to buy them off the kill truck,” said Debbie. So with Debbie Elliott-Fisk they called some members of the Buybacks and other friends for help. “We had a dozen donations come in and we were able to save them,” said Debbie.

But all did not go smoothly.

“The three ponies were paid for on a credit card on Sept. 10, but due to hurricane Lee and flood damage, including a washed out bridge, we had to wait an additional two weeks to pick the ponies up.  They were held in a ‘holding barn’ and brought to the separate ‘pick-up’ barn the evening of Sept. 25.”  The pick-up barn is south of New Holland, PA.

For Debbie these were a very long two weeks. “I continued to make daily calls, sometimes 10 a day, and send emails to check on the status of our ponies.” Another week, then more phone calls, more emails. “My feelings during those days were like a roller coaster, elated that the ponies would not go to kill, then disappointed that we could not go get them. We were losing time to get them to safety and to get them well.”

As much as she wanted to go on the pickup, Debbie had to stay behind. “We had a new foal born the night before and I didn’t want to leave with the foal so young as the first 48 hours are the most crucial.  So my husband and a friend, who gave up his only day off that week to help the ponies left pulling a rescue trailer on September 26 and went to Pennsylvania.

“My feelings were an emotional roller coaster,” Debbie said. ” Tom got home around 6 p.m. that evening and I was elated to finally have them home and safe, but they were in dire condition. I was heart-broken. I found that one had come down with strangles and would have to be quarantined for a week or so.”

But no sick ponies have likely gotten more love and attention than these three rescues. “Two of the three were very sick upon arrival,” said Debbie. “They have all been treated for strangles, similar to human pneumonia, and parasite infestation. Not to mention cuts, scaring, etc. from their auction experience.”  We aren’t out of the woods yet, but are on our way, Debbie wrote on her Facebook  page.

On the Ober farm the new dwellers will have plenty of company.

“We now have 20 Chincoteague ponies on the farm, 10 of which are either retirees for life, have been cared for and are waiting for their forever homes and the last three that just came on September 26 for rehab due to illness and injury,” said Debbie. ” Five of our personal ponies were purchased at the auction on Chincoteague in 2000, 2002, 2006 and 2011. 

Debbie has been providing shelter and care for horses for 15 years, and exclusively Chincoteague ponies for the past 11 years. “With the current economy,” she said, “many more of our Chincoteague ponies are in trouble and I can no longer carry it alone.” She said she gets four to eight ponies a year, some of them weanlings a month after the auction on Chincoteague. “People can’t care for them or didn’t realize the expense involved.”

“If old or injured horses don’t sell, they are usually purchased by buyers who take  loads of horses to Canada and Mexico to be killed for human consumption,” Debbie said. “Very few end up in a retirement facility. A few are purchased as companion horses if someone has another horse needing a “buddy.”  We have four of those on the farm now, she said.

“The kill pen is the last stop for unpurchased horses,” said Debbie.  It is a holding area waiting for the trucks to pick them up.  The trucks come weekly to these auction barns and take any horses left.  I have been told that a facility in New Jersey has two to four tractor trailers a week hauling horses to market for human consumption and dog foods. 

The parents of the rescued ponies are well known to Chincoteague pony fans.

Clipper is the small bay gelding who’s sire was Gunner’s Moon.  Ginger, a big chestnut mare, was sired by  Surfer Dude. Captain, a bay pinto, is a gelding sired by Wild Bill.  “They are all great island stallions, two of which are still living on the island,” said Debbie. ” These are the names on their Chincoteague Pony Association registration papers which they gave the owner in 2001.”

So far little is known about these three ponies between their life on Assateague Island and now. The three  ponies will be available for adoption once they are well. 

Other well known ponies reside on the Ober farm. One is Tornado, a buckskin pinto stallion born in 1988. “He was king of his band for two decades,” said Debbie. “Though he inhabited the same island and roamed the sandy beaches of Assateague made famous by “Misty of Chincoteague,” Tornado become a legend of his own.” He has sired many foals over the years and is one of the most photographed stallions on the island. He was removed from the herd after being injured. Tornado is the sire of Prince, bought by the Buyback Babes in 2007 for $17,500, the most ever paid for a Chincoteague pony.”

Debbie has owned horses since she was 13, as a member of the local 4-H Club. She has bred, shown and raised Quarter Horses and Appaloosas since 1986. “My first Pony Penning was in 1998 and I fell in love with the Chincoteague ponies.” Like countless others, she said she was raised on the Misty stories by Marguerite Henry and in 2000 purchased her first Chincoteague pony.

Having lost her job a few months ago, the cost of caring for the ponies is becoming more than Debbie can handle. It cost nearly $1,500 to buy the three rescues off the kill truck and that was just the start of it. Vet bills so far have hit $300 and then there is hay at $5.00 a bale, feed at $11.50 per bag, wormer at $10 per tube and the ponies need a farrier every eight weeks to have their hooves trimmed.

So with the need growing to pay for the rescues Debbie and others have applied for a formal non-profit  organization to be known as Chincoteague Pony Rescue. Debbie said she thinks the rescues she has handled are only the tip of the iceberg.

 ”We would be grateful for donations to go toward feed and care,” Debbie said. She said if anyone knows of a Chincoteague pony in need, she can be reached at hawkeye@goeaston.net. Her cell is 410-829-3026 and messages may be left on her Facebook page. The mailing address is P.O. Box 125,  Ridgely, MD 21660.

She is also looking for personal and corporate sponsorships for the ponies and the rescue organization.  Corporate sponsors will be listed on the horse trailer and elsewhere, she said. A new website will be chincoteagueponyrescue.org and it is expected to be up and running in a week or so. 

Meanwhile, Debbie is supporting the herd by selling items on Ebay and she is working on a home-based business selling custom business forms, tee shirts and patches and she provides phone answering services.

“I truly love these ponies and they are worth saving,” said Debbie.

Chincoteague Mares Take a Sunday Afternoon Swim

By Jean Bonde

Well, this was Sunday afternoon, (Oct. 2, the day after the northern roundup).

Got a call from Linda & Tom Insley who were down near  Memorial Park.  They said that two horses were swimming from Assateague to Chincoteague.  They followed them while I tried to reach any cowboy.  Finally got thru to Dean Orsino who started alerting cowboys.  Linda & Tom followed the ponies, their pictures below show the two ponies going north up the middle of the street on Ridge Road, then making a turn on Bunting Road. They then darted into the old campground area at Ridge and Bunting and disappeared into the underbrush.  If they had just gone farther down Bunting, they might have got close enough to the fairgrounds to find it altho that is not the regular route for them to get there in July.

Cowboys presumably found them at the old campground which has been abandoned and is overgrown,  and took them to the fairgrounds.  Third picture shows the two mares behind the fence which is behind some of the BB foals at the fairgrounds. They all were taking turns at sniffing noses thru the fence.

The two mares are full sisters. One is Miracle’s Natural Beauty, a 2009 filly of Natural Innocence and Miracle Man.  The other filly is Wildest Dreams, a 2008 filly of Natural Innocence and Miracle Man. They are not the first horses to swim the channel (regular swim route) at an off time and will not be the last. –  Jean Bonde

National Park Service to Repair Assateague Parking Lots

Superintendent Trish Kicklighter of the National Park Service has announced that funds have been requested to fully repair all parking at the Toms Cove Recreational Beach in the Virginia District of Assateague Island National Seashore.

The parking lots sustained damage from overwash caused by Hurricane Irene this past August.

Limited parking was restored prior to the Labor Day weekend and, since then, additional spaces have been cleared and repaired. Although reduced from the usual amount, adequate beach parking will be available through the off-season. According to Maintenance Chief Ish Ennis, approximately 350 parking spaces are ready for use, and will be kept open through the fall and winter.

“Given the susceptibility of the Toms Cove beach to winter storms, it just doesn’t make sense to repair all of the parking at this point,” said Supt. Kicklighter. “Come spring, our staff will begin work on the other damaged lots in preparation for the busy season. I’m confident we’ll have the full amount of parking ready for next summer’s beach goers.”

For more information on Assateague Island National Seashore, visit www.nps.gov/asis or phone Carl Zimmerman at 410-629-6071.