Wednesday, April 11, 2012

The Wolf and the Donkey - a modern parable

This is a beautiful and incredibly touching story of love and grace. Original credit below.

THE WOLF AND THE DONKEY
On May 9, 2007, in the mountains of northern Albania in the northwestern city of Patok, a wolf was captured and put in a pen. To feed him, his captors decided to give him "live food," an old donkey who, having been exploited for many years by its owners, had become worthless to them. Nobody expected to see what happened next.

Both animals, prisoners of an evil man with a desire for possession and selfishness, did something unexpected. The wolf looked into the donkey's eyes and the poor old donkey did the same, and the two became friends. Because in a world dominated by the greed and apathy of men, the titles of prey and predator become meaningless, and a wonderful friendship can develop between two souls, victims of the same evil, only made possible by emotions that we struggle to understand. 




UPDATE:
12.000 people had written to the government of Albania asking that the life of donkey be spared and the wolf released to the wild. The story got coverage from the Albanian television and under the huge pressure of the public, they finally let both of them free.

The original article mentions that the donkey lives now happily on a green pasture and that the wolf would even pass by sometimes to visit him.

Original source: http://www.gut-aiderbichl.at/aktetier/aktetier_1038.pdf

Thanks to Occupy for Animals. Please visit their page here: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Occupy-for-Animals/152547194813334

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Help Save Windfields Farm!


"They say the north wind was tangled in his mane"

He was the little horse with the big heart, Athlete of the Year, the first Canadian horse to win the Kentucky Derby, a sire of sires, a Canadian hero. When I was a little girl, dreaming about breeding the first filly to win the triple crown, I knew the Northern Dancer bloodline would help me achieve my goal.

He was so small that when he was auctioned for sale at the Canadian yearling sales, he failed to raise the $25,000 reserve bid. As a result, he stayed with E.P. Taylor's Windfields Farms. Ron Turcotte and Bill Shoemaker both rode him, but it was Bill Hartack who rode him to victory in the 1964 Kentucky Derby, the Preakness, and in the Queen's Plate.




In his two years of racing, Northern Dancer won 14 of his 18 races, and never finished worse than third (he was third in the Belmont Stakes). He stood at stud at Windfields Farm in Oshawa until 1969, then moved to Windfields' Maryland farm. Considered to be the greatest sire of the 20th century, Northern Dancer sired 147 stakes winners, including Nijinsky II, winner of England's Triple Crown.

He won the American Eclipse Award as three-year old male champion in 1964, and the Sovereign Award for Horse of the Year. In 1965, he became the first horse to be inducted into Canada's Sports Hall of Fame, an honour he held until 1996, when show jumper Big Ben joined him. He was part of the first group of inductees into the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame, and was induced into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 1976.  In 1999, Canada Post honoured him with an image on a postage stamp, and a life-size bronze statue immortalizes him outside Woodbine Race Track in Toronto.

In the 1980s, his stud fee reached US $1M; at the 1983 Keeneland Sales his son, Snaafi Dancer, became the first yearling to sell for $10M. He retired from stud on April 15, 1987 at the age of 26, and died three years later at the age of 29. His remains were brought back to Canada for burial at Windfields Farm in Oshawa, Ontario.

Windfields Farm was a six square kilometre (1,500 acre) thoroughbred breeding farm founded by E.P. Taylor in Oshawa, Ontario. Horses owned by Windfields Farm have won 11 Queen's Plat races, the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes. Their horses have won the Canadian Triple Crown twice. A world-record 48 champions and 360 stakes winners were bred at the farm. In 2008, Canadian Hall of Fame jockey Sandy Hawley trained at Windfields Farm before coming back to win the Living Legends Race aboard Tribal Chief.

In 1989, following the death of E.P. Taylor, Windfields Farm was downsized, with large portions of land being sold to the University of Ontario Institute of Technology and Durham College. Housing developments replaced other farm lands, and the estate devolved into a small, private farm. In 2009,  the breeding operation officially folded, and the bulk of the remaining property was sold to real estate developers. Some of the farm's historic barns, the grave of Norther Dancer, and a trillium forest where fifteen horses (including Archers Bay, Canadiana, New Providence, Northern Dancer, South Ocean, Vice Regent, Victoria Park and Windfields) are interred, were to be preserved as a commemorative park.

But the University of Ontario Institute of Technology and the City of Oshawa, who have agreed to maintain these buildings, the forest, and the memories, have failed to uphold their commitment.  A proposal is now before the City of Oshawa to designated the farm a heritage site.


Northern Dancer was a great athlete, the head of a dynasty that changed horse racing, and a great Canadian. Windfields Farm, in its day, garnered international attention as a breeding operation. On a day when many are celebrating renewal and new life, it is doubly tragic that Windfields Farm, Northern Dancer's resting place is abandoned. My battle cry? Help save Windfields Farm!




To help save Windfields Farm, please send a letter to the City of Oshawa (clerks@oshawa.ca). A copy of a letter, along with more details about Windfields Farm, can be found at http://savewindfields.com.



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