“The number one mistake that first responders make when trying to rescue a horse in an emergency situation such as a barn fire, is to expect the horse to know the responder is there to help,” says Rebecca Gimenez, president of Georgia-based Technical Large Animal Emergency Rescue.

“The horse is scared already, and a suited-up firefighter is scary,” she says. “The firefighter may think he can put a halter on the horse and walk him out in a fire, but the horse will turn its back and kick because he’s scared. You need a different plan.”

Gimenez was speaking at a two-day large animal emergency rescue awareness training program organized by Equine Guelph at the Grand River Raceway in Elora, Ont., earlier this month. The raceway allowed a 15-foot-deep pit to be dug on the property so participants could practice different ways of removing a horse mannequin that had “fallen” into the pit. The class was at capacity, with 90 people taking part, most of them firefighters, police officers, veterinarians and horse owners.

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