A herd of 15 Thoroughbred horses whose needs weren’t being met has been rescued from a site in Devon by World Horse Welfare. The horses ‒ which had been left at the farm following an eviction ‒ were beginning to lose weight as winter approached. The landowner was able to use the Control of Horses Act, which allowed the horses to be signed over to World Horse Welfare and thankfully ‒ despite many of the horses not being used to being handled ‒ their round-up and removal to two World Horse Welfare Rescue and Rehoming Centres was relatively straightforward.

The costs for such an operation, however, are significant, and the horse’s removal to World Horse Welfare’s centres is just the beginning of a lengthy and expensive process, with each horse being carefully looked after, assessed and rehabilitated by the charity for many months before, hopefully, being ready to rehome.

World Horse Welfare field officer Jon Phipps said: “I’ve been working with these horses for a number of months. They were all on the cusp, they were all lean and we didn’t want them to drop any more weight. If we didn’t remove them before winter proper, we were going to have a serious welfare issue.”

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Hall Farm, the charity’s Rescue and Rehoming Centre in Norfolk, received seven of the mares. After settling overnight following their journey, they all had their initial health checks, routine treatments and assessment by the team of experts at the farm.