Last of the Santa Cruz horses

February 4, 2010
Nonprofit horse sanctuary pleads for public’s help
By
Melissa Daugherty
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It’s been about 11 years since Christina
Nooner rescued and rehabilitated Sunshine, the first Santa Cruz horse
born on the mainland. The cremello mare is the namesake of Nooner’s
equine sanctuary, where children and horses find a helping hand in life.
Photo By melissa daugherty
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Helping horses:
to donate to Sunshine Sanctuary for Kids
& Horses:
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www.sunshinesanctuary.org/donate
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Butte Community Bank & US Bank
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By mail: 10931 Singer Avenue
Los Molinos, CA 96055
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For questions & more information, call
529-0183 or 566-2159
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Sunshine Sanctuary for Kids and Horses is anything but sunny these days.
Recent storms have pummeled the ranch into a muddy mess, and the place is
missing an essential ingredient—the kids.
Christina Nooner’s nonprofit organization near Los Molinos is in lockdown due
to an outbreak of equine influenza, and she is starting to feel desperate to
protect the animals and the mission of helping children (many of whom are
at-risk youth) by connecting them with rescued horses.
“These horses have been so therapeutic for so many people, so many kids,” she
said earlier this week as it began drizzling.
Dr. Bill Gray, a veterinarian at Cottonwood Veterinary Clinic, confirmed that
a particularly virulent strain of the flu first struck Tehama and Shasta
counties in December and has since sickened 80 or so animals, and that three
likely have died from the illness.
“It went a lot of places really quick, and that concerned us,” he said.
Gray hasn’t treated any horses with the illness for about a week and said he
thinks the worst of the flu has passed through his neck of the woods. Still, he
cautioned North State horse owners to vaccinate. Inoculated animals appear
resistant to the strain, the subtype of which has yet to be determined.
But Nooner isn’t taking any chances and has quarantined her ranch. Her
husband, Troy, two ranch hands who live there, and this reporter have been the
only people allowed on the property, which is nestled among orchards about six
miles north of town. She is being extra precautious, and for very good reason.
Most of her equine companions are Colonial Spanish horses, descendants of a
herd rounded up and removed from an island off the coast of Southern California
in the late 1990s. Removal of that 15-head herd from Santa Cruz Island—part of
the Channel Islands—stirred up quite a controversy at the time. Animal activists
and geneticists decried the move of the National Park Service, which had
purchased the horses’ home on the eastern portion of the island and viewed the
creatures as an invasive species.
One of the herd’s most vocal advocates was Dr. Karen Blumenshine, a Santa
Barbara-based veterinarian, who had treated the horses for the island’s previous
owners and believed them to be the progeny of animals introduced by the Spanish
in the mid-19th century. In a letter to the editor of the Los Angeles Times in
July 1998, the veterinarian called for the preservation of the creatures on that
range.
“One of the island’s former owners has said this is a historic herd and
wishes them to remain on the island for public appreciation,” she wrote.
DNA testing wasn’t around to support Blumenshine’s theory back then,
and the animals were relocated to Shingletown in the care of the nonprofit Wild
Horse Sanctuary. Nooner was vice president of the organization at the time and
agreed to allow the horses to live out the rest of their days under its care.
About a year later, though, she came into possession of a sickly foal abandoned
by the herd.
During a visit to Sunshine Sanctuary, she showed photos of the days-old
creature—just skin and bones—and recalled lying next to the animal on a mattress
she had placed in her yard. With the help of local children, Nooner nursed the
gravely ill filly, a rare cremello color, back to health by administering
intravenous fluids and antibiotics, and feeding her every two hours for months.
She already owned several rescued horses and was helping troubled
neighborhood kids by inviting them to care for the older and unwanted animals.
“I would just treat [the kids] like people—make them feel valuable,” she said.
“They’d learn compassion and feel needed.”
Nooner said the foal had stirred in her a spiritual encounter revealing that
she was meant to save the breed of sturdy little gaited horses, and unbeknownst
to many she’s been on a mission to do so for the past decade. She’s managed a
sophisticated breeding program, nearly doubling the herd. At the same time, she
continued her work with children and established the operation as a nonprofit,
naming it in honor of the abandoned filly, Sunshine, whose miraculous survival
astonished consulting UC Davis veterinarians.
Two years ago modern genetic analysis found the group to be an isolated
population with ancestral roots to the Iberian Peninsula (mostly in Spain), and
whose closest equine relative is the Peruvian Paso. In an e-mail to Nooner, Dr.
Gus Cothran, a Texas A&M geneticist, described the significance of the breed,
which no longer exists in Spain. “It has survived the New World primarily by
chance,” he said. “It is important to the survival of this land race of horses
that as much of its past diversity as possible be preserved, and to do this we
must preserve the various remnants that still survive.”
Nooner’s worst nightmare is that the recent flu strain could whip through her
ranch, wiping out all trace of these horses. Vaccinations for the animals—28
Santa Cruz horses and a few others—will cost more than $600, and that’s just for
the first round of inoculation. Nooner, who has maintained the herd through
fundraising and her own money, is hoping the public will help defray the cost.
She’s also looking to raise funds for the general upkeep of the horses (her feed
bill alone is about $20,000 a year), training and to ensure the breed continues
to thrive.
“These horses need to be saved for the next generation,” she said. “There’s
something very special about them.”
Our Mission:
To create an environment where kids and horses can feel safe
learning from one another while sharing love & compassion.
WE...
Provide a comfortable home for rare heritage
horses and work to protect them form extinction for future generations to
enjoy. These horses are used in our children's programs as appropriate.
Give sanctuary to gentle donated and rescued
horses until they are adopted into new loving homes.
HORSES...
Help children to discover alternatives to: drugs, violent behavior,
gangs, early sexual experimentation, excessive computer games or television and
feelings of isolation or loneliness.
Help children identify personal strengths and interests and enable them
to feel the satisfaction of personal accomplishment.
OUR MENTORS...
Encourage children to portray gentle kindness with animals and one
another who are vulnerable, disabled, different or unpopular.
Inspire children to participate in all aspects of animal husbandry, such
as grooming, nursing care, stall care, feeding, giving of tactile and verbal
affection, as well as horseback riding and arena games.
Educate about animals and the environment and how they relate to humans,
through discussion and providing learning materials.
Contact Information
- For more information feel free to contact us at any of the following
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- Telephone
- (530) 529-0183
- Postal address
- 10931 Singer Ave
- Los Molinos, CA 96055
- Email
- General Information:
Info@sunshinesanctuary.org
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