Thursday, May 23, 2013

Oklahoma Tornado Wipes out Celestial Acres


Oklahoma Tornado Wipes out Celestial Acres

May 23, 2013

Dear Readers,

     As a Californian from birth, I find it unimaginable to live in Oklahoma, or anywhere that funnels of death come from the sky. Having said that, in the early 1970’s, Jim and I were making our way back to California from Shenandoah Downs in West Virginia, and found ourselves training horses at a small ranch outside of Ardmore Oklahoma.

    We lived in a small un-insulated clapboard house which was provided by the ranch. I have some interesting stories about our time in Oklahoma, but the one I will share here is the one that involved the night of the tornado warning. At the time, there was very little around the area, flat land with few trees. I kept a vigil, crouched by the window, arms crossed on the sill, leaning my forehead on the cool panes of glass. Through the night, I hovered, visions of Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz spinning through my thoughts.  

   There was no storm cellar, no other buildings, other than the barns and the main ranch house, for many miles around. We were alone with nothing between us and a deadly twister, except the poor protection of the ancient clapboard structure we occupied.

   It was a very long night for me, and despite the fact no tornados were sighted, within a few months we were headed down the road, in the teeth of a blizzard, anxious to get back to California, and the paradise it represented in our memories. California where the earth shakes, and structures fall, but  to a true Californian this is so much better than funnels coming from the sky, leaving in their wake a land that looks as though a giant wood chipper has run amuck.  

We have all seen the images on television, and the internet of the devastation visited upon Oklahoma and its residents, both two legged and four legged. There are no safe rooms for horses, cows, pigs or any kind of livestock.  What happened at Celestial Acres Training Center in Moore, Okla., is a horseman’s worst nightmare. Fire is the usual fear we have to guard against in keeping our charges safe.

   Getting the poor horses at Celestial Downs and the area surrounding it out of harm’s way was beyond anyone’s power.  There was no time to load the horses in trailers and evacuate them. There was only one hopethe tornado screaming across the land would miss them, and that hope was not to be.

   The numbers are unclear, but it is believed up to 80 helpless horses occupied the barns that were leveled. One barn was left standing and it held up to 25 horses whose lives were spared. So far a total of 34 horses have been found alive.

   With other horse farms in the area there will surely be further reports of dead or mortally wounded horses. There is no food left for them, no water that is not contaminated. People were reduced to using bottled water to help hydrate the horses and livestock that survived.

   Remington Park in Oklahoma City and Heritage Park sales complex are taking in animals until they can find their owners.

  The Thoroughbred Racing Association of Oklahoma and the Oklahoma Quarter Horse Racing Association have jointly established a charitable account to assist horsemen impacted by the tornado. All donations received will go directly to horsemen, according to a statement distributed late Tuesday by these two organizations.

Credit or debit card donations to the relief effort can be made by calling the OQHRA at (405) 216-0440. Checks can be made payable to the TRAO Benevolence Fund or the OQHRA Benevolence Fund, with the memo line to read 2013 Tornado. Donations can be sent to TRAO at 2620 NW Expressway, Suite A, Oklahoma City, Okla., 73112, or the OQHRA, P.O. Box 2907, Edmond, Okla., 73083.

      My thoughts keep returning to the soft brown eyes of the horses I trained over the years and how they would look at me from within the stalls they occupied, they were always so hopeful. They wanted from me nothing more than a gentle hand, food and water. I can only imagine what the people who owned the horses lost in this tragedy must be feeling. Each face that use to look to them for nurturing is gone, and in such a horrible way and there was nothing they could do to save them.

            Those who died so tragically are beyond our help, the ones that survived are now the ones left in need.
 
Take care my friends, all life is precious,

Shelley Riley

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