International Rescue Horse Registry, LLC

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International Rescue Horse Registry, LLC We provide services to rescue horses and their owners to register them and give them year end award opportunities.

10/02/2025
Members- pls note this page is no longer active.  Pls visit and follow the below page for IRHR   Thx!
24/01/2025

Members- pls note this page is no longer active. Pls visit and follow the below page for IRHR Thx!

27/08/2024

Pls note this page is no longer active and will soon be taken down. Pls contact Diamonds in the Rough Rescue for all IRHR questions and business. Thanks!

Send a message to learn more

Happy Fourth of July everyone!  Pls note the new website to register your horse is
02/07/2024

Happy Fourth of July everyone! Pls note the new website to register your horse is

A huge thank you to Bruce Adams who is the dad of IRHR member Jennifer Reynen.  He made the beautiful awards for the IRH...
27/06/2024

A huge thank you to Bruce Adams who is the dad of IRHR member Jennifer Reynen. He made the beautiful awards for the IRHR 2024 awards season and donated them! We can't thank him enough!

IRHR members pls be sure to take a pic of your award with you and your horse and tag the International Rescue Horse Registry.
Thanks again Bruce!

29/04/2024

Good morning IRHR! The awards are being finished and are absolutely beautiful! One of our member's Dad did them for us. Really lovely! I'll post when they are mailed. :)

08/03/2024

Everyone

Good afternoon IRHR!

And Happy Spring!

Please send an email to the new IRHR Director at [email protected] with a subject line of Member Email so that she can build a new email lisitng.

Thanks and have a great day!

Anna
Former IRHR Director

18/02/2024

In the horse world, it’s become a bit of a tradition to cut the tail hair of our best horses when we lose them.

We didn’t have Leo for long, just days. Truth be told, the plan was never to keep Leo. Our intention when we bought him at auction was simply to end the cycle of suffering for this big sweet horse. We knew that the end he would have faced without us was not a humane one. The gavel fell that day and he was ours, spared from the semi that was there loading others.

You see, we don’t know about Leo’s past, but his worn body told a story. Leo had two crude brands, clipped fresh for the auction in an attempt to squeeze every bit of money out of him. He had saddle sore scars across his back. He had deep lacerations across his body. His knee was large and painful, presumably from a very old injury. He could not stand without extreme pain. This horse paid his dues to his humans somewhere along the line, yet there he was at auction, failed.

So, we did what his owners before us should have done, the only humane thing for Leo. We brought him home and gave him a kind, dignified end here at the farm.

He deserved so much more, a fraction of the effort he gave the humans who failed him. While that saddens and angers us, we do feel better knowing that the buck stopped with us. That had to be good enough.

We stopped him from being bought and sold at another auction. We saved him from being loaded onto a semi.

If you take nothing else from Leo’s story, hear this:
If you have a horse, when the time comes, BUCK UP AND BURY THEM.
Have the courage and the respect for your horse to put them down in the comfort of their home with people they know.
It’s the only right and humane thing to do with our old horses at the end of their lives.
Full stop.

When your horses are old and infirm, unless you bury them, you are failing them.

Do not dump them on a rescue.
Do not take them to an auction.
Do not try to give them away for free online.
Do not send them with that guy that shows up with a cattle trailer and $100.

Give your horse the end they have earned. Bury them.

Leo is gone now, no longer in pain. While it is hard on our team, we are very grateful that we were able to do that for him, if nothing else. We see so many horses who need the same kindness and don’t get it.

Leo was a good horse for somebody, and we didn’t want him to be forgotten. Before he was buried we cut a piece of tail hair to keep, because everyone knows that all the good horses show up in horse heaven with chopped tails.

Leo was a good boy.
❤️

Bella Run Equine is a non-profit organization located in Athens Ohio.

27/01/2024

Good afternoon IRHR!

I had the pleasure of meeting with the director of Diamonds in the Rough Equine Rescue, Sonja Reuter, and your new IRHR Director, Annmarie Stark. today. Both of these amazing ladies have a huge heart for rescue horses and have been an amazing force in the rescue community for quite some time. They have some wonderful new initiatives and fresh ideas for the IRHR!

You'll most likely hear from Annmarie soon about your membership renewals and her plans for the IRHR in 2024. I'm leaving you in excellent hands!

It has been my pleasure to serve you as the founder and Director of the IRHR and I look forward to seeing the great ideas your new Director will bring to the membership.

God bless and good riding,

Anna Schriebl

26/01/2024

Love your horse, not what they can do.

My horse had to retire this year.
It was unexpected and it changed everything.

But for him, nothing changed.

He still goes out in the field, still gets a nice big fluffy bed, cosy rugs and a carrot every night. He still gets remedial shoes, gets his teeth done and regularly sees a physio.

Nothing changed for him, because he’s not a machine and the level of care he gets is not dependant on what he can do. I loved riding him, but that was a privilege, not a right and certainly not a way for him to “earn” good care.

He’s not a car that can be scrapped or sold on because he can’t do what I want to do anymore.

When you take the reins of a horse, you make a commitment.

A commitment to ensure their happiness and welfare always come first; whether they are jumping big tracks, competing at Grand Prix level, hacking or grazing in a field. Level of competition or ability should not dictate the level of care.

Horses are fragile. They break. They get injured. Soemtimes they have to retire. It doesn’t mean they are any less worthy of your care, attention or money.

Stop giving away, “loaning” or selling your broken down horses because they can’t do what you want them to do and if that means you have to change your plans or put them on pause, then so be it.

Love your horse, not what they can do.

03/01/2024

What a great idea! 📸 = Pinterest

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