Mane Characters
Equine Reserve & Retirement
Sign in
Notifications

No new notifications.

No products in the cart.

DonateSponsor a horse →
Equine Reserve & Retirement

Equine Retirement, for Life

When a horse can no longer race, compete, work, or be ridden, its options narrow fast. Equine retirement is the chapter that comes next: a place to live out the rest of its life, cared for as an individual. That is the whole purpose of Mane Characters Equine Reserve & Retirement.
What we do

What a real equine retirement looks like

Retirement here is not a holding pattern. It is a way of living. Horses in the reserve are cared for for the rest of their lives, on the pastures of our Bourbon County farm. A retired horse still needs a great deal, and none of it pauses because the horse has stopped working. That is the honest meaning of horse retirement, and it is the promise we make to every horse who comes to us.

Feed & forage

Daily feed suited to an older or recovering horse, with forage they can actually chew.

Vet, dental & farrier

Routine and emergency veterinary care, regular dental work, and farrier visits to keep a horse sound.

A herd & space

Safe fencing, shelter, good pasture, and the company of other horses, which matters as much as anything.
The herd

Horses in their retirement

Most of these horses are here for life. Meet a few of them, then browse the whole herd.
Siena sunshine.jpg

Siena Sunshine

The sunny one

A good roll in the grass, friends close by, and nothing on the calendar. Siena finally feels completely safe, and it shows.

Meet Siena Sunshine
20250703 100821

Starship Kitty

The boss lady has landed

Kitty raised nine foals before arriving last summer, then blended into the herd like she'd always run it. Declan has caught her eye.

Meet Starship Kitty
20260523

Midnight Jewel

A champion twice over

Jewel earned over $750,000 on the track, then raised foals who won fortunes of their own, including Hall of Famer Night Pro. She came home to us in 2026.

Meet Midnight Jewel
20230921

Pledge of Honor

Honor, by name and nature

A 23-year-old Kentucky gentleman who does everything as a pair with Archie: grazing, strolling, and soaking up the sunshine.

Meet Pledge of Honor
Khan.jpg

Khan of Khans

The warhorse who won retirement

After 108 starts and 29 wins, Khan's toughest job now is accepting all the attention. Wildcat Nat is especially generous with hers.

Meet Khan of Khans
Jessy

Zip Is It

A character in every sense

From Missouri to Florida show rings, Zip Is It charmed everyone he met. Affectionate, mischievous, and famously opposed to wet feet.

Meet Zip Is It
Why it matters

The honest cost of a real retirement

A retired horse can need care for decades. Feed, hay, veterinary and dental care, farrier work, and shelter add up, and they do not stop. That honest, ongoing cost is what your sponsorship and gifts cover, and it is what lets us promise a horse a home for life.
20260428
Questions

Equine retirement FAQs

What is equine retirement?

It is lifelong care for a horse that is no longer ridden or worked, focused on comfort, health, and dignity rather than performance.

At what age does a horse retire?

There is no set age. Some horses retire from injury, some from age. Many horses live well into their late twenties, so retirement can last a long time.

Can I retire my horse at Mane Characters?

Space is limited and intake depends on our capacity. The honest first step is to reach out so we can talk about whether we are able to help.

How can I support a retired horse?

Sponsor a horse to cover a share of its real monthly care, or give a one-time gift. It is the most direct way to keep a horse comfortable for life.
Every horse, a tale to tell. Every tale, a Mane Character.

Give a horse a real retirement.

Share via
Share via