Rider banned from keeping horses after skeletal pictures on Facebook

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A rider has been banned from keeping horses after pictures of her riding a skeletal ex-racehorse were posted online.

Charlotte McPherson was reported to the RSPCA after riding her skinny thoroughbred Thor at an event in March.

She had covered the horse’s hindquarters with an exercise sheet that prevented event organisers from seeing the horse’s protruding bones.

But after official photographs were put on Facebook, dozens of people reported her to animal charities, who launched an investigation.

On Tuesday she admitted two counts of animal cruelty at Birmingham Magistrates’ Court.

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McPherson covered Thor with a blanket to hide his skeletal frame

The 22-year-old, from Kidderminster, Worcestershire, was charged with causing unnecessary suffering by failing to investigate and treat the cause of his poor body condition, and failing to protect him from pain, suffering, injury and disease by riding him in this state.

She has been disqualified from keeping horses for 10 years. She was also given a 12-month community order, sentenced to 160 hours’ unpaid work and must pay £300 costs and a £60 victim surcharge.

The ten-year-old horse, whose race name is Hoare Abbey, but is known as Thor, is in better hands now after the RSPCA intervened.

RSPCA inspector Suzi Smith said: “Thor looked incredibly thin and you could see pretty much every bone in his body. He was obviously unwell, and after a vet examined his body, his body condition was rated zero out of five because he was that thin. McPherson continued to ride him twice a week in this condition, including at a fun ride in Bissell Wood, Blakedown, in March.

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Thor was dangerously thin when the RSPCS intervened

“Not only was he thin, but he had a sore on his spine which was directly underneath the saddle. Thor would have been in a lot of pain while he was being ridden.”

An examination revealed that Thor’s drastic weight loss was because of a high worm egg count from not being wormed properly. Miss Smith added: “It was a slow progress to get him on the road to recovery as he would not have survived a wormer straightaway due to the condition he was in.

“Within five months he had put on weight and been properly wormed, where he soon showed that he had a zero worm egg count. We are so thankful to the Retraining of Racehorses charity who assisted with the veterinary costs in this case, and also to everyone in ‘Team Thor’ who provided the care and attention he needed.

“Thor has done amazingly well and he has now been rehomed. He is loving his new life and when he trots across a field, you would find it hard to believe what he was like earlier this year.”

Organiser of the Fun Ride at Bissell Wood, Neville Cope, 74, said: “I’m over the moon that she has now been seriously penalised because I was appalled by it She hid the rib cage of the horse by putting a blanket over it.

“We have a vet who goes around especially to make sure they’re all okay but the rug on the horse meant they couldn’t see. When she got back from the ride and took the rug off we were all so appalled by it.

“I’ve been involved in horses all my life and never ever have I seen a horse in as bad a state as this, I was absolutely disgusted.”

Pictures from Caters