Filly survives racetrack escape and barn fire



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Photo courtesy of Michael Ann Ewing.

LEXINGTON, Ky. (WTVQ) – Cats are said to have nine lives, but you may need to add a Lexington filly to this list after her eventful weekend that is garnering international attention, not because of this that she did on the track but rather off it. .

“Anything weird can happen in this business and you have to have it, it’s tough, so you have to have a lot of patience,” says horse trainer Michael Ann Ewing.

Saturday took an unexpected turn for Ewing when one of his 2 year old fillies was ready to compete in a race at Ellis Park. As the aptly named Bold and Bossy approached the door, she got scared, threw her jockey down and ran off in what ended up being a 35-minute chase ending on Interstate-69 .

“I was in a panic because all you can think of is that she is going to be hit by a truck or a car and she will either be dead or seriously injured,” Ewing said. “I just couldn’t imagine everything she was doing, she was going to be unharmed.”

Bold and Bossy was relatively unscathed from his wayward journey, returning dehydrated and tired with only a clipped hoof and two shoes lost. As if running loose on the highway wasn’t enough, after being dragged back to a barn on the track, it caught fire overnight.

“Someone, someone brave – children, grooms – came forward, ran into that burning barn and took out those horses and put them in other stalls they could find,” explains Ewing.

Ewing says Bossy’s injuries from the fire seemed to be just singing. After returning home on Sunday morning, the filly was taken to Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital in Lexington to receive fluids for dehydration and to undergo a thorough burn exam.

“You just had to let go, but then you do the right thing and you think ‘we’re not moving her tonight’ and there’s a barn fire,” Ewing explains. “She’s extremely tough.”

Ewing says it’s truly a miracle for Bossy to be released on the other side of all good and hopes she can be released from the hospital in the next few days. She says Bossy will have the rest of the year to recover and that in January she will let Bossy decide if she wants to try running again, hopefully only on a race track.

“She’s tough, so I think she’s going to come back,” Ewing said. “She’s bold and she has her own mind, her own way of thinking and I think she will be fine.”

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