Horse shelter gets ‘Lucky’ in Dover Plains
Tigertap and Gil are two of the resident horses living at Lucky Orhpans Horse Rescue in Dover Plains. Photo submitted

Horse shelter gets ‘Lucky’ in Dover Plains

DOVER PLAINS — Lucky Orphans Horse Rescue (LOHR) in Dover Plains is fundraising for a new and improved communications hub.

Founded in 2008, Lucky Orphans is a not-for-profit organization that gives a second life to retired horses as therapy horses, offering programs such as school visits, equine-assisted psychotherapy and equine-assisted Reiki. It is also certified by the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance to care for retired thoroughbred racehorses.

LOHR currently relies on a network of text messages, walkie talkies, white boards and face-to-face conversations to convey information about the horses. Founder and Executive Director Deanna Mancuso explained why this system is impractical.

“[White boards] forget to be looked at, or accidentally get wiped off,” Mancuso wrote in an email to The Millerton News. “We have [an] app on our phones, but some volunteers don’t like to keep their phones on them, or don’t have service at the farm. We send messages, and hold meetings, but not everyone can make every meeting.”

The organization is hoping to transition to a centralized system of touch screen tablets installed in “pertinent areas of the farm.” These tablets would run the software Hippovibe, a communications platform specifically designed for horse management.

“This new system would keep all communication in a central location, accessible at all times, by all staff/volunteers,” Mancuso shared. “It would also be live, so once something gets added to the app, it becomes instantly accessible at each hub.”

She gave an example of how it works.

“If the vet sees a horse in the main barn, and puts him on a medication, the staff member assisting the vet would immediately put it in the app from the hub in the main barn. Instantly, the staff member in the feed room can see the update in the hub in the feed room.”

Lucky Orphans has set a fundraising goal of $5,000 to finance the project. The fundraiser has been shared via the organization’s email list and social media and sent to board members to forward to their personal contacts.

Mancuso emphasized the importance of updating the system to ensuring a smoother operation of the facility.

“As technology becomes more of our daily lives, horse management apps have become popular. We want to give access to all the staff and volunteers that take care of our horses… Having this valuable tool will help us manage the farm, tasks and horses in a more time efficient way with better communication and better care for the horses,” she said.

Latest News

Employment Opportunities

LJMN Media, publisher of The Lakeville Journal (first published in 1897) and The Millerton News (first published in 1932) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit news organization.

We seek to help readers make more informed decisions through comprehensive news coverage of communities in Northwest Connecticut and Eastern Dutchess County in New York.

Keep ReadingShow less
Pine Plains Bombers defeated at Section IX Regional

Giana Dormi, no. 3 of Pine Plains, and Michelle Blackburn, no. 12 of Pine Plains, put the pressure on Juliana Manginelli, no. 11 of Tuckahoe, as she tries to find a pass during the second round of the regional tournament at Mount Saint Mary College in Newburgh, N.Y. on Tuesday, March 11.

Photo by Nathan Miller

NEWBURGH, N.Y. — The Pine Plains Bombers were knocked out in second round of the Section IX regional tournament after a hard fought game against the Tuckahoe Tigers on Tuesday, March 11.

The Bombers won the tip and got off to an early lead, but the Tuckahoe Tigers outpaced them quickly and finished the game 59-25.

Keep ReadingShow less
County comptroller releases special report on federal funding

Dan Aymar-Blair

Photo provided

POUGHKEEPSIE — Dutchess comptroller Dan Aymar-Blair released a special report early last week on federal monies and how they move through the county level, including the disbursement process in the county; how federal funding benefits Dutchess residents and whether any fiscal distribution issues have surfaced locally as a result of actions taken on behalf of the Trump administration.

According to Aymar-Blair’s report, federal programming represents roughly 10% of Dutchess expenditures, not including any COVID-19 assistance. As an illustration of federal- to county-level distribution and spending, in 2023, under the Biden administration, the county received approximately $65 million from the U.S. government with $25 million going toward direct aid in support of such programs as home energy assistance and food stamps. Federal monies were also disbursed — and continue to be directed — toward county-level agencies, programming and supports such as adoption, foster care and child care needs, emergency/disaster assistance, infrastructure development and maintenance, and workforce initiatives.

Keep ReadingShow less
‘Selected Shorts’ comes to Stissing Center

The Stissing Center was bustling just before the show on Sunday, March 9.

Photo by Alec Linden

PINE PLAINS — The Stissing Center was packed on Sunday for an afternoon performance of podcast and NPR series “Selected Shorts.” The sold-out show, which was recorded for national broadcast at a later date, brought a lineup of four accomplished actors and storytellers to the Pine Plains stage to recite a selection of short stories from award-winning authors.

“Selected Shorts,” a product of Manhattan-based performing arts powerhouse Symphony Space, features prominent actors who recite works of short fiction. The full program usually revolves around a theme; Sunday afternoon’s focus was “transformations.”
Comedian, writer and actress Ophira Eisenberg — or “renaissance woman of storytelling,” as Stissing Center Executive Director Patrick Trettenero introduced her — assumed hosting duties, warming up the crowd with jokes about Brooklyn egg prices and doctors with self-esteem issues — “I want a megalomaniac with a god complex and no hobbies.”

Keep ReadingShow less