By Andrew Smith
Preparing horses for life after racing has always been in the blood for Rikkie Morton, but his retraining has gone to a whole new level since joining the Queensland Off-The-Track (QOTT) Program.
The 40-year-old recently signed on as a QOTT Acknowledged Retrainer, with both thoroughbreds and standardbreds in his care.
With his parents and grandparents all horse people, Morton has been around horses his whole life and decided he too wanted to make a difference when securing his property at Winwill in 2022.
“When we bought our property a few years back, we decided to buy some horses and to put it bluntly, I couldn’t trust anyone with my horses,” Morton said.
“So I put in the effort and got myself a couple of mentors and put my natural instinct to work and got to training these horses and it actually flowed on from there where I had friends of friends coming to me and asking me to train their horses and I ended up building a business from it.
“What I found was in the market, a lot of the clients that were coming to me were purchasing off-the-track racehorses for a sum of money thinking that this horse is safe and sound for them to jump on and ride and off they go.
“It was quite contrary to that - they needed a lot of retraining after coming off the track.
“People were buying these horses for cheap, then they couldn’t handle them, didn’t know what to do with them, and were uneducated people in terms of retraining retired racehorses and it wasn’t a good outcome for the horses or the owners either.
“I wanted to try and have an impact in that area where I’d been successfully retraining for our clients and I can make it more accessible so I can stop that cycle as much as we can by retraining these horses and then putting them into suitable homes.”