How retired racehorses in Ontario find new purpose after the track
HILLSBURGH — Vicki Pappas and Lauren Millet are giving retired thoroughbred racehorses a second lease on life.
Pappas is chairperson and founding member of LongRun Thoroughbred Retirement Society, a 100-acre facility that specializes in matching retired thoroughbreds with new owners for a second career and finding them adoptive homes. Millet is LongRun’s farm and adoption manager.
LongRun was established as a charity in 2000 and then as a farm in 2017, and has rehomed over 1,000 thoroughbreds. It currently has roughly 60 horses, including champions Pink Lloyd, Riker, Rahy’s Attorney, Fifty Proof and Something Extra.
“People don’t understand how good thoroughbreds are in post-career jobs,” said Pappas, who was inducted into the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame as a builder in 2021. “They’re extremely versatile; they can do almost anything.


