SLOPE COUNTY, N.D.
He doesn't remember the exact year. It was probably 1998, or maybe 1999, when a horse trainer at Canterbury Park first asked the question.
Bowman, can you find a home for this horse?
"You think about what can happen to them," Dr. Richard Bowman says, as he guides his pickup over a rust-colored ribbon of gravel road. "They might get put down, or sent to slaughter. I wouldn't have felt good about saying no."
Two decades later, the 71-year-old veterinarian still can't walk away from a horse in need. His 4,000-acre cattle ranch in North Dakota has become a refuge for the injured, the old, the lame and the slow, the horses with nowhere to go when they retire from racing at Canterbury Park in Shakopee. More than 600 thoroughbreds and quarter horses have been healed and rejuvenated in the prairie air, eventually moving on to new owners and careers. Those too infirm to be adopted remain in Bowman's care, living out their days in lush fields inside the Little Missouri National Grassland.
Before he and others stepped up to re-home them, Bowman says, the bulk of former Minnesota racehorses were sent to their deaths in Canadian or Mexican slaughterhouses. Though multiple rescue groups now help out, Bowman Second Chance Thoroughbred Adoption is famous for welcoming every horse in any condition.
"The word 'no' is not in his vocabulary," says Dr. Lynn Hovda, chief veterinarian for the Minnesota Racing Commission. "I don't know anyone who opens their doors like Bowman does. He's got a heart as big as Texas."
Tucked in the southwest corner of North Dakota, the ranch is blanketed in a sea of knee-deep grass, shared by antelope and white-tailed deer. It is a place of peace and respite, for the horses and the doctor.