Life After Death Biggie Smalls Zippyshare

Life After Death Biggie Smalls Zippyshare Rating: 8,4/10 9666 votes

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A QUICK VISIT With ZIPPY CHIPPY.WHO IS SLOWER THAN EVER.BUT VERY HAPPY WILLIANS ASTODILLO IS MY RED WINGS MVP WHY THE BILLS TRADED FOR COREY COLEMAN Before our annual trek to Saratoga Race Course for a day at the races, business writer/sports writer Kevin Oklobzija, Chuck “The Sultan of Suds” Hinkel and I made a short earl-morning side trip Sunday to visit Zippy Chippy, the legendary “lovable loser” of 0-for-100 fame. 70 of winless Zippy’s 100 losses were at Finger Lakes from November 1994 through September 1998. How to use cs go skin installer.

He was infamously banned from Finger Lakes after refusing to break from the starting gate for three consecutive races. Minecraft shaders texture pack download 164. Zippy became something of an international hero as a symbol of trying hard and never giving up. He was on People magazine’s list the 50 most interesting people – or things, I guess, and received fan mail from around the world.

Zippy now is 27 years old and living out his days at Old Friends at Cabin Creek, a small farm in Green field Center, New York, a 15-minute drive from Saratoga Race Course – assuming you don’t get lost. Old Friends at Cable Creek currently accommodates 14 retired horses, most of them formerly high-class runners. Appreciative ex-owners and donations from concerned racing fans keep the place going. Thousands of people visit the old horses annually. Zippy Chippy has the most lasting fame, the neatest story and is the feature attraction.

We had an exclusive visit Sunday morning, guided by Mark Pepper, who operates Old Friends at Cabin Creek with his wife, JoAnn. They live in a good-sized beautiful cabin on a hill overlooking the 92-acre property. The horses currently live in fenced-in paddocks with protective sheds or “run-ins”, where they eat their hay and seek protection during rainstorms and snowstorms. I wish I could say Zippy was happy to see us but.well, not at first. When we drove into the farm, the first thing we saw was a paddock reserved for the great Funny Cide -- we assume he was the solitary horse at the far end of the paddock (he was not the focus of our attention nor the animal we came to see) -- and a large-sized barn where many of the horses stay during the winter. Zippy Chippy and his best friend – fellow gelding Red Down South – share the last paddock.

Red Down South is 18 years old and they’ve been inseparable since the day in early spring 2010 when owner/trainer Felix Monserrate dropped off Zippy Chippy at his new permanent home. When we approached the fence of the Zippy/Red Down South paddock, they at first ignored us. Couldn’t be bothered. Too busy shooing off flies.

But they eventually decided to check us out and advanced in tandem very slowly – even by Zippy standards. When Chuck took out his bag of carrots, they accelerated their pace. They quickly ate their post-breakfast treat and allowed us to rub their faces and up close watch them paw the muddy ground and poop. Red Down South was the friendlier of the two, no surprise considering Zippy’s reputation for being nasty. Mark Pepper told us about the time Felix visited Zippy a few years ago for a special public ceremony at Cabin Creek. The plan was to have Felix lead Zippy into a make-shift winner’s circle – a place Zippy never visited in his racing career. The ceremony turned into a disaster.

Zippy was in a bad mood because the ceremony was at the entrance to Cabin Creek and he had been separated from his pal Red Down South, who remained alone in their paddock at the opposite end of the farm. Zippy knocked down the make-believe winner’s circle, tried to bite Monserrate and slowly (but at a quick pace for him) began the walk back to his paddock. We took some pictures and shared some Zippy stories with Mark Pepper, a very nice fellow who obviously loves and respects the animals that he and his wife are caring for. He said there is a waiting list of former owners and trainers who want to send their former runners to Cabin Creek. It is good to know that some of the horsemen appreciate and respect the horses who wore their silks and made them money.