HorsesHorses
Candice Barnes, assistant director of the Jacksonville Equestrian Center. | News4Jax

Hundreds of horses sheltered in Jax during Hurricane Milton

Published on October 9, 2024 at 12:59 pm
Free local news and info, in your inbox at 6 a.m. M-F.

With evacuation orders in place across Florida for Hurricane Milton, pets are encouraged to be evacuated with their families, but what about animals larger than cats and dogs?

The increased threat of storm surge and wind gusts from Milton is causing families with horses to head to the Jacksonville Equestrian Center to ensure they’re well protected.

Jacksonville Today thanks our sponsors. Become one.

Nearly 400 horses are coming in from places with mandatory evacuations like Tampa and St. Augustine.

“We have not been at capacity since 2017. All of the other named storms where there were evacuees, were minimal compared to Milton,” said Candice Barnes, assistant director of the Jacksonville Equestrian Center.

Barnes showed concern for people still trying to evacuate their horses from Tampa. Fifty horses that were supposed to make the journey up had to divert due to gasoline shortages and delayed evacuation decisions.

Article continues below

Jacksonville Today thanks our sponsors. Become one.

Not just horses

While horses are the main evacuees in the equestrian center, other animals are also offered space to shelter at their facility.

“We were in contact yesterday with animal control. They were looking to see if we could take house animals, cats and dogs, if they needed, and we said yes. Goats, small horses, big horses, whatever we can. We just can’t take in large livestock, but we’re in contact with farms who can,” Barnes said.

This story was produced by News4Jax, a Jacksonville Today news partner.


author image Amanda comes to WJXT from the CBS affiliate in Mobile, Alabama, where she was a traffic anchor and reporter. She launched the Emmy-nominated franchise “Driven,” which focused on profiling trailblazers in marginalized communities, while shining a light on injustice.

Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.