wildhorses
Active Member
I'm currently at Tattersalls yearling sales and most of the horses here have had some level of sedation. I can kind of understand it in this situation and certainly when showing four or five horses deep at Doncaster with people crossing in front of me, horny colts mixed in with fillies in season I wouldn't have wanted my colt fully awake, here is more civilised but the chance for disaster quite high.
The stud where I work doesn't dope the yearlings at all during prep but having dealt with one of the biggest consigners of yearlings, we were going to prep them to be sold under someone else's flag, and sending them away as we were instructed to dope them daily, I was wondering how common this is. The large consigner, I won't mention names, sedates all their yearlings daily, from the day they come in to the day they are sold. The yearling managers hands are yellow from sedalin use.
Personally I feel this is a lazy unethical way of dealing with horses, I feel the same about trainers whose horses are ridden out doped too. The only reason for this is so that cheaper staff, lacking in skill can be employed and it is obviously time saving. But what is the long term effect on the horses? Surely it must affect them in some way. Can't be good for them. How can they learn if they are off their heads, and working them half asleep???
The stud where I work doesn't dope the yearlings at all during prep but having dealt with one of the biggest consigners of yearlings, we were going to prep them to be sold under someone else's flag, and sending them away as we were instructed to dope them daily, I was wondering how common this is. The large consigner, I won't mention names, sedates all their yearlings daily, from the day they come in to the day they are sold. The yearling managers hands are yellow from sedalin use.
Personally I feel this is a lazy unethical way of dealing with horses, I feel the same about trainers whose horses are ridden out doped too. The only reason for this is so that cheaper staff, lacking in skill can be employed and it is obviously time saving. But what is the long term effect on the horses? Surely it must affect them in some way. Can't be good for them. How can they learn if they are off their heads, and working them half asleep???