Rambo
Well-Known Member
It's not just FEI rules though...that's the ppint. BS has now adopted the FEI rules so if you jump BS you are bound by the same.
No a controlled substance still cannot show up in a sample in competition.It was brought about to make drugs available to vets for therapy between competitions all banned substances are barred full stop as could be picked up on a spot check sampling at home.Which can happen with top horses.My post above should say not a Banned Substance btw. All meds on that DB are considered Prohibited i think.....just Controlled Medication canbe used with an autorisarion whereas Banned substances are a no-no regardless.
It is bl**dy confusing though !
I would never ever ever jump a denerved horse as they simply don't know where their feet are which is so dangerous its untrue. I might do a dressage test but doubtful affiliated and nothing to that high a level as again the likelyhood of tripping over feet is drastically increased!
Horses who have had a PSD neurectomy/fasciotomy are also banned from competition. For what that's worth. I was a bit surprised to see the article in H & H the other week which, while it didn't come right out and say that horses returned to high level competition after this surgery, it implied it. Which is, I guess, true enough.
Btw, I'm not sure if it's still the case, but the FEi rules used to say something about not using/doing anything to the horse to affect its ability to feel pain or to change its temperament artificially in any way. So technically calmers are not allowed under the spirit of the law.Which isn't to say I personally think that's how it should be, just that, ETHICALLY speaking, there is really only a difference in degree between buting a horse and giving it devil's claw, or sedating a horse vs giving it a calmer, not a difference in kind. Of course using something that tests is a different situation. The problem is now, neurectomies don't test . . .
The FEI have a total ban on calmers not just the ones that can be detected is you are seen administering one you are breaking the rules.To put it another way, if I analysed my grazing/forage/feed and it showed up that the diet was deficient in X, and I then add X, which has the knock on effect of improving that particular horse's performance, is that 'cheating' - or is it optimising the performance of that horse by giving it a balanced diet?
Should calmers that don't test really be viewed in that way? Because the ones that don't test also don't work universally, principally I think because they address a dietary deficiency - so if your horse isn't deficient in say, magnesium, then it has no effect on them. So really what you're doing is leveling the playing field when compared to a horse which has no dietary deficiency. Those that work universally (to a greater or lesser degree - like the different effects sedalin has on different horses) because they have a sedatory effect (like valerian), do test.
This magnesium thing is all very strange as people could supplement their horses diet very cheaply [...] I personally would have a blood test to check levels before I started giving a horse magnesium for a behavioural problem .
See, I would say optimising, but under the idea that you shouldn't be giving your horse anything that changes it's innate temperament/sensitivity, pushing a tube of something down a horse's throat half an hour before a test is pretty clearly an attempt to do just that. Look at all the people on here wanting something that works but doesn't test.![]()
Think the horse is the one mentioned earlier in the thread, just googled its rider, seems she is more controversial than the horse is... according to the Daily Mail anyway! I am even more shocked now than I was when I saw her riding!
Taking beta blockers for migraines because you have to do that to be able to function like a normal human being is worlds away from a totally health person taking a performance enhancing drug for no other reason that wanting to win.
I'm glad I'm such a crap rider that I'm unlikely ever to compete under FEI rules anyway![]()
Me too.
As an aside my vet is more than happy for me to continue riding my horse with either bute on a daily basis or as and when when the time comes that steroid injections no longer do it for him. He is only 14. My friends 14.2hh pony had a bute a day for three years and it never did it any harm and it died of old age aged 42!
I really can't understand why bute it is such a big deal to so many people. My horse has received three lots of tildren, joint injections, steroid injections and adequan. He has been kept on an initial course of box rest and then ridden all on vets advice. Like the vets say - spavin horses are best ridden. At the moment he gets by on steroid although I am contemplating hock fusion with ethanol. He's had over £3.2K spent on him in vets bills to throw everything at him to help him as much as possible. I haven't ever given him bute to mask lameness. It has helped him on the odd ocassion when I have jumped on a firm surface or when he has run around the field and his arthritis has flared up. He is comfortable. He runs in the field, he rears, and spins and plays with his friend. He has a fantastic quality of life.
If he gets to the stage where he needs bute in order to maintain his comfort on a daily basis then that is what I will give him. Like my vet says its either that (when it comes) or throw out in the field and never ride again. I know which he would prefer and I know which I would prefer. Period.
Some people don't have oodles of money, time, room or money for a second horse and I couldn't contemplate putting him to sleep so I could get another horse as I love him so much.