Elf On A Shelf
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Cold crumpets - BLERGH!!!!
While you have a couple of catcher uppers at pt to pt, they do not 'trespass' onto the track during a race to catch up but are there to field any that come off the track (courses are not fenced all the way around as they go across fields in most cases)
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Can you imagine the carnage as Bill rushes off to catch a horse only to find his horse likes it too much and wants to gallop after the field instead of catching said loose horse let alone the chance of colliding with other loose horses or a lowly straggler. H & S would have a field day and there would be more calamities than there already have been by the 'safer' changes so far
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Yep, that has to be one of the stupidest suggestions I've seen all year, OTY surpassed themselves this time.![]()
But you are forgetting one thing your trusty lasso
God forbid if once lassoed it took off and the resulting carnage.
There are enough horses out on the course at Aintree to avoid without adding in extra "Outriders" that's just ridiculous and dangerous! What you need is a team of people in 4x4's who can go round at the back and drop off people to collect loose horses that have stopped and are milling about. Bring them off the track into the centre of the course where they are out of harms way and can cause no further disruption. There is absolutely no need to add yet more horses to the melay.
Just a thought but couldn't it be arranged that every entrant for the Grand National should have either a hunting qualification or have attended special schooling runs over the Aintree fences which differ from standard NH jumps.
This and reinstating the larger fences may make the course safer as it would weed out the horses that are at their limits.
The loss of two good horses was tragic but when look at the race list more riders were unseated than had the horse fall.
BTW the BHS statement echoed that of WHW, very sensible.
We used to send one or two hunting, but it was a high risk strategy, as the fences and the ground they are asked to run over are not as safe as those we build at home. Hunting helps bored horses, but would be a disaster for many NH horses.Every horse has to qualify for the GN and Im sure all the trainers school their horses over GN type fences.
The hunting idea wont work as point to pointers have to hunt to qualify and their defination of hunting is different to mine. On the odd occasion trainers have sent horses hunting to sweeten them up but I think its a rare occurrence.
Every horse has to qualify for the GN and Im sure all the trainers school their horses over GN type fences.
The hunting idea wont work as point to pointers have to hunt to qualify and their defination of hunting is different to mine. On the odd occasion trainers have sent horses hunting to sweeten them up but I think its a rare occurrence.
I did hunt mine properly and they often stayed out all day (behaviour permitting!) but proper NH horses and pointers don't hunt it is too risky (and embarrassing!).Every horse has to qualify for the GN and Im sure all the trainers school their horses over GN type fences.
The hunting idea wont work as point to pointers have to hunt to qualify and their defination of hunting is different to mine. On the odd occasion trainers have sent horses hunting to sweeten them up but I think its a rare occurrence.
To qualify for the GN they have to have won or be placed in races this is to weed out the no hopers.
As for schooling over GN fences you could say the same about any race the horses are schooled over fences like they are going to meet in a race.
Baggybreeches I used to hunt my bf horse to qualify for point to points and he stayed out all day, I was careful with him but no more than I would with any horse. It used to pee me off at others who used to come to the meet, hack around the roads and go home after an hour. My bf horses won ptps and also some races and was a very fit and sound horse.
A very interesting article that I am sure will help many understand the reasoning behind putting these horses down.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/blog/2011/sep/23/claims-five-broken-leg-horse?CMP=twt_gu