rhino
Well-Known Member
The younger horses were all turned out every day in cages
I work on a stud so am the evil person who works in the industry. All our horses get masses of attention and we didn't breed as many foals last year due to the high stud fees and poor prices at the sales. We have one mare who has not been bred from for 3 years as her foals are not 'commercially popular', but rather than sell her on or shoot her, she is nannying the younger mares. We also have a 20 year old pregnant mare who was raced at 2 and moves like a dressage horse, she lives out and is fat and happy and not requiring to be buted everyday like a lot of riding horses of that age. You cannot make sweeping generalisations about any particular part of the equine industry.
You really don't understand, do you?
I think it is you who does not understand, of all what I wrote you picked that bit. They got turned out every day, that is more than a lot of horses get that have a pro job. I think that being turned out every day in a cage is a lot better than standing for 23 hours in a box. You are very narrow minded.
I think it is you who does not understand, .........
Why can you guys not just say "we know it's not optimum horse welfare but we need to do it to safeguard the investment in breeding them","We do the best we can within the constraint that these animals are valuable capital assets", which is the truth?
QUOTE]
Well I kind of said that... racing is not perfect, things are being done to improve welfare, and more could be done, in every horse sport.
The thing that really gets my goat is how some people are so blinkered that racing is cruel, and will not hear the other side of the argument
So cptrayes, what would you like to see change? If you had a racing yard and were a trainer what would you do?![]()
ThanksBut horses break legs/have heart attacks in ALL sports - I've seen a show horse die of a heart attack in the ring, I've gone to catch horses in the paddock and they've trotted up to me with a swinging leg, and I've seen horses die eventing. They can die in 'cruel' ways just chilling in the field.
Obviously if I come up to you, or a horse, and break your/their leg with a bat, the pain would be incredible. However, if a horse breaks a leg on the track, or a man breaks his leg say, running from a gunman (when adrenaline will be pumping like crazy) or in the last 100m of a cross country ski race, they'll keep going and only realise when they stop and calm down that their leg hurts. But if a horse 'collapses to the floor', it's likely that it's had a heart attack or something similar, and like Hickstead a few weeks ago, they are dead when they hit the floor.
Haha, I do agree.Gosh some of you need to take of YOUR blinkers! cptrayes- I said that welfare in racing could always be improved, and its not perfect. Everyone involved in racing would tell you that, its not perfect, agreed, but its also more transparent and less cruel than you think.
Friesian80, at least cptrayes knows what a discussion is making valid points. I said this...
and you said...
Goes to show what exactly??
If you are going to start an argument, at least finish it, instead of saying everyone else is spouting rubbish and change the subject. This is a discussion forum, so lets have a DISCUSSION
So cptrayes, what would you like to see change? If you had a racing yard and were a trainer what would you do?![]()
I am not against racing. I am not against racing. I am not against racing. Got it yet?
What I would I change? I would change the powers that run the industry who I believe are actively avoiding producing the statistics that people need to make up their minds about how harmful or otherwise they think racing is. They make the sport look dodgy by their actions.
Can anyone explain to me the 1 in 5 going to stud statistic? I cannot make it stack up. I have it scrawled all over a piece of paper and I have mares, foals, yearlings and horses going into training as 2 year olds coming out of my ears within 5 years.
I am not against racing. I am not against racing. I am not against racing. But the industry's PR machine is failing badly. Got it yet?
ps Why on earth would I want to be a Racing Trainer?
I can't be bothered to read half of the rubbish that is being written on this post. But shall add my bit, shoot me own in flames. Someone asked to name a yard where horses are turned out in groups with shoes on all year round. When I worked at Hughie Morrison's this was the case. The younger horses were all turned out every day in cages on grass and there was a group of 4, yes 4, older horses that were turned out together everyday come rain or shine and two of those actually lived out and trained off grass. Why? because they did not like being in and were more pleasant people to deal with outside. I am not saying all trainers are like this but having worked with sports horses there are many a warmblood who is ridden in draw reins from the age of 3 and never turned out. A lot of professionally kept horses (i.e. those competing at National/International level) live a very similar existance to racehorses.
And as for it being life limiting, I have an 8 year old Connemara who has been hunted since he was 4 (with his previous owners), this week he has been diagnosed with PSD to both hind limbs. It is sad and hopefully we can get him right but as you can see he's not a race horse but he's still suffered what might end up to be a life limiting complaint.
I work on a stud so am the evil person who works in the industry. All our horses get masses of attention and we didn't breed as many foals last year due to the high stud fees and poor prices at the sales. We have one mare who has not been bred from for 3 years as her foals are not 'commercially popular', but rather than sell her on or shoot her, she is nannying the younger mares. We also have a 20 year old pregnant mare who was raced at 2 and moves like a dressage horse, she lives out and is fat and happy and not requiring to be buted everyday like a lot of riding horses of that age. You cannot make sweeping generalisations about any particular part of the equine industry.
.......
I am not against racing. I am not against racing. I am not against racing. But the industry's PR machine is failing badly. Got it yet?.......
THIS from your first reference
"At present overall about 2 in every thousand runners are fatalities. Flat and All Weather racing accounts for around 0.6 fatalities of every thousand runners, Jump racing accounts for just over 4 fatalities of every thousand runners. "
is disengenuous when the statistic people want to know is how many HORSES, not runners, die. It truly makes it look as if the industry is trying to hide something.
The pie chart in your second quote is even more disengenuous and would have a statistician spitting out his coffee. By presenting the data in a pie on an angle in pseudo 3D, they have made the area representing 19% retired to stud about four times the urface area the one representing 11% reported dead. Just co-incidence that the deaths section was put on the back of the pie, looking as small as it possibly could? I don't think so - it was done deliberately to reduce the impact. That's exactly the kind of stuff which shows that someone somewhere is trying to gloss over the truth.
I also find it absolutely impossible to believe that one in five of all horses who left racing in 2006 are retired at stud. Allowing for how many more mares are required for stud duties than males, then how many mares would be in studs if that figure were true!!! It would have to be an absolute minimum of 1 in 3, year after year. They would be stacked five high. The only credible explanations I can think of are that 2006 was an odd year (unlikely, I would suggest) or that the people who gave the information as to the whereabouts of their horses lied to give a better impression of the industry.
Frankly, your references are EXACTLY what is doing your industry harm. They are either put together by people attempting to gloss over the truth, or people who are incapable of collating a bunch of statistics.
You wonder why people are suspicious of what you are hiding. Look no further than the articles you pointed me to.
I am trying to show how hard to get the information you want might no be so simple.
to generalise they are made up a bunch of dinosaurs who are very set in their ways, this is changing slowly but I don't see how this will change anything that directly affects the TB in its racing career.
No, in truth I haven't. I'm doing my level best though.
So it isn't racing, per se, that your opposed to, but the PR machine. it may well be that I'm being thick, but I cannot understand your apparently shifting argument.
Take a deep breath, and explain, clearly what it is, that you don't like. Should you argue that there's room for improvement, you may well get a round of applause, as most would agree with you, and whilst agreeing with you, are working towards a better racing world.
A.
Isn't it just, nice and topical too![]()
Personally when talking about manipulating thoughts by constantly calling 2 year olds 24 months olds is a good example........
....... why you, especially NH, are going to be next on the horsey anti's list if they manage to get foxhunting put to bed.......
If, quote "they manage to put foxhunting to bed"?![]()
Having read your posts on the hunting forum, could you not have exchanged the word "they", for "we"? You appear to be doing your level best!
A.