tristars
Well-Known Member
I read somewhere it was a catastrophic bleed.
I understand that is a possibility with older horses.
If it was under g a he would have been spared suffering hopefully
I read somewhere it was a catastrophic bleed.
I’ll tell you why: because this is completely uncalled for.Then don’t open and interact with a thread that offends you and on a matter that you do not wish to discuss further, just scroll on by.
I’ll tell you why: because this is completely uncalled for.
This thread is not ‘discussion’ of anything, don’t deceive yourselves, it is pure speculation, thoroughly mean allusions and insinuations:
Posts 2, 3, 4, 9, 26 - suggesting the operation on Jovian was ‘unnecessary’, ‘more to it than meets the eye’, possibly part of ongoing ‘abuse’ by his abusive handlers -
the horse’s owner and attending veterinary surgeon were of the opinion that the horse should be castrated. End of.
People who have never managed or handled this horse in their lives know better. Yeah, right.
And the post 19 insinuation beggars belief:
Whatever one thinks of Helgstrand, the stable lasses and travelling grooms of elite horses are incredibly closely bonded to them, they have to be, more so than human families in some cases - and this loss will be devastating to them. Perfect timing for some nasty little insinuation, eh? Well done.
Happily however, they are unlikely to read such malice, and easily able to identify it as spiteful, uninformed, rumour-mongering if they inadvertently do.
Over and out
No, most of us do not like Helgstrand. Some of us probably wonder why people who love horses would want to work for him, particularly in light of Operation X and how he rides in public if nothing else. Some of us are even relieved that the horse will no longer have to live this lifestyle. And yes we are allowed to speculate about the very odd decision to apparently put a horse through an elective operation presumably under GA given his age and size within days of a long stressful journey and competition, and the management that led up to the decision. He is a public figure and he puts his horses in the public gaze. What do you expect?I’ll tell you why: because this is completely uncalled for.
This thread is not ‘discussion’ of anything, don’t deceive yourselves, it is pure speculation, thoroughly mean allusions and insinuations:
Posts 2, 3, 4, 9, 26 - suggesting the operation on Jovian was ‘unnecessary’, ‘more to it than meets the eye’, possibly part of ongoing ‘abuse’ by his abusive handlers -
the horse’s owner and attending veterinary surgeon were of the opinion that the horse should be castrated. End of.
People who have never managed or handled this horse in their lives know better. Yeah, right.
And the post 19 insinuation beggars belief:
Whatever one thinks of Helgstrand, the stable lasses and travelling grooms of elite horses are incredibly closely bonded to them, they have to be, more so than human families in some cases - and this loss will be devastating to them. Perfect timing for some nasty little insinuation, eh? Well done.
Happily however, they are unlikely to read such malice, and easily able to identify it as spiteful, uninformed, rumour-mongering if they inadvertently do.
Over and out
No, most of us do not like Helgstrand. Some of us probably wonder why people who love horses would want to work for him, particularly in light of Operation X and how he rides in public if nothing else. Some of us are even relieved that the horse will no longer have to live this lifestyle. And yes we are allowed to speculate about the very odd decision to apparently put a horse through an elective operation presumably under GA given his age and size within days of a long stressful journey and competition, and the management that led up to the decision. He is a public figure and he puts his horses in the public gaze. What do you expect?
I couldn't have it on my conscience, I know that much.I wondered about those who work there
I wondered about those who work there
I couldn't have it on my conscience, I know that much.
Jovian's groom has worked there since 2011.Helgstrand was first censured in 2015, I would imagine most of the current staff knew his reputation before they started.
There are people all across the globe who work at stables, zoos, farms, aquariums, who hate where they work but don't quit, because they don't want to abandon the animals to their fate with someone who might not try to make their days that bit better. They feel the guilt but they work there anyway, because guilt doesn't make the animals lives any happier.
For a long time, I worked at a yard which (though nowhere near the levels of Helgstrand) was not a nice place for the horses or the people there. Obviously, I wouldn't have started working there if I knew what it was like, but, once I was in, I was in. I dreamed of leaving - as did all of my co-workers - but I couldn't leave the horses behind. I did my best to make their lives a little happier - scratches in my lunch break, an attempt at enrichment when the boss wasn't looking to tell me to take it down, it made the stables look untidy - and I came home crying, and I did that same routine again and again and again and again because I really loved those horses.
I hope, for both your sakes, that you never experience it: the heartbreak of watching the horses you love deteriorate whilst being powerless to get them out of that environment; the constant and unbearable guilt that still hasn't faded, even though I now own one of those horses, and can give him the life all of them deserved.
It is agony and I wouldn't wish it on my worst
The problem is that grooms are generally not paid well and they often rely on their employers for accomodation (both theirs and their horses, as the case may be). From that position of financial insecurity, I don't think you can blame people for not wanting to risk being unemployed for the sake of a boycott, especially when they will probably be quickly replaced.I do totally understand what you're saying, Stangs. But I suppose it then opens up the debate about whether if all reasonable people were to boycott places where the welfare was lower than one might hope, maybe it would put those who treat horses badly out of business because they'd have no grooms to do the necessary work - or better still, force them to change their ways for the better.
Unfortunately, what would likely actually happen is they would just employ people who didn't give two hoots about the horses but would still do the work, and so the horses would indeed be worse off.