Girlracer
Well-Known Member
I have a horse that raced as a two year old, he was wired on high energy feed, eyes on stalks, spent all day in the stable unless he was on the walker or being exercised. Do I think that is an acceptable life for a two year old?
Absolutely not, and please no one try and say if someone came on this forum that their two year old Warmblood had no turnout, was fed high protein feed and in a huge amount of work no one would say anything.
Just because it's 'normal' in the racing industry does not make it right, I do not care how many horses go on to race into their teens or how many 'welfare' cases there are outside of racing. Every day I see Thoroughbreds with some sort of anxiety induced behaviour that was picked up when in training. I'm fed up of hearing how well looked after they are, horses do not WANT to be tucked up in a stable going on the walker daily, however well fed they are. Sure they're not your standard welfare cases but I don't agree that they are all happy horses. They are taught to conform, there is no room for self expression or enjoyment. That's no life for a horse, never mind a young one.
Of course there is good and bad in everything, and I don't doubt that some race horses have a very different life when in training, not only that but horse racing is not the only equine sport where the standards of horse care are pretty similar. But the thread is about young horses in racing.
Absolutely not, and please no one try and say if someone came on this forum that their two year old Warmblood had no turnout, was fed high protein feed and in a huge amount of work no one would say anything.
Just because it's 'normal' in the racing industry does not make it right, I do not care how many horses go on to race into their teens or how many 'welfare' cases there are outside of racing. Every day I see Thoroughbreds with some sort of anxiety induced behaviour that was picked up when in training. I'm fed up of hearing how well looked after they are, horses do not WANT to be tucked up in a stable going on the walker daily, however well fed they are. Sure they're not your standard welfare cases but I don't agree that they are all happy horses. They are taught to conform, there is no room for self expression or enjoyment. That's no life for a horse, never mind a young one.
Of course there is good and bad in everything, and I don't doubt that some race horses have a very different life when in training, not only that but horse racing is not the only equine sport where the standards of horse care are pretty similar. But the thread is about young horses in racing.