Caledonia
Well-Known Member
I'll play devil's advocate here. You object to the use of the whip in racing so presumably you consider yourself to be a fair and humane individual. Yet you freely admit to loving and watching a sport where on average 166 horses die taking part in each year. I'd be really interested to know how you can square this in your mind.
For the record I like racing, I watch it and bet on it and realise that accidents do happen. But 467 horses dead or destroyed following serious injury during racing (which appears to exclude fatalities during point to point meetings) between the 13th March 2007 and yesterday seems to be a very high price to pay.
I wrote this earlier this year in response to a query elsewhere. I've doctored it slightly to make it more current.
The average on the track according to the AA site below is 165 a year. However......... it has to be taken proportionally......... this is the site set up by the Animal aid eejit that manages to link every equine disaster to horseracing, inc Jamie Gray......... This guy finds every horse that dies, he is obsessed with racing being 'cruel'.
I have no idea how many horses run every year, but it's a small percentage of fatalities to runners.
Taking a day in January as an example. It was an extreme day, as two horses died, at different tracks. Both suffered injuries on the flat. Out of 185 runners, 2 fatalities. There are that number of horses running somewhere most days, and the previous fatality was the 16th, ten days previously. So statistically that could be 2 fatalities in 1665 runners, or one horse per 832 runners.
Yesterday at Cheltenham, 129 horses ran. 6 fell, one sadly died. That is not a normal percentage, that's high, but it could so easily have been none, it's the nature of the fall that killed him.
http://www.horsedeathwatch.com/
On this list is a horse that died. She was owned by one of my closest friends. She was home bred, and hugely loved, and was running in a bumper (NH flat race), her second ever race, when she lost her action. The jockey pulled her up immediately, my friend ran down the track to her, and her hind fetlock had broken. My friend got there in time to give her a hug and a kiss before the vet dispatched her. She was unaware, and in no pain. She had the most wonderful life she could hope for, and never wanted for anything.
So when a horse like her is described as raced to death, I want to spit on him.
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