nona1
Well-Known Member
I didn't see anything that distressed me beyond the thought of 'how sad that these horses are in a situation where they have to be destroyed'. The handling was excellent and very professional - the man is clearly a horseman. When the large horse baulked slightly at entering the area the handler just very calmly continued to lead him in and whistled quietly to encourage the horse to follow him - no shouting, tugging or roughness at all. The area was thoroughly cleaned between horses. The shooting was fast and accurate.
On the 'still alive because twitching' idea - I too used to think that the old 'it's just the nerve endings' explanation was rubbish until I saw a programme on TV recently. IT was the show where they slaughtered animals and prepared them right in front of a group of people who then ate them. At one point there was a lump of beef hanging on a hook - literally just a joint of meat about 1 foot square, and it was twitching, spasming and moving like anything. No way was that possibly 'alive' in any sense of the word, and they explained that it was the body chemicals breaking down and still effecting the nerves. This sort of movement is very common after death. The animal is still totally dead though.
On the 'still alive because twitching' idea - I too used to think that the old 'it's just the nerve endings' explanation was rubbish until I saw a programme on TV recently. IT was the show where they slaughtered animals and prepared them right in front of a group of people who then ate them. At one point there was a lump of beef hanging on a hook - literally just a joint of meat about 1 foot square, and it was twitching, spasming and moving like anything. No way was that possibly 'alive' in any sense of the word, and they explained that it was the body chemicals breaking down and still effecting the nerves. This sort of movement is very common after death. The animal is still totally dead though.