The situation in Australia just got worse

S_N

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Copied and pasted from the Blood Horse website.

"If everything you have read about the equine influenza problem in Australia has seemed bad news…then it just got worse.

Three high-priced yearlings residing at Darley, in the New South Wales Hunter Valley, have been confirmed to have contracted equine influenza (EI). The rest of the Thoroughbred population on the expansive farm is now under threat.

Darley’s Australian general manager Oliver Tait said, “EI is spreading quickly, and we were not surprised when a small number of our yearlings began to display clinical signs of the virus. We contacted the DPI immediately and their tests confirmed that it has reached our property.”

Darley has a large farm in the heart of the Hunter Valley. It is just down the road from Segenhoe Stud, which had a teaser pony test positive over the weekend. Surrounding Darley are major farms including Vinery, Alanbridge, Brooklyn and Kia Ora, each of which house hundreds of broodmares and foals.

Darley has been restricting the movement of people and horses on and off the property since Aug. 26, in addition to strictly adhering to bio-security protocols.

"It is apparent that the virus is airborne, as our New South Wales property has been in lockdown for two weeks," said Tait. "We have continually been seeking advice from leading epidemiologists in the UK and USA since the outbreak of EI in Australia, and their advice to us is that vaccination is unequivocally the only way forward. Containment efforts have probably assisted in slowing the spread of the virus, but it is clear that they have not stopped it.

"Surely now we must focus on a vaccination strategy rather than a restriction of movement in order to stop the spread of EI into other parts of Australia. We have a stud in Victoria and I naturally have concerns it will, in time, also become a victim of EI.”

Tait isn't the only one concerned about the spread. Leading Randwick trainer John O'Shea said containment had failed and it is time to vaccinate. "This will spread out to Rosehill and Warwick Farm very soon and unless we vaccinate right now, racing will stop there and the foals in the Hunter will be wiped out."

The DPI is still resisting vaccination, which will cost approximately $200 per horse."
 
I'm being thick here - as you know I am! - but are horses over there not, as a routine, flu jabbed or is this a new strain of flu which the basic flu/tet jab doesn't touch? Because otherwise, why would it cost so much to vaccinate?
Looks like you're going to be on that yard a lot longer than you thought!
 
They don't have Flu AT ALL in Australia!!!!! Or at least they didn't
crazy.gif
That is why their quarantine laws are so stringent!!!! From the UK it's 3 weeks over here and 2 weeks over there. So no, they don't vaccinate over there, unless the horse is travelling internationally. The horses over there, therefore don't even have a semblance of a built in immunity to it - I wonder what this will do to the Brumbies................
 
Gotcha! I still can't understand the mentality of places like Darley though. Their horses are more likely to travel internationally anyway, why don't they vaccinate as a norm, they can certainly afford it? My horses aren't likely to travel far from here, if at all, until they are sold but for my own peace of mind I have their courses started before they are weaned, it just seems the sensible thing to do. I know you say Australia doesn't/didn't have flu anyway but when you get grooms/owners/riders/trainers, travelling so widely now, it just seems the logical thing to have done.
 
what is $200 australian in UK £s ?

It looks to be an awfully high cost for a vaccine that is 'routine' over here

Is there a 'rip off' going on somewhere to make the vaccine that high a cost ?
 
[ QUOTE ]
what is $200 australian in UK £s ?

It looks to be an awfully high cost for a vaccine that is 'routine' over here

Is there a 'rip off' going on somewhere to make the vaccine that high a cost ?

[/ QUOTE ]

I think they mean to start each horse on the course - so the cost of the first 3 vaccines maybe?
 
Their horses dont race in the UK then, because they wont allow them on the course without valid vacs. I remember taking the PBA to AHS show when held at Ascot & were told not to forget the flu card because we would not be allowed entry without it, & it being up to date.
 
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Their horses dont race in the UK then, because they wont allow them on the course without valid vacs. I remember taking the PBA to AHS show when held at Ascot & were told not to forget the flu card because we would not be allowed entry without it, & it being up to date.

[/ QUOTE ]

Yes they do!!! Look at Choisir!!! Their competition/racehorses are vaccinated if they travel outside of the country.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/other_sports/horse_racing/3004046.stm
 
Hi there, just thought I'd pop in as I am in New Zealand, so kind of close to the action as it were! New Zealand doesn't have EI at the moment.

The reason that they are not vaccinating (and neither are we) is because the vaccine is a live virus so you run the risk of actually passing the disease on to other unvaccinated horses. They also do not have a huge stock of vaccinations as the virus changes and they have to produce a stock of vaccinatons for the particular virus that year. As vaccinatons are not routine it will take some time to produce enough stock.

They will not let me vaccinate my horses against EI because of this, even though 3 of them are from the UK and have a full vaccination history prior to arriving in New Zealand. I do believe, however, that you are able to vaccinate when they are in quarantine due to the quarantine time (its now 3 weeks UK, 3 weeks NZ if you are coming over here) and you can vaccinate if you are prepared to quarantine your horses. It was also compulsory for my horses from the UK to have a full EI vaccination history prior to me bringing them over here.

As far as I am aware, the EI virus in Australia is no more aggressive than any others, its just they are used to being EI free and it has been a bit of a shock to the whole industry.
 
We didn't vaccinated as it has never been here before. A fit racehorse has died as has an elderly pleasure horse. To date i don't think any foals have died.

It has come at the WORST possible time as it is breeding season at the moment.

No mares can go to stud so they have to foal down on the property that they are currently on. Many of which are not equipped for foaling.

My horses do not currently have EI but it is now only a matter of time as EI is in my local area.
 
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