fburton
Well-Known Member
Hmm, so you think I'd just get abuse if I were to approach him? Great!Yes Fburton I think you should give Ruby a call. I'm sure he'd delighted to hear your point of view!!
Hmm, so you think I'd just get abuse if I were to approach him? Great!Yes Fburton I think you should give Ruby a call. I'm sure he'd delighted to hear your point of view!!
Hmm, so you think I'd just get abuse if I were to approach him? Great!Actually, I'm more interested in finding answers which I don't seem to be able to do here (for some reason), than putting any point of view. FWIW, I think the new rules are arbitrary and unhelpful - as I have said before.
Of course - I didn't for a moment think of phoning, tbh. Emailing or even *gasp* good old fashioned letter writing (yes, I still do that occasionally!).No, I'd suggest emailing him to ask his views. I didn't for a moment suggest you phoned. Common courtesy would dictate a polite approach.
Of course - I didn't for a moment think of phoning, tbh. Emailing or even *gasp* good old fashioned letter writing (yes, I still do that occasionally!).
And would likely consider most things arriving in envelopes to be bad news (e.g. bills)...I think an email might be better, jockeys are rarely home!![]()
I am prepared to discover they really do cause no pain - although that would still leave the burning (for me) question of how then their use could be considered excessive by any reasonable person, which has led us to where we are now. Why put a limit on mere "encouragement" in the the first place??
Ok - on a slight tangent - a trainer teaching piaffe from the ground uses a whip on the lower limb to encourage the horse to step more. It's not painful per se, but the horse responds. If used correctly there is no issue. If used excessively and too frequently there is.
A schooling whip helps teach a horse to move away from the leg, but using it every stride would be excessive and confusing for the horse.
Spurs used correctly are not wrong, spurs used excessively are.
None of the above three cause pain, unless abused.
But surely this is the point of reducing the number of times the horse can be "encouraged" along. When you have situations where the Jockey is whipping the horse home (i know the whips are padded etc but it does have the effect of pushing the horse beyond its physical limits) surely it is better for the animal (and the not so experienced race watcher) to have limits set in place that all are aware of?
For those of you talking about China's welfare rights -
Did you actually read the article, or did you not get past the words in the paper title?
The whole point is that the whip ban furore is NOT about welfare or animals being compromised, it's about the ridiculousness of the penalties and the way they have been applied.
An example of how the whip rules stand at the moment - if Ruby Walsh has an extra strike of his whip in the heat of the moment, he's going to lose work for another ten days. So for two extra taps with a whip - and that is what they are now, he cannot work for more than half a month?
Regardless of your opinion on the whip, this is about ridiculous penalties.
Yes but the UK is now such an urban society, full of people who in the main have no idea how to handle an animal. That doesn't stop them trying to impose their views on animal handling on those who work with them, its probably down to some kind of guilt based on living entirely artificial lives, so they think by imposing their fluffy bunny rabbit ideas on those who deal with animals on a day to day basis excuses their own lack of knowledge.
The merits of the debates and its actual consequences are secondary to the vast majority of the British public, living in their little concrete boxes in urban housing estates.
Indeed - but the sensible limit, IMHO, is already reached. And the punishment for one strike over, is ridiculous, and not welfare.
Are "normal" i.e. non-padded whips allowed in training? Presumably they are because it would be impossible to enforce otherwise. Assuming they are allowed, how common is it for them to be used? Thanks.
Are "normal" i.e. non-padded whips allowed in training? Presumably they are because it would be impossible to enforce otherwise. Assuming they are allowed, how common is it for them to be used? Thanks.
I know a horse not a hundred yards from here who is no longer racing, thank god, because, in his last trainer's own words "he'd lost the heart for racing and being flogged to the line". I know where I stand!
I think the point is that some horses don't give their all. It is those that need to be beaten - oops, sorry - encouraged. Unless you don't accept that the "lazy" ones deserve to win too if they are athletically capable, selective whipping plays an essential role in racing.And that is my issue with over use of the whip. The horse is giving its all - it doesn't need to be beaten to give more.![]()
but I see the new rules on the use of whips as good for the sport......