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  #1  
Old 10-14-2010, 09:45 AM
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Default Responsibility for ex-racehorses

This link was sent to me today. http://www.ksdk.com/news/local/story...provider=email The horse was bred by John Oxley and last trained and owned by Dawn Martin. Who Her Own Storm was turned over to after she was retired to the track is not known, but she eventually was starved and on the way to the slaughterhouse. In addition a few tracks (none of them 'Storm had raced) have taken an anti-slaughter stance. Personally, I would be devastated if a horse I had bred or owned ended up like this horse, but is it the breeders or former owner's responsibility for the rest of the horses' life? Please note that no one involved in this situation has said it is, but this is a topic of discussion in the racing industry and something worth addressing I think.
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Old 10-14-2010, 10:04 AM
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Pretty hilarious that this horse is directly assigned to Secretariat (4th gen), any horse that has Storm Cat in its pedigree is gonna have Secretariat also.

If all states took the responsibility that Pennslyvania does, where funds are collected from each starter and the owner has NO CHOICE but to pay it, it would be a good start.

For example, Philly Park collects on average $750 per racing day ($10 times 75 starters). In October, they will recieve $13,500 in fees towards the retirement program.
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Old 10-14-2010, 10:13 AM
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Pretty hilarious that this horse is directly assigned to Secretariat (4th gen), any horse that has Storm Cat in its pedigree is gonna have Secretariat also.

If all states took the responsibility that Pennslyvania does, where funds are collected from each starter and the owner has NO CHOICE but to pay it, it would be a good start.

For example, Philly Park collects on average $750 per racing day ($10 times 75 starters). In October, they will recieve $13,500 in fees towards the retirement program.
You have to wonder if there would have been so much news about the horse if the movie hadn't come out though. It seems that retired racehorses make much more news when victims of abuse, mainly because I think people can say this horse made x amount of $ on the track and no one took care of it afterwards, also you can use names like Secretariat and Kentucky Derby winner relative etc.. I heard somewhere that less exracehorses end up in slaughter pens than other horse, but I think most people would suspect otherwise because of the image of racing.
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Old 10-14-2010, 10:22 AM
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As proved in other threads my math skills are obviously diminishing, and I am far from an expert on what I am about to say but to me the logical assumption is that thoroughbreds, specific to racing, are the most 'bred' horses in the United States so that would automatically increase the numbers that end up slaughtered.
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Old 10-14-2010, 10:31 AM
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Actually there are more Quarter Horses in the US than any other breed. TB's however are more likely to be related to "famous" horses. Sure, a Dutch Warmblood might be related to Aristos B, but most people have no idea who that is. They do know who Secretariat or even Seattle Slew or Affirmed are. To say a rescue horse once showed at Devon or Upperville means little outside the show world. Most people know of Churchill Downs as the home of the Derby or of saratoga or Belmont or Santa Anita.
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Old 10-14-2010, 10:36 AM
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Actually there are more Quarter Horses in the US than any other breed. TB's however are more likely to be related to "famous" horses. Sure, a Dutch Warmblood might be related to Aristos B, but most people have no idea who that is. They do know who Secretariat or even Seattle Slew or Affirmed are. To say a rescue horse once showed at Devon or Upperville means little outside the show world. Most people know of Churchill Downs as the home of the Derby or of saratoga or Belmont or Santa Anita.
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Old 10-14-2010, 10:47 AM
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Actually there are more Quarter Horses in the US than any other breed. TB's however are more likely to be related to "famous" horses. Sure, a Dutch Warmblood might be related to Aristos B, but most people have no idea who that is. They do know who Secretariat or even Seattle Slew or Affirmed are. To say a rescue horse once showed at Devon or Upperville means little outside the show world. Most people know of Churchill Downs as the home of the Derby or of saratoga or Belmont or Santa Anita.
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  #8  
Old 10-14-2010, 11:08 AM
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The last owner is responsible I would guess.
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  #9  
Old 10-14-2010, 12:42 PM
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I have cared for a few rescued horses in my time as a veterinarian, but none that looked as bad as that mare.

And she does look like her great great granddad, he was and still is my hero.

Great job by some caring people.
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  #10  
Old 10-14-2010, 12:44 PM
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The hoo hah about the filly's tie to Secretariat while understandable, is particularly silly given the prominance of her second dam Gal in a Ruckus, Oxley's upset winner of the 1995 Kentucky Oaks. Gal in a Ruckus beat Urbane in that Oaks, the heavy favorite owned by Jay Em Ess who went on to a notable career as a broodmare producing Suave.
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  #11  
Old 10-14-2010, 07:30 PM
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Originally Posted by Sightseek View Post
You have to wonder if there would have been so much news about the horse if the movie hadn't come out though. It seems that retired racehorses make much more news when victims of abuse, mainly because I think people can say this horse made x amount of $ on the track and no one took care of it afterwards, also you can use names like Secretariat and Kentucky Derby winner relative etc.. I heard somewhere that less exracehorses end up in slaughter pens than other horse, but I think most people would suspect otherwise because of the image of racing.
You really have to look at the slaughter numbers in terms of percentages and not just raw numbers. An estimated 10% of horses headed to slaughter are TBs...or somewhere around 9-10,000 annually...or 30% plus of a single years foal crop. Those are not good statistics.
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Old 10-14-2010, 07:51 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Linny View Post
Actually there are more Quarter Horses in the US than any other breed. TB's however are more likely to be related to "famous" horses. Sure, a Dutch Warmblood might be related to Aristos B, but most people have no idea who that is. They do know who Secretariat or even Seattle Slew or Affirmed are. To say a rescue horse once showed at Devon or Upperville means little outside the show world. Most people know of Churchill Downs as the home of the Derby or of saratoga or Belmont or Santa Anita.
i knew there were more QH's bred each year...which ought to tell you that they are overbreeding as well! that's a lot of horses, just in those two breeds each year.
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Old 10-14-2010, 07:56 PM
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Originally Posted by paisjpq View Post
You really have to look at the slaughter numbers in terms of percentages and not just raw numbers. An estimated 10% of horses headed to slaughter are TBs...or somewhere around 9-10,000 annually...or 30% plus of a single years foal crop. Those are not good statistics.
The catch 22 of this is that when they outlawed slaughter in the US, the horses are simply shipped to places where they can still do it. What that has done, IMO, is put horses at more risk of being inhumanely killed. I remember reading some awful things about a Mexican slaughterhouse using just horrific methods. How an animal is slaughtered should matter as much as the fact that it is slaughtered to begin with.
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Old 10-14-2010, 08:57 PM
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The banning of slaughter means that horses that might have been slaughtered "locally" now suffer for days and weeks before meeting their end. It also means more cases of abandonment, especially in such hard economic times. Honestly (I'm zipping my flame suit) if there was a slaughterhouse in every county and it was quick and didn't drag the horses into weeks of terror in pens and trucks I'd rather be ale to lead ol' Dobbin down there are get a couple of bucks rather than paying for euthanasia and disposal. The difference between getting $200 for meat value vs paying $750 is almost $1000. If I'm struggling enough that I am contemplating disposing of my horses, that is significant.
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Old 10-15-2010, 12:41 AM
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The banning of slaughter means that horses that might have been slaughtered "locally" now suffer for days and weeks before meeting their end. It also means more cases of abandonment, especially in such hard economic times. Honestly (I'm zipping my flame suit) if there was a slaughterhouse in every county and it was quick and didn't drag the horses into weeks of terror in pens and trucks I'd rather be ale to lead ol' Dobbin down there are get a couple of bucks rather than paying for euthanasia and disposal. The difference between getting $200 for meat value vs paying $750 is almost $1000. If I'm struggling enough that I am contemplating disposing of my horses, that is significant.
Being that there were but few equine slaughterhouses in the US prior to 2007--most notably the big three-- Beltex in Ft. Worth, TX, Cavel in DeKalb, IL, and Dallas Crown in Kaufman TX, if you weren't close to any of these you could not lead ol' Dobbin down there ...

For most, there was no such thing as " local " slaughter, and the horses still shipped and suffered before meeting their end right here, unless you were within close proximity to the big three .

There will never be a slaughterhouse in every county --as they incur huge pollution problems and lower the value of property, so perhaps horse owners as yourself should learn how to use a gun.

US slaughter was never properly regulated, and if per chance it does come back, it won't be again .The captive bolt method which has a 10 percent allowable vivisection error , and the ramps designed for cattle will be used again.

Nice end for ol' Dobbin ...

In Europe, the horse is not run into a killbox reeking of feces and blood and the captive bolt is not used . In many abbatoirs there, the methods are clinical, quick, and much less stressful than it ever was here .

There the horses are individually led into a clean area and dispatched with a bellgun--no richocheting bullets and no long nail is driven into the skull haphazardly .

The bellgun was used to euthanise horses at major tracks in the US for years ...

But we did not do that here with our mania for speed and mass production .

Nothing clinical, clean , or humane about US slaughter --travel non withstanding.

The Mexican slaughterhouses use the same captive bolt as we do but for ONE slaughterhouse in Juarez,where the puntilla knife was used --no different than the head honcho at Cavell who was known to cut horses throats that came out of the killbox unstunned .

US methods were based on bovine slaughter--ignoring the equine instincts and cranial structures .

Where do you live that it costs $750 to euthanise and dispose of a horse ??

In the New England area, a vet farm call may be 75 dollars plus the cost of the injection . I have heard of people paying under 200 for this service and 50 to 200 for a backhoe, etc .

And many boarding stables will bury a boarder's horse for nothing .

No need for a flamesuit for an ice cube that would rather slaughter a horse for its flesh and 200 bucks, than pay for euth and disposal after it served you.

And PS--that abandoned horse stuff is largely pro-slaughter rhetoric--ditto the starving in a field stuff as well .
With or without slaughter , there were always irresponsible and cavalier horse owners that did exactly this .

Talk is cheap, and so are a lot of people .
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Old 10-15-2010, 10:13 AM
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Originally Posted by paisjpq View Post
You really have to look at the slaughter numbers in terms of percentages and not just raw numbers. An estimated 10% of horses headed to slaughter are TBs...or somewhere around 9-10,000 annually...or 30% plus of a single years foal crop. Those are not good statistics.
100,000 horses are slaughtered every year?

People are that irresponsible to keep breeding their horses like that? Pathetic.
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Old 10-15-2010, 10:20 AM
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I have paid plenty for euth for horses bound for slaughter at the hands of others. I have never and would never send my horses to a killer.

My main point echoes yours, Prudery. If slaughter were more humane and and "local" rather than a process that involved shipping under horrifying conditions, meaning it suffers terribly over weeks before the end, it would be a decent alternative to abandonment and starvation.
I am in favor of harsh penalties for anyone who takes a horse under false pretenses ("He's going to a nice home" or "he'll be retrained as a little kids horse") knowing full well that they intend to send a horse to a killer, but I can see why for some people it is what they "have to do.
Many people in this economy are struggling to feed their families and cannot afford proper disposal of a horse they can no longer pay for but cannot even give away because everyone else is struggling. They would rather take meat price, IF they knew that the horse would be quickly and humanely dispatched.

In rural areas with lots of land, disposal is less expensive. In more urban environments (near NYC, LA etc) it costs more because you can't just bury a horse in the yard under the old oak tree.
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Old 10-15-2010, 10:31 AM
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Originally Posted by Linny View Post
I have paid plenty for euth for horses bound for slaughter at the hands of others. I have never and would never send my horses to a killer.

My main point echoes yours, Prudery. If slaughter were more humane and and "local" rather than a process that involved shipping under horrifying conditions, meaning it suffers terribly over weeks before the end, it would be a decent alternative to abandonment and starvation.
I am in favor of harsh penalties for anyone who takes a horse under false pretenses ("He's going to a nice home" or "he'll be retrained as a little kids horse") knowing full well that they intend to send a horse to a killer, but I can see why for some people it is what they "have to do.
Many people in this economy are struggling to feed their families and cannot afford proper disposal of a horse they can no longer pay for but cannot even give away because everyone else is struggling. They would rather take meat price, IF they knew that the horse would be quickly and humanely dispatched.

In rural areas with lots of land, disposal is less expensive. In more urban environments (near NYC, LA etc) it costs more because you can't just bury a horse in the yard under the old oak tree.
How much is plenty to pay for euth and disposal ???

And I am not in a rural area ...

I get what you are saying, but if slaughter paid nothing-- would you or others chose it ?

People forget that horses are a luxury and cost a lot of money .

Have you checked vet fees for smalll animals as well .

The biggest problem is overbreeding of all the popular breeds .

Next is poor training--which makes a horses not worth much in utlity.

And of course, irresponsible horse husbandry, and people owning horses that can not afford them, and should not have them .

And I never condoned " more humane " slaughter as an option for me--because we will never have it, and it IS all about the money on both ends ..
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Old 10-15-2010, 11:30 AM
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Well stated Prudery .
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