Thoroughbred Racing and Unwanted Horses Rescue
86
The Thoroughbred horse racing industry in America is well aware of inherent issues revolving around the care and health of its participants, thousand pound animals taught to race against one another and to dig deep for victory. The Sport of Kings has been around for centuries, and the problem in the United States of unwanted horses, free and wild creatures who roam the West and those who toil on the race tracks, is not new.
But new awareness in recent years of the existence of outrageous numbers of unwanted horses and possibly of avoidable race track breakdowns is changing horse racing and how America deals with its unwanted horses.
New Foals Each Year
In Thoroughbred horse racing, over 30,000 foals are born and registered for racing each year.
Just one each year, at the age of three, will win America's most prestigious horse race, the Kentucky Derby. Only 20 from each yearly crop will become eligible to enter the Derby gate.
In 2008, when the phenomenal Big Brown had racing horsemen talking in controversy from East to West, a filly named Eight Belles was one of the 20 Derby entries, along with Big Brown. The filly menaced Big Brown to the wire, finishing second to the phenom, then collapsed in a heap with two broken legs as she galloped out past the finish line.
The breakdown was a horrific reminder that Thoroughbred race horses give their all most of the time on the track, only a heralded few enter the record books, many do not survive following a mediocre racing career, and some, like Eight Belles, create a furor of reaction that seems almost destiny-like. Eight Belles' necessary euthanasia on the track on Kentucky Derby day at Churchill Downs was a crowd event of tears and shock.
It followed the breakdown of Barbaro in 2006's Preakness Stakes, the second of the three Triple Crown races. Brave Barbaro shattered his right hind leg in a simple, unfortunate misstep, was temporarily casted as millions watched and prayed, and then ambulanced to a Pennsylvania equine hospital, where he succumbed eight months later to laminitis, a painful inflammatory disease of the hoof.
Laminitis is a terribly drawn out and agonizingly painful condition for which there is no cure. It cut short the life of Secretariat in 1989, as well as Barbaro and many other horses which suffer from the disease usually out of lack of exercise and excessive time limited to a stall.
Is the Thoroughbred Industry Doing Enough?
The first step to a cure for anything is awareness of the problem.
The filly Ruffian's horrific breakdown in 1976 in her much publicized match race with boy counterpart and Kentucky Derby champion Foolish Pleasure for the most part came and went as one of those difficult things that occur in Thoroughbred racing.
Barbaro's breakdown and struggle against laminitis brought unprecedented public awareness to race track breakdowns and the conditions under which race horses perform. Eight Belles' death in the Kentucky Derby dirt increased the cries of awareness to a fever pitch.
Those cries of raised awareness resulted in the Thoroughbred industry's June 16, 2009 American Horse Council National Issues Forum concentrating their discussions on "The Welfare of the Horse".
At the forum Dr. Tom Lenz, chairman of the Unwanted Horse Coalition, presented somewhat discouraging figures, including these:
- 80,000 to 150,000 equines annually join the unwanted list
- 432 US horse rescue agencies can house just 40 residents apiece
- 18,000 horses are rescued evey year but just half of them find adoptive homes
- $18.6 Million annually would be needed to euthanize unwanted equines
- $234 Million annually would be required to house unwanted horses
- $15,000 is an average cost per year for an individual to properly house a horse
Dr. Lenz's figures were recited as statistics resulting from a public survey of horse awareness taken from November, 2008 to January, 2009. The survey asked questions of over 23,000 individuals in relation to the problem of unwanted horses, and the results were published in the October, 2009 issue of Horse Illustrated.
Synthetic Surfaces and Studies
The jury is still out on whether synthetic race tracks have or will cut down on the number of race day breakdowns. Does the synthetic surface, which in texture simulates turf, equal a safer running condition for the Thoroughbred?
European flat racing takes place exclusively on turf, a fact which causes Euro trainers and owners to think twice before shipping their stars to America to participate in the fall Breeders' Cup World Championships. Twice recently, the Breeders' Cup races, which do feature some turf races, were held at Santa Anita's new synthetic track. This season, primarily because of water drainage problems, Santa Anita officials voted to rip up the synthetics and return to dirt racing.
Turf racing has been part of the American racing scene in its own right, but the dirt races are where the mammoth stars are born and mostly perform.
In Europe's July 23, 2011 George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes (Eng-G1), a 1-1/2 miles turf event, Godolphin Racing's Rewilding snapped a cannon bone in front of the viewing grandstand while he was gamely rallying toward the race leaders. The race is a "Win and You're In" event of eligibility to the American Breeders' Cup World Championships Turf race scheduled in 2011 for November 5, the second day of the two-day festival.
Studies on Thoroughbred racing conditions such as synthetic surface safety, retraining retired race horses to other jobs, rescue of unwanted Thoroughbred and general horses, and causes of race day fractures continue under scrutiny by the industry and veterinarians nation-wide.
Veterinarian Dr. Wayne McIlwraith of Colorado State University's Gail Holmes Equine Orthopedic Research Center undertook studies of pre-existing fractures through blood biomarkers research that can indicate microdamage in horse's bones that may later lead to a catastrophic injury. Individual tests, albeit expensive, can be done, Dr. McIlwraith's research reported, to determine if a horse is in danger of suffering future fractures.
Dr. McIlwraith's findings were reported in the September 6, 2008 issue of Blood-Horse magazine.
The 2011 season's hot topic in American horse racing has been whether or not to completely ban race day drugs, including Salix (Lasix), which helps reduce pulmonary hemorrhage caused by excessive exercise. Europeans do not allow any type of drugs in their horse racing society.
Horse Rescue Work Goes On
Some horsemen have taken up the cause of unwanted Thoroughbred racehorses after discovering the truth about Ferdinand (1986 Kentucky Derby winner) and Exceller. Ferdinand was slaughtered in Japan, and Exceller's life ended in a Sweden slaughterhouse. Foreign-owned slaughterhouses in the United States have been closed for several years. Americans don't eat horses, but foreign countries do, and the cruel endings go on in Canada and New Mexico and elsewhere.
The Colorado Horse Rescue group and the Kentucky Equine Humane Center are examples of agencies nationwide in America that continue the difficult task of rescuing and homing unwanted horses. Rescue agencies are budget poor and have thousands of equine companions available for adoption.
In the October 2, 2010 issue of Blood-Horse magazine, Susan Hayden Kennedy wrote "A Horse For My Kingdom" for the column "Final Turn". Kennedy said horses in rescue facilities around the country continue to wait for help.
Kennedy states these horses' needs almost poetically: "Their heads are high; their ears, alert. If you listen, you can hear them ask: 'What happens next? I'm awaiting my (new) assignment'".
- The Horse | Horses FREE to a Good Home: Thoroughbred
Thoroughbred adoption and searches for breeds to rescue are pinpointed.
- Bengal Tigers face extinction
Discover the Bengal Tigers' plight.
- The Ugly Truth About Unwanted Horses
More on what happens to unwanted horses, even retired racehorses.
- College Students Devote their Spring Break to Caring for Abused Farm Animals
Learn how college students are helping to break the chain of abuse suffered by many farm animals.
vote upvote downshareprintflag
- Useful (10)
- Funny
- Awesome (7)
- Beautiful
- Interesting (12)
CommentsLoading...
My daughter's dream is to work with ex-racehorses. She is well on her way to achieving her dream. She loves all horses but Thoroughbreds have a special place in her heart. She had one of her own which sadly had to be put down just over a year ago but it has made her all the more determined to work within the industry and make a difference. This is a very informative and thoughtful hub. Many thanks for sharing!! : )
Amazing hub.
Its a useful hub.
Congrats on getting "Hub of the Day"! Rock on, you're only here for a short time and made the front page. :) Wonderful hub, by the way. The information is more than useful and the pictures are truly magical. Voted up and awesome.
I wish I could take in more horses.. I owned a standardbred named Tampton Jase, I called him TJ , he was awsome. I also owned an arab who was given to my daughter and the last horse I owned was a retired thoroughbred who my daughter is showing successfully. If I had the money I would get more but don't have it. It is a shame with this economy. I feel so bad and long for it again, but financially I just can't do it. I'm glad you wrote this hub. I wish things were different for these beautiful animals.
Congratulations on being the Hub of the day! I love horses, they are beautiful and majestic animals. I'm so glad you shared this to make other people aware of this problem. I have grown up around horses my entire life, and my heart has a soft spot for them.
Great hub! Congrats on hub of the day... it is well deserved. Growing up, my neighbor had one of these ex-race horses... she was perfectly normal until you put a saddle on her. Then she would start to tremble and it was all you could do to keep her from bolting. So ingrained was the desire to run. She would rear up and go over backwards if you waited too long.... take the saddle off and she went back to normal... it was a sad existence. Instead of riding her we would let her follow without bridle or saddle... otherwise you took your life in your hands.
Congratulations on receiving Hub of the Day! I had no idea what kind of life it is for thoroughbred race horses. It is very sad what is happening. Very well written hub!
They are beautiful animals. I was sad to learn of their fates.
Awesome hub! It breaks my heart to see any animal live its life unwanted. I've had horses my whole life until now and as soon as I get a place that will allow it, I plan to go to rescue for my next horse!
Congratulations on being chosen hub of the day. I've never watched a horse race, although I've seen movies with horse races in them. It has never interested me. There is a similar type of program for ex-racing greyhounds. we have plenty of horses where I live. They are majestic.
We have two adoptees in my family. Little Star and Touching Fire. My sister adopted them because she loved them, and it's so difficult for many of us to not love a horse. Both are rescue horses, though not thoroughbreds. Little Star is an Arabian, and Touching Fire a quarter horse, who is great at working with children. My family, being from Kentucky, and growing up on a small horse farm, we're very familiar with the thoroughbred breed. My thanks to you for sharing the information in the article! Much appreciated! Best wishes to your continued equine endeavors and God bless you for the hard work! If I had the finances and the space, I'd adopt every unwanted horse I could find, and consider myself exceedingly blessed. God went all out majestic when He created this wonderful animal!
Very informative hub. Congratulation for the hub of the day. Thanks for sharing.
Liked this hub about horses a lot. Horses truly are beautiful creatures! Glad to know they are being rescued. Good job! And congrats!
I'm glad this hub was awarded the accolade of "Hub of the Day," as it helps bring more readers to this well documented hub. I had no idea of the numbers of thoroughbred race horses that are subsequently deemed unwanted. Thanks for calling attention to this hearbreaking problem.
nice hub indeed..
Barbsbitsnpieces...well, I'll tell you right off the bat...I don't support horse racing of this magnitude...just like racing grayhounds...it is cruel, unusual punishment for the animals. And when they are no longer useful; no longer producing that big purse...no longer making $...they are regarded as a burden and...well, you've told the tale here in this excellent hub.
To end a thoroughbred's life by shipping that animal off to a foreign country to be slaughtered is insult upon injury...a tragedy beyond comprehension. And the rescue groups who try so hard are overwhelmed w/the #'s needing to be saved.
Just like circus animals and other animals used in "acts" for our entertainment..that, to me, is just what the big money horse racing and greyhound racing industry is....big money at animals' expense.
It is unnatural, as proven by the # of weakened, brittle, splintered, fractured and broken bones; to run an animal as is done in professional horse racing. To me, it matters not, whether synthetic or natural surfaces are used...the "sport" itself is detrimental to the horse. Period.
Well, I've said enough....I am going to link this hub to a recent one I wrote (published today) in order to further the awareness and knowledge of others. i hope you don't mind.
Thank you for a great study...and informational hub.
UP Useful
Congratulations on hub of the day.
I've loved horses all my life, they are wonderful animals,we must do all we can for them.
Thank you for a well written informative hub.
Wonderful work. Animals are wonderful too, and should have proper care, or simply do not use them for our benefit. God Bless You.
Congratulations of your Hub of the Day award! Great job!
This is indeed a sad situation of which I have been at least marginally aware for years. I don't follow horse racing, and am against it on general principles, but you point out painful details that much need to be shared for change to occur!
Thanks for writing this informative and important hub!
After coming back and seeing Lucky Cats' comment, it occured to me that I have an older hub about animal rights, and a link to this hub would be in order there, as well, if you don't mind.
I sure don't have the income level to own and care for a horse, but they are gorgeous, graceful animals that I love. If I can do anything to help them, it is only by attempting to educate, that, at least, is free.
Are you talking about...The Colorado Horse Rescue I think your talking about? (CHR) I love them! On of my horses is from there and we donate often! They are such great people, and have a great facility. Amazing Hub! Very Informative and detailed.
Good job with this hub! I am new to hubbing but not new to the probems plaguing the equine industry. Sadly the unwanted horse is a mounting problem in the minds of those in the equine veterinary industry.
Fascinating and disturbing information - we don't hear this side of what can otherwise be an exhilarating sport - watching champions win big races.
thinking more about the issues ...I don't want to enter into controversy but would it be also true to say we eat hamburgers and cows(or other animals for that matter) don't seem to hold the same affection? Would there be more 'unwanted cows' - do we single out certain animals as more deserving? - why? questions questions
Great hub, Barbara...UP and definitely awesome! Our animal friends can't really defend themselves in this life... so humans who care must step in and take some responsibility.
Voting up and sharing this. Oh, this was absolutely heartwrenching to read. I'm so glad you mentioned some rescue organizations. Thank you for this article. I'll be sharing it with friends in the U.S. also.
Congratulations on your HOTD award. Thanks for raising more awareness about what happens to these majestic animals when they do not win money for their owners. Many people who watch horse raising and like the thrill of it may not be aware of what happens behind the scenes. The same for greyhound racing as several people have already mentioned. Voted up and useful.


























Offtrackmtb 9 months ago
These are lovely animals, and as the economy continues to stall more and more equines of every breed are finding themselves in bad circumstances. Thank you for drawing attention to their situation