Saturday, July 4, 2009

Opinion

Riding Kills Horses, Too

April 10, 2008 05:30 PM ET | Bonnie Erbe | Permanent Link | Print

Corrected on 4/11/08: An earlier version of this article incorrectly identified the location of the event at which two horses died in March. The event was at Red Hills.

While it is nothing short of thrilling that the New York Times placed a story about eventing fatalities on its front page yesterday, it is nothing short of infuriating that the report missed or bypassed a most important point.

Yes, riders are injured all too often on artificially pumped-up courses. Some even die. But equine athletes—the horses themselves—die trying to get through these courses. Unlike human riders, these horses do not knowingly undertake the risks. It is high time we stopped sacrificing horses' lives to massage human egos seeking unnecessarily tougher athletic tests.

I wrote about this two weeks ago in my Scripps Howard Newspapers column. And I should mention that I own seven horses and compete in the hunter ring.

Eventing is a three-phase Olympic sport that tests horse and rider teams in dressage, stadium jumping, and cross-country. At a horse trial in Florida last month, an Olympic rider, Darren Chiacchia, was seriously injured, and two horses were killed trying to complete a course that could easily have been made equally challenging yet less dangerous. Chiacchia's injury, the Times reports, provoked an eruption of online discussion in the eventing community about the excessive difficulty of some course designs.

The dangers posed on cross-country courses come in two forms. First, huge wooden fixed fences that horse/rider teams must jump do not come apart when horses stumble and hit them. Second, horses are sometimes forced to maintain speeds at the gallop that their hearts simply cannot abide. The two horses that died at Red Hills last month both died of heart attacks. This proves the inaccuracy of the common saying "healthy as a horse."

Cross-country is by far not the most dangerous horse sport. We all know Barbaro's sorry tale. Young horses are regularly "euthanized" at the track after breaking legs and sustaining other injuries. Many of these injuries are also easily averted.

Challenging athletes is one thing. Pushing them to inhuman extremes is another. It's time to make eventing and all equine sports safer for the horses, too.

Tags: sports | animal cruelty | animals | horses

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Reader Comments

Horse Sport

There is nothing "cool" about pushing a horse to the brink of exhaustion at any competition. The sorry coach that allowed his/her horse to become dehydrated should have their license/certification taken away for a period of time. All serious eventers should know how to avoid trouble by properly conditioning their horses AHEAD OF TIME and ADJUSTING during competition. Further, is it time for the USEA to step in and disallow eventing competitions (especially these) when the weather temperature reaches a certain sweltering point? After all, would we pull our horses out of a cross country run in the pouring rain with dangerous slippery footing to protect our their legs? Do we not close down jumps with dangerous footing? Why are we not paying attention to the high temperatures we are asking our horses to perform in? Years ago I visited a Stonely Burnham event running in 98 degree weather. I was only watching, walking and taking photos and I was exhausted with a massive headache and sunburn by the end of the day. Riders were soaking their horses under spray hoses before and after the event. Horses are tough buggers but it's simply not fair to ask them to perform for us in unfair conditions. This problem should be addressed.

Horses

Horse back riding is not cruel horses enjoy it

help horses

i wil hery like to stop killing horses and racing ...

i love horses and i will kill the person that kills horses

i will help the pour horse for dieing !!!!!!!!

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About Bonnie Erbe

Bonnie Erbe is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report and hosts PBS's weekly news analysis program, To the Contrary with Bonnie Erbe. She also writes a weekly syndicated newspaper column for Scripps Howard News Service.

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