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Horse Lovers Must Read
Leigh Anne O'Kelley

Posted on 12/30/2003 4:37:20 AM PST by rooster1

An Education in the Unthinkable

Driving up in the afternoon I watch the horses graze carefree in the pasture. Once a naive horse owner I am now all too aware of the horrors of the slaughter industry in the US. There are two horse slaughter plants operating in the US currently, both in Texas and named Bel-Tex and Dallas Crown.

With both plants so far from South Carolina, it seems unlikely to most horse owners and lovers that we would have a problem with our beloved horses ending up at a plant, but it is not far fetched. How many of us, I included, have stopped by an auction house and looked through the horses awaiting their turn at sale? Never staying to buy, but just seeing what was there. On any given night there are "kill buyers", those who go to buy the cheap, the old, the underweight for very little money. Like cattle they will stay in feedlots and be fattened up and then make the trip to Texas.

Horror stories about the trucking companies have led to some minor changes but still no victories for the horses. Sometimes hauled for several days, they are denied water, are crowded with mixed sexes. Mares, foals and stallions all fight for room. Some horses never make the trip and are trampled to death on the trip or suffer injuries for which they will receive no care.

Breed, size, color, or tempermant mean nothing to the slaughter house buyer. Once faithful friends of someone, wild horses who slipped through the cracks, unwanted, or stolen horses all await the same fate. Undercover footage has shown the brutal process of butchering for meat. Horses struggle in the chute where a captive bolt gun is applied to their head. It is supposed to insert a bolt to split the animals skull rendering it unconscious before it is strung up and it's throat split. Imagine the horror in the horse's mind as he hears the others, and scrambles on blood soaked floors trying to escape the inevitable. Undercover investigations have caught on tape horses being strung up fully alert, and being cut open before being dead.

Horses in the US played such a valuable part of our country's birth. We built roads, cleared forests, carried mail, battled for freedom, created towns and plowed fields for food all with the horse. As Americans we do not dine on our equine friends. Most people are appalled at the idea. Yet, we kill our horses to feed the Japanese, French, and other European and Asian nations.

Even famous horses are not spared. A Blood Horse reporter uncovered that beloved Ferdinand, a Derby Winner, was "disposed" of in a Japanese slaughterplant after he failed to be a productive stud. Racehorses are so full of heart and determination. They are used and abused, they make men rich, they offer the chance for the socially elite to show off their best, and yet the reward they receive is put out or be rid of.

The demise of the 1986 Kentucky Derby (gr. I) winner and 1987 Horse of the Year signaled an end to whatever innocence may have remained in the Thoroughbred business. While it is easy to point fingers at the Japanese culture that holds monetary issues above emotional ones, the story of Ferdinand also ends the era when North American interests can sell bloodstock without taking responsibility for the ultimate disposition of the animals they've brought into this world. While it numbs the brain that Ferdinand was passed from farm to farm and agent to agent throughout Japan with nobody thinking to contact people in the United States who'd bring him back home, it is also mind-boggling that nobody here inquired into what happens to stallions who have outlived their breeding usefulness overseas.

Ferdinand's story became a big news story thanks to the extensive and meticulous reporting by Barbara Bayer, who spent several months tracking the path of shame that marked Ferdinand's last days. After The Blood-Horse broke the story in late July, other industry publications attempted to discredit Bayer, The Blood-Horse's Japan correspondent, as a "freelancer." They said she lacked proof, that the timing was wrong for this type of story (as if there's ever a right time), and that the horse's fate was uncertain. They were wrong on all counts.

Bayer, through her intimate knowledge of Japanese culture, got it exactly right. She knew just what it meant when she was told Ferdinand had been "disposed of." In fact, he had been killed late in 2002, the victim of two societies all too willing to rid themselves of what is no longer money-producing.

After failing to make the desired impact as a stallion at Claiborne Farm (also his birthplace) near Paris, Ky., Ferdinand was sold and arrived at Arrow Stud in Japan in 1995 with high expectations. His covers, which peaked at 77 in his initial year, plummeted in subsequent seasons. By 2000, his final season at Arrow, he covered 10 mares. He moved to a smaller operation, Goshima Farm, where he covered six mares in 2001 and two in 2002. Then he passed into the hands of a dealer, whose job it is to get whatever he can for unwanted bloodstock.

That dealer initially lied to Bayer several times when she inquired as to Ferdinand's whereabouts. The story evolved from "he'd been given to a friend" to "he's at a riding club far away from here" to, finally, "he isn't around anymore. He was disposed of."

Thank God their are agencies in place trying every day to save horses from this fate. From lobbying to letter writing. Those in the "trenches" daily buying horses from kill buyers, establishing retirement options and racehorse retirement. And there is more.... there is you reading this article. Please call, fax or write your US Congressman and urge them to cosponsor the American Horse Slaughter Prevention Act (HR 857). Let them know how recent efforts to legalize horse slaughter in Texas met with overwhelming opposition from the public. Tell them about the survey conducted last month that showed that 72% of Texans oppose horse slaughter.

HR 857 prohibits the transport of horses across state lines and international borders for the purpose of slaughter and also prohibits the sale or transport of horsemeat for human consumption. If passed, HR 857 will put an end once and for all to the slaughter of American horses both in the U.S. and in foreign countries.

Next time you drive by a field of horses, think if that one will be there tomorrow. WIll he be there ten years from now, or will he be in the stomach of a man far, far away. Our horses deserve better, we do not slaughter our dogs and cats in this way to feed other countries. We value their lives and care for them and at the right time humanely euthanize them. We have shelters in place to care for those who need help and who can over see a humane end if need be. Blood money is what prevents the horse from having the same basic rights. The strong and beautiful horse who America owes so much too, dies today to line the pockets of a few greedy individuals who see them only as a money making business for countries overseas. Don't you think it is time to put an end to this horror? How many more will have to die? I will go kiss my horses tonight and whisper a prayer for the others who won't be getting the love and care I shower upon mine. It is time now for us to take a stand and speak for those who cannot.

Leigh Anne O'Kelley

www.rescuewishes.com

www.rescuewishes.com/allanimals


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: animalrights
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To: rooster1
You should be proud. Thanks, tell your daughter I really appreciate her article.
21 posted on 12/30/2003 5:58:08 AM PST by mel
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To: Dudoight
I have a pony who is very fearful, and I have after a couple years convinced her that I am not trying to kill her. I would seek the advice of a trainer who ~is~ experienced with working with horses with such a background.

Or it is possible also that she has just never been caught or trained much.... At three, she may be a baby that no one ever had time to deal with.

With an Arab it would be good to wait another year on her anyhow for riding, but try to get some help in getting her halter broke and catchable. No matter what she knew before you are starting over. Pretend she knows nothing. There is much she needs to know that you can teach her before she is trained to ride.

Not knowing your experience level, I don't know if you can do this alone or should hire a trainer to help, both at this stage, and later for the next steps. Know that she can hurt you if you make a mistake.
22 posted on 12/30/2003 6:04:46 AM PST by HairOfTheDog
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To: rooster1
The French eat horses -dont they
23 posted on 12/30/2003 6:06:17 AM PST by joesnuffy (Moderate Islam Is For Dilettantes)
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To: Dudoight
One thing I did, in the round pen with the two stallions (one at a time) was sit down on the ground with a bowl of golden grain in front of me. I made sure to sit so that the horse was to the side, and I never looked directly at him. I just sat still while he approached me, sniffed me. He left, came back several times, and at last he ate the grain.

I did exactly the same thing several days in a row, then put my hand in the feed and let him eat it off my hand.

After several more days, I held one hand up a few inches, and touched the horse's head on the side, briefly and gently. At first he shied away, then came back. After that, I always touched him while he was eating--he didn't get the grain unless I was touching him. All the time, I'm sitting down on the ground.

After that, I brought a halter and laid it on top of the bowl of grain. Again, he was shy, but he didn't get the grain unless he reached his nose through the open halter. When he was comfortable with that, I rubbed the halter on his face while he was eating.

One day, I just fastened it. He didn't even get nervous, by then, although he looked at me suspiciously.

After he was wearing the halter all the time, and eating grain from the pan, I brought a long shoestring from one of my son's tennies. After he got used to it, I tied it to the halter, let it hang.

In the next few days, I got up with grain in my hand, took hold of the string, and started to walk away. He followed me.

Thereafter, I could lead him around with a shoestring on a halter.

Then, I brought a saddle blanket and put it on the ground beside me. After he got used to seeing it, I put it on my shoulder while I was petting him. After he got used to that, I used the blanket to rub him. Then I put it on his back.

See...incremental teaching. One stallion took to it, the other didn't. The vet recommended gelding, to reduce the nervousness. It worked with one, not the other. The second one, that I couldn't tame, was explosive, although except for biting me, never hurt me. If you touched the second one, his skin jumped and he could never hold still. We drugged him, hoping it would reduce his anxiety, but the dose required to sedate him even a little was too high to use on a regular basis.
24 posted on 12/30/2003 6:09:57 AM PST by Judith Anne (Send a message to the Democrat traitors--ROCKEFELLER MUST RESIGN!)
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To: American_Centurion
Fretting over fear and pain that has already ended for the animal is a waste of time, and IMO a stupid endeavor for the state to persue in "animal cruelty" charges. I'm not talking mistreatment or neglect, I mean charging after the animal is dead by that time it's a so what issue.

Under that logic any crime that is already over isn't worth prosecuting if the suffering is already over. We fret because there will be more.

25 posted on 12/30/2003 6:12:43 AM PST by HairOfTheDog
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To: rooster1
OK, so take your old, lame horse out back and shoot it instead of selling it at sale for $500.
26 posted on 12/30/2003 6:14:20 AM PST by blackdog (I'm hooked on phonics but smoking it is not so easy.)
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To: Dudoight
I forgot to mention that one other thing--while I was working with the stallions, I always talked baby talk to them, low and soft, and kept my body very still, only used very slow movements.
27 posted on 12/30/2003 6:14:53 AM PST by Judith Anne (Send a message to the Democrat traitors--ROCKEFELLER MUST RESIGN!)
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To: blackdog
My horse will not be shot out back or sold for $500. He has worked his whole life for me and been a very good friend. If/when his pain is such that he needs to be put down, his end will be as painless as the skilled hands of my vet can provide.
28 posted on 12/30/2003 6:17:43 AM PST by HairOfTheDog
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To: HairOfTheDog
I'm not talking about crimes. I'm talking about worry for suffering that has ceased. 5 seconds, even 20 minutes is boneheaded nitpicking.

Now long term abuse, or neglect is a different story.
29 posted on 12/30/2003 6:20:05 AM PST by American_Centurion
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To: Kenton
Some of the meat goes to the many zoo's, which feed it to the cats and other meat eaters they have.

A wife of a friend of mine had a yearling which broke it's leg. I put it down for them and then butchered it. It was pretty good eating. His wife didn't like me much when I would say how good it tasted though.
30 posted on 12/30/2003 6:20:07 AM PST by yukonjacko
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To: American_Centurion
I view the slaughter process as abuse of the trust those animals had in us.... For horses sent to slaughter because they have injured themselves in our service, or have become to old to continue working... the days and weeks they spend being kicked and shoved and moved to slaughter is abuse.

31 posted on 12/30/2003 6:25:45 AM PST by HairOfTheDog
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To: rooster1
Sorry, it's an 'effin ANIMAL.

Food, glue, dogfood - whatever.

Kae-go-gi (sp?) anyone?
32 posted on 12/30/2003 6:29:49 AM PST by NY.SS-Bar9
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To: yukonjacko
A wife of a friend of mine had a yearling which broke it's leg. I put it down for them and then butchered it. It was pretty good eating. His wife didn't like me much when I would say how good it tasted though.

I am apalled that you would have so much as mentioned it to her then... Is hurting your friends always amusing?

33 posted on 12/30/2003 6:32:20 AM PST by HairOfTheDog
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To: HairOfTheDog
You and I are not going to agree on this.

You view the trust that the animal gives you to be a bond or promise from you.

I view it as the animal being trained and suited for my use as a tool. I care for them properly (animals I own and my tools), but I view them as objects. Some people can't. I believe it to be a waste of time to place deep emotions on an animal that truly has no real understanding of them. Sure they may trust you and depend on you for food and shelter, but they would know no different if they were loosed to roam wild.
34 posted on 12/30/2003 6:33:04 AM PST by American_Centurion
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To: Dudoight
We bought the horse from a woman who rescues them.

He must not have ever been beaten. Although he was very skiddish when we got him, we can now do a lot of things with him- we can saddle him, pony my kids on him, take a plastic salt bag and rub it all over his body, etc.

Although his name is BeyWatch, we are thinking of renaming him "Curious George" since he is the one who has to examine every new thing in the pasture or pen.

We are following Pat Parelli's Natural Horsemanship techniques and it seems to be paying off.

www.parelli.com
35 posted on 12/30/2003 6:42:06 AM PST by 11th Earl of Mar
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To: blackdog
OK, so take your old, lame horse out back and shoot it instead of selling it at sale for $500.

Then do what with the carcass?

If you have enough land you drag it in the back forty and wait for the coyotes to clean it up. But it is still a big skeleton.

36 posted on 12/30/2003 6:44:52 AM PST by 11th Earl of Mar
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To: American_Centurion
My emotions aren't wasted, they bring me great satisfaction.

Sure they may trust you and depend on you for food and shelter, but they would know no different if they were loosed to roam wild.

Being turned loose to roam wild isn't a choice that is before us. What is before us is how to 'dispose' of the ones that have spent their life in our service.

I acknowledge that it is harder to spend dollars on a vet to have the animal put down and then to dispose of the body either with rendering truck or with a backhoe. I acknowledge that it would be 'easier' when the horse breaks down and can't work any more to just haul him off to a meat auction and leave before the ugly stuff happens.

I just find that 'easy' way out to be abhorrent and not worthy of the loyalty and life work those horses gave us.

37 posted on 12/30/2003 6:45:42 AM PST by HairOfTheDog
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To: Dudoight
I commend you for what you did, but a healthy horse that age should be more than a pet. If she is healthy send her to a bronc buster and yeah if you watch it might even hurt your feelings a little bit, but when you get her back your pet will be more than a pet to you. Just good healthy positive criticism, make her your riding partner and you'll be alot happier.
38 posted on 12/30/2003 6:51:10 AM PST by HELLRAISER II (Give us another tax break Mr. President)
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To: 11th Earl of Mar
You backhoe a big hole. And for those without the equipment or space, you spend $500 for someone else to do it. (now you are out $1000)

It's always amazed me when people who "love" their horse sell it at auction for $500 and think that it's going to a good home. Way too many people keep horses who cannot afford them. They don't love anything but themselves.

39 posted on 12/30/2003 6:52:30 AM PST by blackdog (I'm hooked on phonics but smoking it is not so easy.)
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To: rooster1
At the risk of sounding mean and cruel, horses are ANIMALS. They are not humans. Sure, they can be trained, are intelligent, and can show what seems to be human emotion, but God put them on earth to be used by man. What makes it okay to slaughter or kill a cow, but not a horse? I grew up on a farm with both horses and cattle and can tell you that I've seen what appears to be intelligence in them. But deep down, it is just a Pavlovian response for food or attention. It's sad to think of a beautiful, graceful animal ending up in some Frenchie's stomach, but that's the marketplace. Deal with it. Horses are part of agriculture. End of story.
40 posted on 12/30/2003 6:55:39 AM PST by jtminton (2Timothy 4:2)
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