One of the discussions at the summit:

The Well-being of the Competitive Horse

Communication between the equine and man has always been a mystery. Although
it is not in a horse´s genetic makeup to verbally communicate, they "speak"
to us all the time. This concept was a common theme throughout all four of
today´s panels on the Wellbeing of the Competitive Horse.

 Dr. Catherine Kohn, VMD, from the Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio,
acknowledged people who know horse language have special importance in 
future
equine research.

 "We need to identify the relevant problems to research," said Kohn during
the panel on "Equine Research: State of the Field." "But we need bright,
intelligent, creative people that work with horses daily and know the 
problems they
experience in order to identify them."

 When Keeneland Race Track installed Polytrack in 2006, it became the third
North American facility to transition to this synthetic surface. The reason 
for
the change was revealed during the session on "The Safety of Horses: A
Long-Term View."

 "We felt the safety of the horse and rider was not coming first and that 
was
unacceptable," Nick Nicholson, President of Keeneland, said. "You need to
listen to the horse and do what´s best for him. It´s a tenet that is not 
used
enough in this business."

 During the same session, Bill Casner, co-owner of WinStar Farm in
Versailles, Kentucky, concurred with Nicholson, but added some personal 
insight.

 "Horses that have faulty conformation just float over a synthetic surface,"
Casner explained. "It is very forgiving and provides young horses with a
chance to work through their issues because it allows their bones to 
remodel. The
horse is telling us that he likes this kind of surface and we need to 
listen."

In the panel "Veterinary Research on Equine Athletes," Dr. Mary
Scollay-Ward, Association Veterinarian at Calder Race Course and Gulfstream 
Park said a
horse´s body language usually indicates a predisposition to catastrophic
injury.

 "With most catastrophic injuries, horses do tell you by exhibiting some 
sort
of sign," Scollay-Ward said. "Except condylar fractures. In my experience,
they usually occur in 3-year-olds that are moving quickly through their
conditions and forward in their training but there are no outward signs."

 Charlie Hutton, a speaker for the "Experience, Compassion and Handling of
the Horse," owns Hilldale Farm in Princeton, Kentucky and primarily trains
reining horses. In his opinion, the key to equine safety is good 
horsemanship.

 "You have to always listen to the horse," Hutton said. "Horses are
creatures of routine and if they act differently than they normally do, 
there is
almost always something wrong. I rode a horse yesterday that seemed tired 
and was
working to get through the ride. I knew something was off and sent him to 
the
vet this morning."


Judy
http://iceryder.net
http://clickryder.com 

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