The Citizen (Gauteng)

Cracked plane windscreen leads to problems for horses

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The crucial quarantine issues facing a wealth of imported horses to contest the Melbourne Cup among other spring carnival features are unlikely to be resolved until next week.

After last weekend's flight from Europe – carrying a whopping 19 spring carnival contenders – was forced to spend about 20 hours on the tarmac at Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates because of a cracked windscreen, Racing Victoria is now faced with a range of complex quarantine issues as a knock-on effect.

First, nine of the horses are directly affected as they were to race on Caulfield Guineas Day but these horses will now not come out of quarantine until the day after the meeting.

Just as crucially, the day delay has meant the final shipload of horses on 13 October – carrying one-third of the Melbourne Cup field – could also be forced into spending their first night in Australia at the government's quarantine facility at Mickleham to avoid a clash with the horses spending their last day at Werribee.

The 19 horses delayed in Sharjah are: Casterton; Cliffs Of Moher; Count Octave; Dal Harraild; Danon Distance; Duretto; Finche; Fleet Review; Gustavus Vassa; Intelligen­ce Cross; Langley; Marathon Man; Pharrell; Red Verdon; Shraaoh; Sound Check; Spirit Of Valor; Withhold; Yucatan

Racing Victoria's racing operations manager Paul Bloodworth told RSN 927's Racing Pulse on Monday that RV had applied to the Australian government to allow a special dispensati­on of 24 hours from the mandatory 14-day quarantine period so as to overcome the serious issues facing the raiders.

He said he felt the 20 hours the horses spent in air-conditione­d facilities on the plane in Sharjah might be counted as that extra day of quarantine that would allow the horses to leave Werribee on the day of the Caulfield Guineas meeting on 13 October.

"I think the main thing the government will take into account is the fact that these horses basically spent a day in isolation in a quarantine environmen­t," Bloodworth said.

"In the end, that will be the one thing that they will take into account which will hopefully fall in our favour."

The quarantine quandary is not restricted to the 19 horses on the delayed plane. On arrival at the quarantine facility on Sunday, the new arrivals mixed in with the three Godolphin horses already in the country, meaning those horses will effectivel­y have to restart their 14 days of quarantine.

Bloodworth said the delay in decision-making around the issues revolved around crucial blood samples. "They need to assess all the swabs," he said. "When the horses arrive here from any country, they have four days of swabs – which is effectivel­y testing for EI (equine influenza) and they won't have those results back until later on this week.

"They also get a report on the circumstan­ces around the delay in Sharjah and so the decision will be this time next week. I'm still pretty confident and hopeful that the government will see in our favour."

Bloodworth said all 19 horses on the long trip to Melbourne had come through their ordeal in fine order. –

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