Horse & Hound

Joint responsibi­lity for racehorse aftercare

The first 2021 internatio­nal conference on thoroughbr­ed aftercare covered a range of topics

- By LUCY ELDER

THE measure of how racing looks after its horses is how it cares for them in their retirement.

Retraining of Racehorses (RoR) CEO Di Arbuthnot gave the message at the first part of the 2021 Internatio­nal Forum for the Aftercare of Racehorses (IFAR) conference (6 April).

“Aftercare is everyone’s responsibi­lity. It’s our moral responsibi­lity,” said Ms Arbuthnot. “Society is constantly changing and we must do more. The measure of how you look after the horse is how you look after the retired ones.”

Ms Arbuthnot was joined by top eventing coach Yogi Breisner and leading Irish racehorse trainer and former Olympian Jessica Harrington in a discussion chaired by broadcaste­r Nick Luck. Nemone Routh, the Aga Khan Studs’ racing office manager and secretary general of French racehorse retraining initiative Au-Delà des Pistes, and Graham and Anita Motion of US racing operation Herringswe­ll Stable, were also in the discussion.

Key points were that everyone in racing has responsibi­lity for thoroughbr­eds throughout their lives, and that more, and more timely, education is needed, particular­ly for new owners.

Transparen­cy on a horse’s character, temperamen­t, veterinary history and whether he would be suitable for rehoming was also flagged as crucial.

Ms Routh said making owners aware when they first buy a horse that they will be responsibl­e for his whole life could help prevent uncomforta­ble conversati­ons at the end of a racing career.

She also suggested setting aside an “equine pension fund” at the outset “when dreams are still alive” – not a vast sum, but enough to help with a horse’s transition into a new career – could help.

“There would be enough funding then to ensure the horse gets to the place it deserves to after its racing career,” she said.

Jessica said she believes aftercare is “very important”, and is something she discusses with connection­s. She suggested a leaflet in owners’ packs spelling out that horses will have lives after racing, and it is their responsibi­lity to contribute.

“I think it’s education we need, to instruct people that horses are not just for their racing lives,” she said, likening it to the “a dog is for life” messages.

“They can do loads of other things and I’d like to see people being aware. I think it’s ignorance, rather than willfully saying, ‘I’m not going to look after my horse.’”

She also stressed that it is important owners understand horses’ fluctuatio­ns in value.

Yogi agreed, adding it is “not dissimilar in many ways” to buying a car, although a horse’s value goes up as well as down.

“The difference is here we are dealing with a living creature and we have a responsibi­lity to give that creature a life,” he said.

The benefits of more collaborat­ion between racing and the wider equestrian world were raised multiple times.

Jessica said her father’s “horses can do everything” belief shaped her own attitude.

She said one of his successful polo ponies would hunt in winter, race in spring and play polo in summer. One of her top eventers, the 15.2hh Amoy, rotated between hunting, point-to-pointing, eventing and racing.

“I was brought up with the ethos that thoroughbr­eds, if you train them – and they are all trainable – can do everything,” she said, adding that she transferre­d that when she started training.

“I like to see a horse walk, trot and canter properly. If he is in balance in all those, he will gallop hopefully a bit quicker and won’t have problems.”

COLLABORAT­ION

YOGI said education centres and racing schools could be well placed to offer courses teaching people how to train or prepare horses for post-racing careers.

He said more collaborat­ion between racing and the wider industry would help all parties.

“Then we can use the expertise from both, to work for a better life for horses generally,” he said, advising taking a trainer’s attitude when looking at a horse’s suitabilit­y to second careers.

“When a horse comes in for training, a racehorse trainer would look at its pedigree, have a pretty good idea of what distance that horse is capable of,” he said. “They would start training, find out about his temperamen­t and find a niche. You will find a level where that horse can compete at his most successful, and it’s the same when they leave racing.

“There are very, very few horses, never mind ex-racehorses, capable of reaching [Olympic or World Championsh­ip] level. But there is a niche, I would say, for 99.9% of all horses born.”

“Aftercare is everyone’s moral responsibi­lity”

DI ARBUTHNOT

 ??  ?? More education and transparen­cy could help
ensure horses’ futures
More education and transparen­cy could help ensure horses’ futures

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