Horse Health Veterinary Consults with Dr Gustafson

Horse Health Veterinary Consults with Dr Gustafson
California, New York
Showing posts with label veterinary behavior. Show all posts
Showing posts with label veterinary behavior. Show all posts

Thursday, November 3, 2022

Keeneland Equine Welfare Concerns

Keeneland Yearling Sale: equine welfare concerns

 

 

Keeneland in September is the home of horses and money, where yearling thoroughbreds preside: Bidabidabidabidabidamoneymoneymoneymoneymoney, 950, now 1 million it is, do I hear 1 million fifty, bida bida bida bida bida, now one million one hundred thousand, bidabidabidamoneymoneymoneymoneymoney, 1.1, now 2, one hundred more, 1.2 now 3, here we go, moneymoneymoneymoneymoney, 4 bidabida now 5, …and thus goes the auctioneer selling each horse swiftly. Going once, twice, thrice, gone… sold $1.6 million. Men in green, Keeneland green. The blood; blue, the money; green. Out steps 1.6, handed to his groom in waiting at the exit to a strange new world and on the other side of the ring, in steps the next blueblood, this prize, a filly led in by her groom, handed to the ringmaster with shiny black shoes. A brief intro, sire, mare, family money-winning accomplishments, bold-type ancestors noted, half-sibling accomplishments, a smooth-talking personality presenting brief avails, and again, here we go, people sifting about in the hallway that encircles the seats that encircle the elevated ring, many of the inadequately prepared yearlings are fearful. The sales ring setting is poorly designed, the gauntlet to get there is a disgrace, and does not favor the horse. Sedation and chains are prevalent, their vibrissae are clipped, terrifying the youngsters. Temple Grandin would cry for the horses; Here now sir, what do you want to give for this fine filly? bidabidabidabidayomoneymoneymoney 10, now 20, 50 now 75, 100,000 dollars, now 125 bidabidabidabidabidupsomemoremoneynowifyouwantthis runner…






 

A man’s world, a game painted money green, a dozen or so yearlings going for over a million in session one, more million-dollar blueblood babes to follow. Historically, a quarter of the $1 million horses will never make it to the track, nearly a third will never win a race. How many yearlings are mishandled at this fragile formative age is part of the reason so many fail to ever win a race. The sale process takes the heart out of some of them at their formative stage of racehorse life; no heart, no running by and through horses at speed in tight company. Keeneland green. A horse mill. 

Beyond pedigree, conformation is important, anatomical maintenance of soundness. Bloodstock agents appreciate conformation conducive to durability, trainers look for bone. Most seek trending blood, looks and behavior aside, thus the low success percentages. I can see the horses who have been whip broke, and those that have not. One wants the have nots, as the chain-broke are unlikely to prevail. You can see some are broken by the look in their eye. More than a few are sedated, a tolerated practice.

I watch, beautiful horses all, but so many unnecessarily troubled. Unprepared, lip-chain broke and drugged as a shortcut for half-baked Kentucky horsemanship. In Ireland, the horses come through the ring relaxed and prepared, whiskered, softly handled to display their true grace. Halters without chains, soft eyes, beautiful vibrissae with a high potential to become willing partners, unlike most American sales candidates. More troubled horses than not at Keeneland, Kentucky. Their dignity dishonored with the vibrissae clipping and chained restraint. Drugs to sedate, the doping starts when they are a year old. This tolerated medication carries with them to the track, and the drugging needs to stop here, as the American medication mentality needs nipped in the bud.

After a horse passes the content eye, and soft ear criteria suggesting a willing partnership, I scrutinize bone and throat. I seek short thick canons for my clients, a body-balanced hip, with an extended gaskin, thick hocks... true-angled pasterns resting on big hooves, supple coat and not heavy, yet none of these charms matter if the mind is not willing. 

I seek horses grown up with a well-tended mind, a mind of flight with an eager tendency to willingly join the herd of man, behaviorist me. I want a horseshoe is taught by other horses how to be a horse, herd-raised stock, yearlings taught the confidence to run by and through horses running at speed by running with horses at speed in tight company. I look for vibrissae, and so many have been savaged. I eye their ears and eyes, their carriage, the ease or unease of their relationship with their handler. 

I watch for cooperative gestures. Relaxed by observant, attached to their handler, but free to express their state of mind. I seek potential willing partners, horses brought up surrounded by nature, nurtured in herd settings. Only other horses can teach a horse to win. Humans are simply passengers in this game, needing to re-create natural for the growing runners. It is the mare who provides the winning foundation, the mare and her herd, the cohort foals and yearlings, the huge rolling pastures. Horses teach young horses to run, and they teach them well. Lead changes become automatic, communication with others in the herd is intense and constant.

Watch that yearling walk, watch her perceive her new world. If the money talks and she walks on to a new life, will she be willing to listen, to prevail, to stay sound and healthy under duress, to run by and through horses at speed with confidence and finesse? Not an exact science, but it is clear some of yearlings fighting lip chains and shown into the ring reluctantly chained and medicated are unlikely to be winners. Fillies handled roughly often bail on everything, refusing to fall in and train after feeling what the humans may do to them. 

Back in the day, horsemanship and the art of handling youngsters prevailed at sales, today it is face shaving, chains and drugs. Already horseracing is in public disfavor for substandard welfare, and its presence at Keeneland is disturbing to equine behaviorists..   


Amateur horsemen have prepared most of these young thoroughbreds. Nearly all of the yearlings’ faces have been clipped clean, much like many the American Breeders’ Cup runners faces. The Jockey Club breeders and Breeders Cup trainers remain a bastion of amateur horsemanship, some of the sorriest on the planet, I am sorry to report. 

Clipping vibrissae is abusive, inhumane, unnecessary, and counterproductive. It is contrary to the development of a willing partnership. The Keeneland sale was a display of horsefolk diminishing the dignity of the horse. "In addition to the harm that a lack of vibrissae can bring about; the act of removing them is not done with complicity and adds unnecessary stress to the animal." Here is the scientific research:

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF02213989 





Pharmaceutical sedation of the yearlings remains prevalent, drugs continuing to replace horsemanship in the racing industry. Disappointingly, the public drugging begins at the yearling sales, prevalent and tolerated by the sale managers, obvious but unnecessary had proper horsemanship preparation been in place. A third, or so, of the yearlings express postures and behaviors suggestive of tranquilization, droopy glazed eyes, sagging lower lip, dropped penises. Inattentive. I know sedation when I see it. 

When questioned, some of the breeders admitted to tranquilization use, "a shot of ace in the oats this morning."  Injections, 'yeah, doc stopped by early and popped 'em with the stuff that lasts all day.’ Others were in denial. Most didn’t have much to say when confronted about the abusive practice of clipping vibrissae. 9 of 10 facial lacerations I have sewn up through time were on horses with clipped vibrissae. The percentage of yearlings at Keeneland with facial trauma was significant, one after the other with beat up heads because the vibrissae are clipped, their monitors to avoid head trauma when locked in tight places. Vibrissae are utilized for spatial safety. A horse uses her wiskers to protect her eyes, face, and nostrils. With these sensory structures removed, the yearlings are bashing their heads about in the stalls because they have been abusively deprived of sensation by Jockey Club Breeders.

After having their vibrissae clipped, many stalled horses stop drinking and eating, sometimes for days. This leads to colic and sometimes death due to deprivation of the most important horse nutrient, water, because the sensory structures to assess the water have been amputated by the Jockey club breeder. Clipping vibrissae and poor horsemanship are the primary cause of facial trauma in Keeneland yearlings. You should have seen all the banged-up heads, and those were the ones that made it through the  trauma inspections. 

 








By my estimate, 98% of the horses has their vibrissae clipped, with men doing 98% of the bidding on the naked-faced babies. A covey of male auctioneers sell the horses, prompted by green-suited bid spotters, all men. Men, men, men in green, money money money, green money, old money, plenty of money, SOLD. Whiskerless thoroughbreds, confused and dismayed at being whiskerless, abusively chain-shanked and drugged. 

A number of international equestrian organisations have banned the trimming of a horse's whiskers. Since 1st July 2021, horses are prohibited from competing in any FEI competitions internationally if their “sensory hairs have been clipped and/or shaven or in any other way removed”. Keeneland needs to follow suit, and now. The United States Equestrian Foundation has banned the disrespectful practice. Kentucky horsemen appear to be the most horse-disrespectful horsemen around. Vibrissae clipping is punishable by law in France, Germany, Switzerland, and some of the Nordic countries.



Perhaps this excerpt will help the Kentucky breeders understand the horse, and their role with horses.

Dignity is each animal’s inherent worth that humans must uphold in their relationships with that animal. This means that we must respect each animal for himself or herself (including individual particularities, behaviours, and prefer- ences). We must therefore take that unique worth into account and hold each animal in high moral regard, independent of our own impressions, opinions, and experiences. As such, animals’ inherent worth should not be tied to their instrumental usefulness, nor to their sentimental, heritage, or market value. 

Strain is a physical or psychological action by a human being to impose a benefit. In extreme cases, the term also includes any violence applied to animals to force them to do something against their will or to prevent them from doing what they want. The definition also covers the negative consequences of such actions. Strain always affects dignity. Dignity is only comprised, however, if overriding interests cannot justify it. This is the case, for example, when animals are subjected to pain, suffering, or harm, or exposed to anxiety or humiliation, or undergo interventions that profoundly alter their appearance or abilities, or are excessively objectified as instruments, also known as instrumentalization (Art. 3 AniWA). 

The AniWA (art. 4) prohibits the unjustified 1and unnecessary imposition of strains on animals (injury, pain, stress, restriction of freedom, violation of dignity, overwork, etc.). Implicit in this standard is the need to weigh the different interests of the parties involved (humans, animals, and the environment) to determine whether the strain is justified. If its impact on the horse outweighs the interests of the other parties, the strain in question is abusive and amounts to a contempt of dignity. 

The concepts of pain, suffering, and harm are not easy to distinguish, but understanding them helps to clarify any impairments to welfare. Pain is characterised by an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with real or suspected tissue damage (lameness, colic). It is noted that donkeys do not show pain as blatantly as horses do; they remain more stoic. Animals experience suffering as negative emotions that affect their quality of life and impair their welfare. Suffering is expressed through abnormal behaviour and body language (facial expressions, ear position, postures, etc.). Harm is manifested by loss of functionality or behavioural disorders, such as limited responsiveness to stimuli. It appears when animals are pushed to extreme levels of adaptation."

from https://www.cofichev.ch/Htdocs/Files/v/6125.pdf/Publications-cofichev/COFiCHEV_Ethique_Resume_EN_DEF_20220427.pdf



Nearly every face laceration and eye injury I have sutured and treated was on a stalled horse with recently clipped vibrissae. i have treated many colics that occurred subsequent to vibrissae clipping, as the whiskers are essential eating and drinking organs, leave the vibrissae alone.



Through the ring the yearlings go, chained and shanked, vibrissae abusively shorn, a sorry affair altogether when viewed from the horse’s perspective, and mine, but few others. In addition to inadequate preparation, much of the unwelcome behaviors when being handled are due to the sensory deprivation. Horses with clipped whiskers become confused and frustrated, they bash their heads into the stall walls and thresholds as evidenced by all the apparent head trauma on many of them, all unnecessary, all due to the deplorable amateur Kentucky brand of sensory deprivation followed by forceful horsemanship. 



Vibrissae are essential sensory structures that allow horses to race safely at speed in close company, spatial locators of not only their position, but other horses’ shifting spatial positions surroudning them. Their whiskers can feel the rail, sense the going, know the acceleration of others approaching or departing, and so much more that we do not know. The amount of brain tissue to which vibrissae deliver information is considerable, informing neurologists of the critical survival and protection functions of horses’ treasured facial hairs.




Banning the vibrissae-clipping practice would save the sale breeders millions of dollars and alleviate some the public concern with horse abuse in the racing industry, yet the incompetent breeders continue abusing the horses so they look clean. The horses may look clean, but they are confused without the full array of sensory organs. And if I am not able to put a stop to the yearling-abusive practice, you know who will be swooping in next, and that will be another black eye for the industry and game, more lost millions if not billions because of a lack of integrity of the breeders. The Keeneland breeders are doping with sedatives, clipping vibrissae to serious detrimental psychological and physical affect, and then lead their horses to the ring with their horses abusive chain shanked. 

 

 


To be fair, a few of the yearlings had vibrissae intact, and notably, they had no obvious head injuries like too many of the whiskerless. As well, at least one of the ring handlers is female, beautiful hair flowing down her back, pinned down so as not be grabbed a hold of easily by a frustrated sales candidate. Perhaps a thir  of the incoming grooms with the horse’s last day at hand, are women with hair tied up. 

The auctioneer drone is incessant, sales wear on, thousands of horses, thousands of chain shanks, bidda, biddahererightnow, bidda here, twenty thousand, now 30... lots of withdrawals due to injury and infirmity. Relatives win big races, and value skyrockets. The full sibling to Authentic sells, or was it to Audible? Blue blood, and thick. Money, money, the tempo unfading, stock moving through, live stock, an introduction for each yearling, most unnamed, known by their sire, and dam’s sire, pedigreed bloodstock, bluebloods going for green, flesh disguised as money. Walking money, walk that talk, Mr Auctioneer, Yes, sir.  What’ll you give for this fine filly, sir, 50,000? 50,000 is it, now 100, one now two, 300,000, now 350, forty, and a bidabidabidabidabidabida … money flying off chins, fingers, ear taps, computer clicks, cap tips, eyeglass cues, and nods… sweeps of paper, high-handed salutes bidabida, half the action online, it seems. 

Chains, the yearlings are brought in seized with lip chains and nose chains, shanks and rubbers, nerve lines and war bridles of all sorts. Despicable handling, and at a critical behavioral development phase. The sales trauma ruins many minds. 

Kentucky horsemanship is not dead altogether, but if things don't change soon, it will be. A few arrive with the kinder European style bitted halters, which are preferable, effective, and less harsh. Some horses travel through the ring adequately prepared, much like nearly every yearling at Tattersalls across the pond, all of them whiskered, no obvious sedation, and no harsh shank handling. 

Let me make it clear it should not be about effective restraint, but effective preparation, the horses should be prepared for behavioral contemned in hand, rather than fear of punishment. Where sedation is prevalent, amateur horsemanship both precedes and follows the sale. The less prepared, the more chains and drugs, the less likely the yearling is to train up willingly. Keeneland: Shaved whiskers, chains, and sedatives—a poor reflection on the human/animal bond in Kentucky. An ineffectual way to win any future race at all.

Inadequate horsemanship remains perseverant at Keeneland, tolerated and accepted, bidabidamoneymoneynow 50, 100, 150-2, now 250—3. Bida bidabidabidaabidaba 4 resonates, ringing loud as I arrive to restructure the thoroughbred culture conscience, to menace their abuse. Here we go, yet again, first racing drugs, now sales drugs, a lot of pharmaceutically-sedated yearlings. Keeneland sale drug-use of behavior modification drugs goes on without apparent restriction. The post sale drug tests do not offer sedation testing. The yearlings can also be treated before the sale with NSAIDs, masking injury and lameness. 

I have a veterinary eye for pharmaceutically-induced behaviors. It is disappointing to see that a significant percentage of the Keeneland yearlings are doped, sedated to manage their lack of appropriate preparation. The clipped vibrissae create varying levels of distress, inciting the perceived need for sedation by so many of the breeders. 

Of course, as my readers and students and teachers know, my horse-care criticisms are unbounded. The most significant issue this time is the shaving and clipping of vibrissae, removing the facial whiskers with malice aforethought, amputation of essential sensory organs, which elicits much of the perceived need to sedate and shank the young-minded yearlings, ruining many of them.

 The vibrissae clipping must stop, such an egregious outright abuse of yearling thoroughbreds by Kentuckians who should know better. More criticism will follow if it not restricted. Such a simple thing not to do. Behavior would be much more manageable if the vibrissae were present. 

Now that we have raceday Lasix use restricted, a practice which engendered and normalized drug use at every stage. Just as horses can be adequately prepared to minimize EIPH incidence, the yearlings could be adequately prepared to avoid undignified drugs and painful chains. 

Equine behaviorists are insisting the vibrissae remain intact all through a horse's life. I aim to make the world a better place for horses, the yearlings in particular. The vibrissae clipping, drugging, and chaining of the Keeneland yearlings must be regulated for their sake, and I'd be happy to be the regulator via education of breeders and trainers on the nature and needs of the horse.

 

 

Sid Gustafson DVM 


Below are the supporting and referenced scientific articles and recommended reading.


https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7509108/


https://drdavidmarlin.com/fei-moves-to-ban-clipping-shaving-of-sensory-hairs/


https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF02213989 


 https://www.animallaw.info/statute/germany-cruelty-german-animal-welfare-act









More reference links and suggested reading




 https://www.animallaw.info/sites/default/files/lralvol9_p159.pdf

 

Dignity is each animal’s inherent worth that humans must uphold in their relationships with that animal. This means that we must respect each animal for himself or herself (including individual particularities, behaviours, and prefer- ences). We must therefore take that unique worth into account and hold each animal in high moral regard, independent of our own impressions, opinions, and experiences. As such, animals’ inherent worth should not be tied to their instrumental usefulness, nor to their sentimental, heritage, or market value. 

Strain is a physical or psychological action by a human being to impose a benefit. In extreme cases, the term also includes any violence applied to animals to force them to do something against their will or to prevent them from doing what they want. The definition also covers the negative consequences of such actions. Strain always affects dignity. Dignity is only comprised, however, if overriding interests cannot justify it. This is the case, for example, when animals are subjected to pain, suffering, or harm, or exposed to anxiety or humiliation, or undergo interventions that profoundly alter their appearance or abilities, or are excessively objectified as instruments, also known as instrumentalization (Art. 3 AniWA). 

The AniWA (art. 4) prohibits the unjustified 1and unnecessary imposition of strains on animals (injury, pain, stress, restriction of freedom, violation of dignity, overwork, etc.). Implicit in this standard is the need to weigh the different interests of the parties involved (humans, animals, and the environment) to determine whether the strain is justified. If its impact on the horse outweighs the interests of the other parties, the strain in question is abusive and amounts to a contempt of dignity. 

The concepts of pain, suffering, and harm are not easy to distinguish, but understanding them helps to clarify any impairments to welfare. Pain is characterised by an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with real or suspected tissue damage (lameness, colic). It is noted that donkeys do not show pain as blatantly as horses do; they remain more stoic. Animals experience suffering as negative emotions that affect their quality of life and impair their welfare. Suffering is expressed through abnormal behaviour and body language (facial expressions, ear position, postures, etc.). Harm is manifested by loss of functionality or behavioural disorders, such as limited responsiveness to stimuli. It appears when animals are pushed to extreme levels of adaptation."

from https://www.cofichev.ch/Htdocs/Files/v/6125.pdf/Publications-cofichev/COFiCHEV_Ethique_Resume_EN_DEF_20220427.pdf

British law forbidding tail docking from 1949:

https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo6/12-13-14/70

 

 



Dr Gustafson graduated from Washington State University as a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine in 1979. He is a practicing veterinarian, animal welfare journalist, equine behavior educator, and novelist. The application of behavioral science to the husbandry of horses enhances optimal health, performance, soundness, contentment, and longevity. Behavioral, social, locomotory, and nutritional strategies enhance the prosperity, vigor, and health of stabled horses. Sid offers veterinary care, training, husbandry, and conditioning from the horse's perspective to achieve willing and winning equine partnerships with humans.

Friday, September 18, 2015

Ethical Horsemanship Favors the Horse

Hello learners,


The Science of Equine Behavior provides the Basis of Ethical Horsemanship






In consideration of the horse's nature and behavior, horsewomen and horsemen are obligated to provide horses an appropriate environment, unconstrained neonatal development, formation and fulfillment of the mare-foal bond, adequate nutrition, sufficient sociobehavioral circumstances, as well as training and horsemanship modalities based on the horse's innate perspectives and sensitivities.



By nature the horse is a precocious grazer of the plains, a social and herd animal, and flighty. Horsemanship and training are best accomplished through behavioral appreciation of the horse and facilitation of the horse's nature, rather than by force or coercion. Horses are best trained in a relaxed, calm state. Training that puts the horse into the flight or sympathetic state generated by fear and punishment while restricted by rigs or round pens is discouraged, and not in accordance with acceptable standards of animal training. Horsetraining and horse teaching methods are best based on scientific studies regarding the nature of the horse. Horses learn preferentially in a relaxed state from a calm experienced handler with adept communication skills.
Social behavior in natural feral settings is the 'natural' behavior that 'natural' horsemanship utilizes to appreciate the nature of the horse.
As to dominance, the science reveals that free-ranging horses form social hierarchies that are complex and rarely linear. Under natural open range conditions with adequate resources, horses seldom have the equivalent of an alpha individual because the roles of leadership and defense are more critical than domination. Dominance theory as a training modality is not only discouraged, but appears inappropriate. The formation of order in horse groups sustains collective welfare and enhances group survival, and reflects leadership rather than domination.[1] It is important veterinarians and students of equine behavior appreciate this science.
There is no alpha. Leadership is shared and alternated and variable and context dependent in established harems in natural settings. Dominance is rare, and certainly not prevalent. When present at all, it facilitates group protection and stability. Horses share leadership. Survival is herd based, rather than individual based. The lead mare leads the horses to water and grazing and resting places. She drinks first to make sure the water is safe, rather than because she dominantes the others. Students of equine behaviour appreciate shared leadership and herd stability. Horses seek competent leadership and are willing to accept competent leadership from humans.
The horse is special in retaining the ability to thrive in feral conditions independent of man. This allows us to study their true nature versus their stable nature and to apply that knowledge to their welfare as it pertains to training.
Horse retains the ability to survive without us, and survive well.
It behooves humankind to take care with horses. Sensitive horsefolk respect the 60 million year development of the horse's social behavior and development. They appreciate equine intelligence in regard to both training and husbandry, and what the future might hold.
Stabling is unnatural. Horses graze and walk together 60-70% of the time under natural circumstances, eating and moving from spot to spot independently but within a few meters of the next horse. Stable managers and horse owners should make every effort to accommodate or recreate these long-evolved herd grazing and life-in-motion preferences for proper physiological function and mental health.

Horses require other horses for proper health and prosperity. Horses prefer the constant companionship of other horses. A horse should seldom be kept alone. Horses being mixed with other horses and expected to share resources should be properly acclimated socially, and be given the required space to adjust to new herds without injury or undue stress. Every effort should be made to provide horses with the social benefit of appropriate companion horses through times of stress and illness.
Horsewomen and men need to appreciate the sensual nature of the horse, and understand the physiological needs of the horse. Horses prefer the open view. If they cannot be in physical contact with other horses, they need to see and smell other horses for proper behavioral functioning and responsiveness.
Water is the most important nutrient, and must be provided in consideration of equine behavioral preferences. Salt is the most important mineral, and should be provided daily in some fashion.
Grazing while moving is the preferred predominant equine activity. Horses did not evolve to metabolize grains and non-structured carbohydrates, or to remain stationary for even short periods of time. Serious metabolic issues develop when horses become sedentary grain eaters, and this lifestyle should not be imposed on horses.
Play and sleep are naturally occurring preferences that require accommodation however horses are housed or stabled, as sleep deprivation results in behavioral deterioration.
Horses are physiologically dependent on shared social grooming and sensual contact companionship. If stabling precludes these preferences from fulfillment, then every effort need be applied to replace or recreate these needs on a daily basis.
These behavioral considerations apply to horses in transport, and for those horses too, however unwanted, man is obligated to provide the proper environment, social functioning, nutrition, medical care, and exercise to sufficiently assure health and comfort.
As to performance, every care and precaution need be taken to avoid exceeding the adaptability of the horse. All of the horse's normal natural sensation should remain fully intact and functional without undue pharmaceutical influence. The horse's metabolic, physical, medical, and behavioral limitations are best be monitored by equine veterinary professionals on an intense comprehensive basis.
Professional veterinary societies and organizations are encouraged to provide education regarding equine behavior.

References
McGreevy, Paul, (2004) Equine Behavior: A Guide for Veterinarians and Equine Scientists Philadelphia: Elsevier Limited. ISBN 0 7020 2634 4
Olsen, Sandra, Horses and Humans, The Evolution of Human-Equine Relationships, 2006, Sandra Olsen, Grant, Choyke, and Bartosiewicz, BAR International Series 1560, Archeopress, England, ISBN 1 84171 990 0
McGreevy, Paul; McLean, Andrew, Equitation Science, Wiley Blackwell, UK, ISBN 2009048321
McGreevy, P.D. et al, (2007) "Roles of Learning theory and ethology in equitation" Journal of Veterinary Behavior 2, p. 108-118.
McGreevy Paul D., (2006) "The advent of equitation science" The Veterinary Journal 174 p. 492-500.
Waran, N., McGreevy, P., & Casey, R.A., (2002) "Training Methods and Horse Welfare", in Waran, N., ed., The Welfare of Horses, Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers (2002) 151-180.
Magner, D. (2004.) Magner's Classic Encyclopedia of the Horse. Edison, New Jersey: Castle Books, 2004.



Dr Gustafson is a practicing veterinarian, equine behavior consultant, and novelist. The application of behavior science enhances optimum health, performance, soundness, contentment, and longevity in animal athletes. Behavioral and nutritional strategies enrich the lives of stabled horses. Training and husbandry from the horse's perspective result in content, cooperative horses who are willing to learn and perform.

Sunday, August 30, 2015

The Fictional Approach to Veterinary Ethics



Homo ferus, a novel, link


Homo Ferus


“Wolf is in me.”   Artemus Valerone DVM



I go to see Dr. Valerone once a week these days. They have limited my visits since I brought his dog to him, as if an animal has taken my place. Before, when I went everyday, he knew me, counting on me to be there daily. Recently he does not recognize me so readily, seeing me only once a week. And now with his dog to care for him, and he her. Nonetheless I continue to come. I hear more and more of his story of how he arrived here. He warns me about being a doctor, how it came to be for him.
Earlier, when he first was admitted, things were much rougher, hopeless at times. But that was before his dog living and being with him here became an actuality, in large part due to my rational efforts and yes, in the end, bribes of sorts to the psychoanalytic staff of self institutionalized social deviants that run the place. Psychoanalysis, psychotherapy, psychopharmacology, all things psycho had failed to bring him on the mend. But he is on the upswing now, I know. I convinced them dog is his likely remedy. When she arrived the animal psychodynamics began, healing ensued.
I arrive early this day and sit in the phenolic visitation lounge next to him and begin to listen to his bemused dialogue. It is one of those large white rooms that was originally designed to express opulence, probably built around the time of his birth. The tall venerated ceiling hangs a mesmerizing fan that minces his words, whiffing and whirring on as if it may dislodge to spin down and decapitate us. Wobbled wafts of disinfected air pass through his articulation. The room’s incarcerated sterility is cheated by old soft leather armchairs. I sink deeply in mine, Valerone is poleaxed in his with eyes drawn out the metal matrixed window, talking. On the wall is a Vincent van Gogh reproduction, crazy flowers conceal distorted stars. This must be the lend me your ear room. Dr. Valerone’s gentle, soft voice perambulates in muffled echoes through the room and down the old halls. His soft vocals and averred inflections reverberate the story again through my spine, circuitously it trickles, sometimes jolting my mind. He tells me he is crazy, but I really don’t think so.  I have grasped his nature at last, at long last. He’s not crazy, if he was he is not anymore, but still he insists on his dementia, if these other folk are sane, then for him insanity will do him rightly well; he reiterates;


I went insane you know. I don’t remember if it was what happened with the animals or if it was something organic in me that was the cause. I’m not sure, perhaps it was the war. Maybe it is simply the animal in me that is jilted. In my college days they called me Kodak. “Hey Kodak,” they would ask, “where's the insertion of the semitendinosus?” Whatever the question, once I had heard or seen it, I knew the answer. I remembered everything I saw or heard, read. A photographic memory, we all have it, my ability to recall is just a bit more vivid than most. In the end that faithful memory was my demise, a memory too lucid. Therein lies my trouble, graphic photographs in my mind of how things once were at times for animals, still are. Had I left the veterinary field, I would still be out there. But no, I stayed. My memory never went away. The animal in me lingers, thirsting now for spontaneous freedoms.

To read on, please click the link below!




Dr Gustafson is a practicing veterinarian, equine behavior educator, and novelist. The application of behavior science enhances optimum health, performance, soundness, contentment, and longevity in animal athletes. Behavioral and nutritional strategies enrich the lives of stabled horses. Training and husbandry from the horse's perspective result in content, cooperative horses who are willing to learn and perform.

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Grooming, the art and science of pair-bonding with horses

Grooming
To pair bond and establish familiarity, one must brush their horse, often and regular. Massage is essential to maintain health in stabled horses, full body massage, por favor. Massage is diagnostic and therapeutic. Rub your stabled horses, please, rub them everywhere, do not forget to rub the coronary bands. Rub them before tacking up, rub to make sure they are sound. Rub, rub, rub, as rubbing creates winners. Forget the bute, and rub. 
 Brushing and grooming stimulate digestive and circulatory functions, as well as create social pair bonding between horse and horsefolker. Brushing enhances nutrition, circulation, and many physiological functions. If you are confused about rubbing, watch horses rub one another and watch horses rub themselves.
Stalled horses need a good hour or two of brushing a day to feel enriched. I have seen people train horses to ride by simply brushing them everywhere everyday. That is it, brushing, which apparently can involve and incorporate pressure and release and reward, creating the establishment of boundaries and yields. Mutual benificence. 

When in doubt with the training, brush, is what I learned from that little girl, and what I hope you to all learn from this unit.
When a horse becomes troubled, stop the training and brush and rub, please.

Troubled horses do not learn, while brushed horses learn well, oh yes. To brush your horse is to train your horse. Forget about showing your horse who is boss, show your horse who cares about them.
Brush your stabled horses, often, please. Rub and brush. Lunge them, too. The word lunge comes from lung, it seems, and to lunge is to enhance and maintain pulmonary health. The key to prevent bleeding (EIPH) in racehorses is abundant locomotion. Some believe drugs keep horses from bleeding, but the preferred method is abundant locomotion. Bleeding during a race prevented by abundant locomotion between races.
Notice how often horses self-groom their lower legs. Rub the legs all up and down before tacking up. Flex all the joints, please. Get the digital pulse, por favor.
Remember to rub your horse's fetlocks, pasterns, and coronets with your bare hands before and after riding each day for winning results. To know your horse, rub your horse.
Horses are physical beings. They need friendly touching, often. And clean: I dare proclaim horses are the cleanest creatures on the planet in open country.
Stabled horses, well, they get quite dirty when forced to live in a stall or stable. Open range horses seldom need bathed, but stabled horses may, so dirty and soiled a regularly unmaintained stall or small paddock is compared to the open range, where horses stay quite clean, but will sometimes show up very muddy or dirt-caked in insect season.
At racetracks, many horses are bathed daily, others less so. Many horses learn to enjoy the process, which involves extensive grooming and brushing and close physical contact. Other horses are quite aggravated by water, and many despise water squirted near their ears, eyes, and nose. 
Sometimes water is applied to cool horses off. The place to cool hot horses off, and the place they most accept water on the head, seems to be directly on their forehead, above the eyes, below the ears, straight on, right over the brain. This forehead area is where the most heat is dissipated in the least amount of surface area.
Horses in competitive training who get hot often come to appreciate head cooling, which is physiologically effective in lowering body temperature.
Watch the nozzle-squirting devices, and use a soft stream when habituating and desensitizing your horses to water. Hose the hot horse's body and up into the groin, as well. Get your horses habituated to water carefully over time, especially at first. 
Make your horse's first experience with water a good experience.
In some cultures, horses are not bathed with water so much as with brushing.
Rubbing a horse brings one into an awareness of the horse's soundness, health, and demeanor.
Rubbing simulates movement. If you cannot provide locomotion, you best get in there and rub. 
Stall-rested horses need rubbed and passively flexed for at least two hours a day to maintain health.
Friends, forage, locomotion, and rubbing.
Get in touch with your horses with your hands.
Cheers,
DrSid  


Dr Gustafson is an equine veterinarian, veterinary behaviorist, and novelist. He helps refine horse and dog training methods to accommodate the inherent nature and behavior of horses and dogs. Applied veterinary behavior enhances optimum health, performance, soundness, contentment, and longevity in animal athletes. Natural approaches to development, training, nutrition, and conditioning sustain equine health and enhance performance. Behavioral and nutritional enrichment strategies enhance the lives of stabled horses. Training and husbandry from the horse's perspective result in content, cooperative horses. DrSid provides equine behavior consultations to help recreate the needs and preferences of horses in training and competition.

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Equine Behaviour Through Time

The link below is Dr Gustafson's latest published Equine Behaviour article, as seen in Horses and People Magazine in Australia. The piece covers the principles of Equine Behaviour in literary fashion.


Equine Behaviour Through Time

http://www.horsesandpeople.com.au/sites/default/files/articles/Equine%20Behaviour%20Through%20Time_0.pdf

Dr Gustafson is an equine veterinarian, veterinary behaviorist, and novelist. He helps refine horse and dog training methods to accommodate the inherent nature and behavior of horses and dogs. Applied veterinary behavior enhances optimum health, performance, soundness, contentment, and longevity in animal athletes. Natural approaches to development, training, nutrition, and conditioning sustain equine health and enhance performance. Behavioral and nutritional enrichment strategies enhance the lives of stabled horses. Training and husbandry from the horse's perspective result in content, cooperative horses. DrSid provides equine behavior consultations to help recreate the needs and preferences of horses in training and competition.

Thursday, April 19, 2012

How to Race Horses without Lasix, Chapter 1

Chapter 1

Horses have long raced without medication the day they run, and appropriately so. Medication is for horses who are sick or unsound. Only healthy horses are qualified to race. Horses that require drugs to race should not be raced until they heal, and can race without medication. Healthy horses race safest.
Trainers who feel they cannot race horses without injecting them with raceday drugs are unqualified horsemen. The concept of fair play precludes the use of drugs to influence the outcome of a race. Horses deserve better than to be medicated on raceday, as over 90% now are. Horses have long successfully raced clean when properly cared for and appropriately conditioned, and have raced more safely than mismanaged horses that require medication to get them around the oval each race. 
Conscientious horsemanship and appropriate husbandry of stabled racehorses manages both EIPH and soundness. Horses need to get out of their stalls each afternoon for a few hours of grazing and walking about, perhaps some lungeing to lung up the lungs and flush the metabolism. Horses are born to move nearly constantly, and it is this near constant movement that appropriately conditions lungs to handle the athletic rigors of a horserace. Humane care of the horses is the answer to managing bleeding and breakdowns, not drugs, my goodness. The bleeding medication issue is entwined with the breakdown issue, as it is the horses medicated for bleeding that breakdown approximately 4X more frequently than clean running horses.
The horses will prevail soon, as the ban on raceday drugs is inevitably necessary to revive the sport and restore integrity to the game. 
Horses everywhere will breath great sighs of relief at not having to be needled with drugs hours before every race they run.


Dr Gustafson is an equine veterinarian, veterinary behaviorist, and novelist. He helps refine horse training methods to accommodate the inherent nature and behavior of horses. Applied veterinary behavior enhances optimum health, performance, soundness, contentment, and longevity in animal athletes. Natural approaches to development, training, nutrition, and conditioning sustain equine health and enhance performance. Behavioral and nutritional enrichment strategies enhance the lives of stabled horses. Training and husbandry from the horse's perspective result in content, cooperative horses. DrSid provides equine behavior consultations to help recreate the needs and preferences of horses in training and competition.

Dr Gustafson's novels, books, and stories