Equine, Equestrian & Nature Consulting, Coaching & Education

Horse Sport Welfare – Economics and Ethics Part I

Animal welfare and public awareness

Economics, ethics and horse welfare have been hot topics lately as the public questions what humans do with horses. From Olympic sports to endurance and other disciplines, the public sees horses as the same creature. With food animal welfare standards being implemented around the world, the sport horse industry must defend its position of using horses for sport. Indeed, many horses enjoy the competition and participate eagerly with their human companions, but others either mentally or physically unfit to perform struggle.

Animal welfare science has evolved many tools to assist in determining whether an animal is happy or in pain. These tools have successfully changed the way many food animals are housed and cared for, but are slow to make it into the horse world.  As the public becomes more aware of what animals need to be happy, the public particularly through social media is pressuring all horse sports to support why we think our horses are happy competing.

With their own personal grooms, regular feeding, daily bathing, plenty of water, nice shelter, soft bedding, daily exercise, an on-call health care professional and often their own person massage therapist, from the outside looking in, horses used in sports may appear to be some of the best kept horses anywhere. And for the most part, they are some of the best cared for horses because they are valuable. But their value is the same factor often causing welfare issues.

When a Horse is a Commodity

When people “invest” in a horse hoping to sell her/him for more money than they paid, then the horse becomes an “asset” or “commodity”. And here is where the welfare issues often start. This is not to say that a horse cannot be both a loved animal and an asset, actually many horses are cherished as both. But as prices for horses have gone up and the monthly care risen, investments in horses have time frames in which people need to sell their horses before the monthly costs out pace their investment. Even good people who say they “love horses” will suddenly start to cut corners in order to cut expenses.

A trainer gets pressure from an owner to sell the horse and the trainer does not want to get stuck with an expensive animal he/she cannot sell, so the trainer may try a few “tricks” to try and get the horse to perform better or stay sound in order to sell the horse. Or an owner, rider or trainer need a “win” to stay on top for points and they think just this one time they might try something to give the horse an edge. Through the last 50 years, I have heard more stories of what people have done to horses than I care to remember.

From using electric shock dog collars under saddle pads to get horses to run faster or jump better, to tying horses tails to their heads so they don’t carry it crooked or injecting alcohol into the nerve so the horse cannot swish her/his tail (once saw the tail fall off while the vet was demonstrating how to alcohol a tail) or keeping a horse’s head tied up for hours in a stall so they will lower their head for a pleasure class to putting plastic plexiglass on top of jumps to trick a horse to jump higher than it sees…..and the list goes on and on and on. The point is that many of the these people were not ethical people to begin with and would sacrifice the horse’s welfare in order to win. However, many of them have won and therefore they have been looked up to as top professionals.

And I don’t think I need to mention how many drug “cocktails” have floated around with cleaver chemists trying to figure out how not to get caught with a drug test. If a trainer or owners does not get caught, well then that is license to continue using. While our competition organizations for racing and other sports have made good headway offsetting drug use, it continues secretly (and sometimes not so secretly) as protocol in some barnsTo address horse sport welfare, you have to look at what has caused it.

A walk back from the show ring

Underlying causes:

1.Economics -We have already discussed economics as a main contributing factor to horse welfare. While horse sales are a big part of the horse industry, prize money also contributes to horse welfare issues. The higher the purses, the more likely people are to cheat or compromise their horses. There is not reward for those trainers who do put their horse’s welfare first and opt not to compete. One trainer told me they lost their client and a barn full of horses because they refused to jump a horse when it was slightly lame. Another trainer did not feel the horse was having a good day and did not want to risk competing, but the owner told him that he had flown in with guests for the competition and if the trainer would not show the horse, then he was fired. And he was fired. These are bad owners and luckily not the majority, but until our industry has some support for trainers who do put horses over money, these kinds of injustices will continue.

2. Ignorance – lack of education about equine behavior, learning, ecology and general horse biology is often a problem. If you don’t know how much a horse needs to sleep or that they only get REM sleep lying down, then you would never think why your horse is spooky at a horse show when it has had not REM sleep for 2 weeks. Sleep deprivation is common at competitions where horses have lights and sounds all day and night and often never get enough sleep. In the US, we have the largest number of uneducated horse professionals in the world.

Few trainers have degrees or any education in the basic biology and ecology of horses. There are not tests or schooling to become a horse trainer. Almost anyone who does not have a recent felony can apply for a racing license and if you can market yourself well and win, then just about anyone can become a horse trainer in any discipline. Few if any trainers have education or degrees in equine science, training, biology or welfare. I once surveyed trainers in California who had show barns and only 5 percent even had a college degree and most had nothing to do with horses or the horse business.

3. Lack of Respect -When horses were essential as transportation, people learned more about horses. There was a culture of “horsemen and horsewomen”, but since people do not live with horses nor really need them, there has been a loss of knowledge and respect for horses. If an animal is treated as an asset and nothing more than a “sale horse”, then it is placed at a distance from the person. The animal is a negotiated item to be put into a “package deal” with little regard for the animal’s welfare. Interestingly, trainers who do not respect people do not respect horses either.

4. Lack of Ethics – The horse business has been known as a “shady business” for years. When I first started brokering horses back in the 1980s in California, I was so careful not to be called a “horse dealer” or a ” horse trainer” as both had such negative connotations. Instead, I tried  to raise the bar in horse sales by having disclosure statements, and business agreements to do any horse sales transaction. Many trainers did not want to sign anything which of course brought into questions their ethics. Why would a person not want to disclose information about a horse that would help the new owner better care for the horse?  The shadiness of horse deals continues – multiple commissions never disclosed, horses traded who are not sound or have problems, health or behavior information not disclosed. Hardly a day goes by that I don’t talk to a trainer who tells me of a horse they bought or had on trail only to find our the previous trainer or owner lied to them about the horse. Of course these are the people who should not be in the horse business as they damage the reputation of all horse professionals and certainly make it difficult for the general public to trust entering our sport.

5. Social License – When something is done over and over again and is culturally accepted, it often gives “social license” to continue doing with little thought as to whether the action is harming anyone. For example, I walked into a barn to evaluate a horse behavior issues and was the young girl groom injecting both horse in the cross ties. I asked why what she was injecting and why. Her answer was, ” We inject all the horses daily for the first week of the show so they are quiet and get used to being quiet”. I asked her if all the horses were unruly and wild. She said,”No, but we do it anyway as it is our barn policy as we don’t want anyone getting hurt”. Clearly, this girl knew little about the biology of a horse or the potential side affects of sedating a horse.  I asked her if they had to sedate all their horses and her answer was, “Everybody she had worked for sedated horses when they first get to the shows”. Although her motives were for the safety of the riders, this is an example of doing something because it has been done by enough people, therefore it is OK to do with no thought or knowledge of how it was affecting the horses.

This is a big topic to cover and deserves input from all sides. Hopefully our horse sports can evolve using welfare science combined with ethics and oversight to support best management practices for horses. More to on this topic later.