Puerto Rico: New Regulations For Transporting Horses By Cargo Ship Go Into Effect March 28

The Puerto Rico Gaming Commission has approved a new set of regulations for transport Thoroughbreds via cargo ship which will go into effect on March 28, according to bloodhorse.com.

The regulations include rules additional stall space, proper ventilation, a transportation attendant, and a first aid kit. Violators risk their access to Camarero Racetrack, ability to register the horses, and a fine of $2,500 per horse. Repeat offenders could have racing licenses revoked.

Cargo ship transportation for the three-day journey came under scrutiny in 2019 when eight horses died in transit and one was euthanized upon arrival in Puerto Rico. Several U.S. racing jurisdictions issued warnings in late 2021-including the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission, Penn National Gaming, The Stronach Group, Indiana Grand, Florida HBPA, and New York Thoroughbred Breeders-threatening action against licensees allowing their horses to be transported via cargo ship due to welfare concerns.

Read more at bloodhorse.com.

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Study Indicates High Insulin Sensitivity In Newborn Foals, Challenging Existing Research

Though longstanding literature suggests that newborn foals have impaired glucose tolerance due to immaturity of their endocrine system, scientists at Ohio State University recently determined that newborn foals are actually more sensitive to insulin than mature horses.

Led by Dr. Hannah Kinsella, the team evaluated glucose and insulin levels in healthy newborn foals and compared them to the levels of healthy horses using intravenous glucose tolerance test samples. Twelve healthy Standardbred foals between 24 and 60 hours old were used in the study; eight horses of other breeds that were between 3 and 14 years were also used. 

The results suggest that a newborn foals' pancreas can secrete a high level of insulin, which allows it to save energy. Baseline glucose in foals was found to be significantly higher than in horses, showing that foals are insulin sensitive in their first days of life.

The ability to maintain normal glucose levels may also prevent low blood sugar right after birth. The team suggested that this may indicate evolutionary adaptations that allow the foal to transition to life outside the womb. 

“Published reference ranges for glucose in the neonatal foal are higher than those used for adults, and the results of this study further solidify that this should be taken into account in the clinical management of the neonatal foal,” Dr. Kinsella reported. “The question of whether the use of tight or liberal glycemic control is more beneficial in the treatment of the critically ill neonate continues to remain controversial, and additional investigation is warranted.”

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Read the study here

Read more at HorseTalk

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Foal Patrol Presented By National Museum Of Racing And Hall Of Fame: Elate’s Mothering Style Runs In The Family

Since its first season in 2018, millions have tuned in to Foal Patrol around the world for a behind-the-scenes look at what daily life is like for in-foal mares and foals. Learn more about Season 5 featured mares at www.foalpatrol.com.

Foal Patrol has partnered with the Paulick Report this season to bring you closer to featured mares and foals and to ask farm staff questions about their care and health before and after foaling.

In this episode spotlighting Elate at Claiborne Farm in Paris, Ky., Paulick Report staff ask Claiborne's Mary Ormsby, “How does Elate's mothering style compare to her own mother's?”

Elate, her mother Cheery, and her grandmother Yell were all born at Claiborne Farm, and they were foaled out by the same member of the farm's staff. This means the team had plenty of past performance to project how Elate would handle herself as a mother when she had her first foal last year.

For a chance to have one of your questions asked in an upcoming Paulick Report episode, email your question to foalpatrol@racingmuseum.net. Be sure to let us know if your question is for a specific Season 5 mare.

Foal Patrol Season 5 education content begins with breeding and reproduction and covers various aspects of the life of a Thoroughbred horse, from foaling through retirement. New content for Foal Patrol viewers of all ages will be added to the Foal Patrol Education Site weekly, from January through June 2022, at www.foalpatrol.com/education.

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Ramey: Your Horse Probably Doesn’t Need A Blanket, And Here’s Why

So, I was walking up to this barn, and I see a client strolling down the aisle, shaking her head, obviously concerned about something.  “What's the matter?” I asked.

“I had my horse talk to the psychic,” she said.

This is the sort of instance where you can easily blow a doctor/client relationship by saying something like, “Oh, geez, what an utter and complete waste of time and money!”

Being somewhat wizened to client psychology at this point, instead, I wondered, “What did she say?”

“Well,” my client offered, “my horse hates the color red.”

Perplexed, for among other reasons, because I know that horses are mostly colorblind, I asked, (somewhat reluctantly, because I knew that some answer would be forthcoming), “Why is this a problem?”

Turns out that the horse had red leg bandages, in which his legs could be wrapped at night.  Worse:  he had a matching red blanket.  The poor beast was covered in red.  Fortunately, there was a solution.

“I'm going to have to go out and buy blue leg wraps and a blue blanket this afternoon,” she said. “It's the only way he'll be happy.”

At once nodding sympathetically, and pinching my forearm as hard as I could so as to maintain my composure, I offered her some obviously needed support. I held up pretty well until she said, “Doctor Ramey, I never knew horses were so materialistic.”

“Neither did I,” I said, moving quickly towards a quiet spot where I could lie down and hold my sides.

Actually, the whole idea of blanketing horses is mostly pretty silly. Horses originated in some of the coldest parts of the world: the Central Asian steppes. If they hadn't figured how to stay warm, they would have frozen out long before we started riding them. See — they've got a nice coat of dense hair to provide insulation, in addition to their body mass.

The body mass of a horse actually makes it fairly hard for them to get rid of heat. In fact, getting rid of body heat is the main problem for most large-bodied animals. Horses have less body surface relative to their size than do smaller animals. So, for example, if you're an elephant (not making any weight comments, I'm talking about the animal), you've got a very big body with relatively little surface area exposed from which you can radiate heat. On the other hand, if you're a canary, well, cold weather is a big problem.

(Does anyone sell canary blankets?)

GRAPHIC EXAMPLE:  When I worked at Iowa State University, after I graduated from veterinary school, a horse died in the barns at about 10 p.m. It was 22 degrees below zero outside. All horses that died in the clinic had to have a post-mortem exam. Unfortunately, the pathology lab was closed, so to keep the horse in a state where a good post-mortem exam could be performed, we moved him from inside the barn to outside. About 12 hours later, we did the exam, and the horse was still quite warm inside. What I'm saying is that if dead horses can stay warm in 22 below weather, live horses can SURE do it.

Horses also generate a lot of heat, mostly through digestive activity.  So if, for example, you're feeding hay to your horse in the winter…

WAIT – You are feeding hay to your horse in the winter, right?  I mean, if not, your horse will have a lot worse problems than getting cold.

… then he's going to be generating a lot of heat on his own. Hay, or any feed, adds fuel to your horse's internal fire, as it were.

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Now, if you live in Finland, and it's January, and you've body clipped your horse, and you insist on keeping your horses outside all of the time, by all means go ahead and blanket him. But the idea that horses might ever get cold in the warmer climes – say Southern California – is fairly hard to understand, at least from a horse physiology standpoint.

It's not that blanketing is necessarily benign, either. One of the things bad things that blankets do is compress the horse's hair coat. With a blanket on, they can't fluff up their hair and help insulate themselves. In addition, if it gets wet under the blanket – as it can in a winter storm, or, when a horse is sweating under the blanket – the blanket keeps the water from evaporating, making the horse even colder. (As you probably know, cold and wet is a pretty miserable thing to be.)

So, mostly, there's not really any reason to blanket your horse.

However, blanketing certainly does do a couple of things. It may help keep some dirt off of your horse, which can be helpful if you're at a show. Maybe it'll save you some grooming time. If you've decided that the perfect time to body clip your horse is just before the latest blast of arctic air comes your way, putting a blanket on him probably won't hurt. Blankets certainly adorn horses in a delightful color of your choice, which not only allows you to express your latent interior design talents, but it allows you do so without much embarrassment for your horse, since horses are mostly colorblind. However, blanketing does NOT do anything to limit the growth of the coat – coat growth is controlled mostly by day length (as the days get shorter, the coat gets longer, and vice versa).

I've seen catalogs that try to sell you on the fact that not only does your horse need blanketing, he needs a different blanket for just about every conceivable temperature range. I haven't seen the slightly chilly, light westerly breeze, 60% humidity model being marketed yet, but I'm sure it's coming. What I'm saying is that if you are bound and determined to blanket your horse, at least don't see how many of the darn things you can own. They take up a lot of storage space, too.

All this said, my experience has been that no matter the facts, a lot of people are going to blanket their horses anyway because, well, just because.  And, mostly, that's fine – it certainly doesn't hurt them, unless they get their legs wrapped up in it (it happens).  And I won't criticize you at all, because I know you're doing it because you love your horse.

When it comes to blanketing your horses, it's mostly for you, not for them. And that's OK. Just don't forget to take his blanket off when the forecasted high temperature is 75 degrees F the next day.

Dr. David Ramey is a vocal advocate for the application of science to medicine, and—as such—for the welfare of the horse. Thus, he has been a frequent critic of practices that lack good science, such as the diverse therapies collectively known as “alternative” medicine, needless nutritional supplementation, or conventional therapies that lack scientific support.

This article original appeared on Dr. Ramey's website, doctorramey.com and is reprinted here with permission.

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