#141
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Me and PP at Lanes End |
#142
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If they want to be "alone" they can move to a private facility. If TAP wants his horses working alone he can build his own place and train them 'round the clock so no horse ever hits the track when another is on it. Trainers sometimes have lives away from the track and want training hours to actually end. Dark days mean that you get a break from the 5am to 6pm schedule.
If you want total privacy, build and maintain a training center.
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RIP Monroe. |
#143
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That is why they are trained in the cool of the dawn and early morning hours. It's not because all racetrackers love getting up at 4-freakin'-am every day of their lives; nor because afternoon racing is more important, leaving only the morning to train.
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"Have the clean racing people run any ads explaining that giving a horse a Starbucks and a chocolate poppyseed muffin for breakfast would likely result in a ten year suspension for the trainer?" - Dr. Andrew Roberts |
#144
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#145
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Now we are getting somewhere. I stopped getting works notifications years ago, but 500 per day seems excessive.
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#146
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Horses are alot like people in that regard - rather susceptible to heat stress due to the electrolyte changes that occur with sweating to cool, and the way they breath. And being Calder doesn't particularly matter, it's hot anywhere in the spring-summer-fall. Believe me, horses would prefer it to be about 40 degrees if they have to work. The horses are not out for racing for the time and work they get in the mornings, either, are they? There's no horse trainer in the world - any discipline - who would choose to try and train horses in sun, heat and humidity versus cooler, shadier, drier - the horses just can't do the same amount of work, they couldn't get the same amount of training in, and they have a definite risk of overheating. At Rolex Kentucky last week, one could see the huge misting fans they have set up at the start/finish to try and lower the outside ambient temperature by 10 degrees or so. To try and keep horses from dying from heat exhaustion/heat stroke as they come off the course during the hotter times of day. Racehorses are not immune to heat problems, and training all day long would certainly needlessly expose them to that - as they are during races on hot, dry, sunny summer days.
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"Have the clean racing people run any ads explaining that giving a horse a Starbucks and a chocolate poppyseed muffin for breakfast would likely result in a ten year suspension for the trainer?" - Dr. Andrew Roberts |