If you think you've heard this one before, stop me. But some things are worth repeating, and history has repeated itself. So have a farrier, a horse, a rider, an owner, and a judge at the world's premier three-day event. Re-meet the winner of the 2015 Badminton Horse Trials Farriers Prize. |
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
Badminton Horse Trials Farriers Prize 2015: Instant Replay for Best-Shod Four-Star Eventer Hooves
Wednesday, May 13, 2015
Lost Shoes, Caught Shoes and Twisted Shoes: Drama on the Hoof
Lost shoes were in the news this week, and it turns out that the tribunal in Ireland didn't feature the only lost shoes in the news. Each of us has a favorite lost shoe photo, video or story.
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
All for Want of a Shoe: Lost Horseshoes Subject of Nine-Hour Irish Turf Tribunal and Australian Rule Change
One of horse sports' great wild cards has always been the lost shoe. Some horses lose a shoe and stop in their tracks. Some keep running and jumping--even winning. Sometimes the shoe sparkles in the sun. Sometimes it's never found.
Some people just shrug it off. Some people want to do something about it. And sometimes it's just a mystery.
Sunday, May 10, 2015
Case Notes: Inside Bal a Bali’s Laminitis Recovery
Thanks to an interview today with Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital’s Vernon Dryden, DVM, some of the details of Bal a Bali’s nine-month ordeal can now be shared. Dr. Dryden acknowledges the willingness of the colt’s owners, Sienna Farm and Foxhill Farm, to share information that might benefit another horse suffering from a similar problem.
Brazil's Bal a Bali Comes Back from Laminitis to Win Santa Anita Stakes Race
Every once in a while, a bad news story takes a turn for the good. This one took a turn for the great.
Yesterday in California, a horse from Brazil made his first start in the United States. Bal a Bali holds a world record and won Brazil's Triple Crown. He was purchased by American investors, and flown north to join trainer Richard Mandella's stable at Santa Anita Park in California.
But that was almost a year ago. This horse's health took a detour when something went wrong. Very wrong. Laminitis-level wrong.
But that was almost a year ago. This horse's health took a detour when something went wrong. Very wrong. Laminitis-level wrong.
Finally, yesterday he showed what he can do. And what he can overcome to do it.
Thursday, April 30, 2015
Why They Run: The Hoof of Fire Horse Number 12
A team of fire horses speeding to the famous Triangle Shirtwaist Fire in New York City in 1911. When they got there, the firemen could do little, as the employees had been locked into their work stations on the upper floors of the building. Many seamstresses jumped out windows to their deaths; 146 employees, mostly women, died that day. Ladders couldn't reach them. Notice theses horses wear no blinders on their bridles; this was customary for fire horses. |
Not all running by horses is done on the racetrack. It's not always done for prize money or glory in front of a cheering crowd. Sometimes horses run because they know that is what they are supposed to do.
And that's exactly what Horse Number 12 did.
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