Monday, February 27, 2012

Another Unique Equine Product is Gaining Fans, The “Illuminated Hoof Pick”

What a Good Idea!

Another Unique Equine Product is Gaining Fans, The “Illuminated Hoof Pick”:

A uniquely designed technological improvement is shedding new light on the most basic tool in the tack room. The “Illuminated Hoof Pick” from MJ Equine Tools not only provides a top of the line stainless steel pick and stiff nylon brush, what sets it apart is that it is the first to also sport an innovative battery powered LED light on the tip. The sturdy Illuminated Hoof Pick is designed for the toughest work, offers an easy grip handle, and is even water resistant.


As any educated equine pro will attest, meticulous hoof picking should be part of the daily grooming schedule to help prevent horse hoof problems caused by impacted stones and other debris. Cleaning a horse’s hooves with the Illuminated Hoof Pick provides a better view to clean out the debris, but also to spot problems such as a puncture wound or hoof cracks before they become a bigger problem.



The inventors of the patent pending Illuminated Hoof Pick, Mara Glunz and Joanne Stoynoff, are long time equine enthusiasts with over 30 years experience in riding, training, grooming and management – and even winners of a few championships along the way. One day while teaching a lesson on hoof cleaning in the stable, the proverbial light, and in this case, almost literally, went on in Mara’s mind. “This would be much easier if the hoof pick had a light,” she said. And the idea of the Illuminated Hoof Pick was born.


The MJ Equine Tools Illuminated Hoof Pick sells for $24.99 and is available at:


www.MJEquineToolsInc.com


877-573-7887





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  3. New RidersRasp™ offers Horse Owners an Easy Option in Performance Enhancing Hoof Care

AQHA Equine Color Specialists Available to Answer Your Questions

AQHA Equine Color Specialists Available to Answer Your Questions:

AQHA’s color specialists have entered their busy season, taking countless calls and emails from customers needing to know more information on coat color genetics.


To give you personalized, fast advice, AQHA Equine Color Specialist Lisa Covey will be on AQHA’s Facebook page from 2 to 4 p.m. each Friday through June to answer your questions.


So gather up your horses’ information, photos and questions, and join us from 2 to 4 p.m. on Fridays for Coat Color Q&A at www.facebook.com/aqha1. Lisa will be standing by to answer your questions. Simply post your questions and photos for Lisa on AQHA’s Facebook wall.


Frequently asked questions include:


Based on the dam and sire, what color possibilities does my future foal have?


I want to breed for a specific foal color. What color stallion do I need to breed my mare to?


My newborn foal just hit the ground. What color do I register her as?


In addition to the Friday Coat Color Q&A sessions, AQHA’s Facebook page provides excellent customer service, the latest news, helpful tips and sweepstakes for great prizes. Join the more than 340,000 fans who make AQHA’s Facebook page a great place to foster your love for the American Quarter Horse.





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New “Horse World” Simulation Game For Horse Lovers Debuts on Facebook

New “Horse World” Simulation Game For Horse Lovers Debuts on Facebook:

HorseShow.com, the revolutionary online horse show site, announces the launch of its new Facebook game titled “Horse World.” This innovative game is designed for horse lovers as well as fans of simulation game by replicating the “real-life” activities of building farms, managing stables, and participating in equestrian training and competition.


Similar to other wildly-popular Facebook “farming” games, with the new Horse World game players can create customized virtual facilities, building farms with fully functional stables complete with pastures, barns, training venues, farm equipment and custom homes, and even create communities by inviting friends to build their own farms next door. Once stables are built, players can add horses and train them in the training venues to earn experience points, which are used to then compete in shows and races.


Credits are earned in many ways including creating a business through boarding horses, hosting shows and/or races, as well selling facilities, equipment and/or horses. As in the “real” equestrian world, Horse World users can enjoy shopping for saddlery and equipment for their horses in the virtual tack store. Players also earn achievement ribbons and credits for completing tasks and progressing through levels, as well as earn points and reward good performances by their online horses by regularly “petting” their steeds.


“We’re tremendously excited about ‘Horse World’,” said Jeff Sloan, CEO and founder of HorseShow.com. “Players of all ages can enjoy the interactive, realistic, and simulation features of this new Facebook game that is fun whether you are a horse owner or not.”


Launched on February 3, 2012, Horse World continues to add new and exciting features, including more shows and races for all breeds and disciplines; custom colors; horse sales and breeding; plus opportunities to compete against online friends’ horses. Future partnerships with breed registries and equestrian organizations will allow for even more breed and discipline-specific elements.


To learn more about HorseShow.com’s online features, please visit www.horseshow.com. To join the fun with your new Horse World game, visit http://apps.facebook.com/horse-world/.


HorseShow.com is an online horse show site designed for equestrians to compete and network with a global audience. Offering a revolutionary way to assess a horse and rider’s readiness for competition, HorseShow.com gives members the ability to upload their riding videos, enter shows, and receive expert feedback from renowned officials – all from the convenience of one’s own facility. In this unique online video format, judges provide each entrant with a detailed scorecard, including a complete analysis with feedback, personalized comments and suggestions. Horseshow.com welcomes all breeds, disciplines and experience levels to take part in both judged competitions and fun popularity shows, and in addition to valuable learning experiences and gaining a competitive advantage, members of HorseShow.com can collect ribbons, trophies, and cash prizes all from the comfort of their home.





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TAHC: Severe Weather Awareness Week in Texas: When planning for your family, you should also prepare for your livestock. http://t.co/Xu5b1M1B

TAHC: Severe Weather Awareness Week in Texas: When planning for your family, you should also prepare for your livestock. http://t.co/Xu5b1M1B: TAHC: Severe Weather Awareness Week in Texas: When planning for your family, you should also prepare for your livestock. http://t.co/Xu5b1M1B

TAHC: TAHC Accepting Comments on Two New Rule Proposals #constantcontact http://t.co/5ZiFKCTk

TAHC: TAHC Accepting Comments on Two New Rule Proposals #constantcontact http://t.co/5ZiFKCTk: TAHC: TAHC Accepting Comments on Two New Rule Proposals #constantcontact http://t.co/5ZiFKCTk

Manuka Honey for Healing Horse Wounds (AAEP 2011)

Manuka Honey for Healing Horse Wounds (AAEP 2011): As a gel, manuka honey can be used safely to promote healing of equine wounds without the need for a bandage, thereby reducing complications and costs associated with long-term bandaging, one researcher explained....

Weed of the Month: Yew, Taxus

Weed of the Month: Yew, <i>Taxus</i>: Taxus species, frequently called "yew" are used as ornamentals in much of the eastern United States and Canada. Generally, these evergreen plants are found in highly managed landscapes. Taxus plants thrive under many conditions, which make them a pop...

USEF: Use of GABA as a Calming Supplement Prohibited

USEF: Use of GABA as a Calming Supplement Prohibited: Recently, reports of the use of a product called "Carolina Gold" have been brought to the USEF Equine Drugs and Medications Program. One of the principal constituents of this product is gama aminobutyric acid (GABA), an inhibitory neurotransmitter.

...

Steps Taken to Classify Seizures in Horses

Steps Taken to Classify Seizures in Horses: Compared with what's known about seizures in humans and small animals, there's surprisingly little data about seizures in horses. In addition, veterinarians and owners use many different terms to describe the disorders....

Clenbuterol Ban for New Mexico Horse Racing

Although this is an important drug for treating lower airway inflammation, recent research has shown that long term use (>21 days) actually reduces its effectiveness on the airway.

Clenbuterol Ban for New Mexico Horse Racing: The New Mexico Racing Commission has suspended the use of clenbuterol for Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse racing, effective April 20, 2012. The suspension, passed by the commission Feb. 23, will be in effect for 12 months at all tracks in New Mexico....

PRCA: News From the Road

PRCA: News From the Road:

Sartain, VonAhn take San Antonio team roping title


Reno Rodeo Photo by Laura Leigh, Horseback Magazine


SAN ANTONIO, (PRCA) – If a cowboy wants to put a tough season behind him, San Antonio is the spot to make it happen, and Nick Sartain and Kollin VonAhn did just that at the AT&T Center on Saturday night.

The 2009 world champions won the short round at the San Antonio Stock Show & Rodeo – a Wrangler Million Dollar Gold Tour event – with a 4.2-second run to push their rodeo earnings to $19,323 apiece and get their 2012 seasons off to a great start.

“It was about time for us to win something good, I thought. We were due,” Sartain said. “We had kind of a tough time last year. I didn’t rope as well as I thought I should have last summer, and we had some trouble and didn’t make the Finals. I was ready to win something, and this is a great place to do it. It seems like we’ve turned it around this year. It’s been real good so far, we’ve been blessed.”

Even before their winning run, Sartain and VonAhn had already banked close to $7,000, which gave them no reason to believe that good things were not in store for them in the final round.

“This is one of my favorite rodeos,” VonAhn said. “We’ve never won this rodeo, but it seems like every time we’ve come here, we’ve done pretty well, so my confidence is high when I come here.”

The other big bonus for Sartain, VonAhn and all the event winners were the $5,000 gas cards awarded by the San Antonio committee, something that could become a major asset when it’s time to hit the road hard in the summer.

“If you’ve bought any fuel lately, you know it’s high,” Sartain said. “It’s really nice for us to win two of them, because we travel together quite a bit.”

Bull rider Cody Teel completed an outstanding day in San Antonio with what has to be considered the biggest win of his professional career after riding D&H Cattle’s Priceless for 90 points. The 19-year-old and reigning College National Finals Rodeo bull riding champion finished second in the PRCA Xtreme Bulls event earlier in the day, and he left the AT&T Center with a combined $34,987 between the two events.

For tie-down roper Justin Maass, a 7.4-second run in the final preliminary round pushed him to the semifinals, and he only picked up steam from there. After earning checks in each of his two semifinal runs, another 7.4-second run edged reigning World Champion Tuf Cooper by four-tenths of a second and brought Maass his first San Antonio title.

In a tough bareback riding competition, the top four cowboys were separated by just two points. Steven Dent and Will Lowe each put up 88-point rides in the short round to win matching $10,889 checks, but Dent won the rodeo based on his total earnings in San Antonio ($17,030).

The steer wrestling was another hotly contested race, with Ethen Thouvenell edging Shane Henderson and six-time Linderman Award winner Kyle Whitaker by a tenth of a second. Thouvenell, who qualified for his first Wrangler National Finals Rodeo in 2010, hopes to use the $17,112 from San Antonio to help him make a return trip to Las Vegas.

Another cowboy hoping to get back to Sin City is saddle bronc rider Chet Johnson. The Sheridan, Wyo., cowboy was the second-highest money winner at the San Antonio Rodeo with $19,077, and he put an exclamation point on it with his 86-point ride on Calgary Stampede’s Knight Rocket. It is the 2009 Canadian champion’s first win in San Antonio.

Angie Meadors won the barrel racing with a time of 13.87 seconds and left San Antonio with $18,340 in total earnings.


2. Cousins collect big checks in San Angelo


SAN ANGELO, Texas – Tate and Dakota Kirchenschlager entered the finals of the San Angelo Rodeo in a tie for third place in the average, but on Saturday afternoon the pair of cousins vaulted themselves to the top spot.


The Texas team ropers posted a time of 4.8 seconds in the finals, which was good enough for second – behind Clay Tryan and Travis Graves (4.7) – earning each $1,434.


But the run resulted in more than just a second-place check; it also gave them the average title by six-tenths of a second over Tryan and Graves. The resulting payoff for the average title was $5,479 for each of the cousins.


“We just wanted to go out and rope our way,” Dakota said. “Tate heads really well and he gets the rope on them as soon as he gets out there. This win helps our confidence a lot, but we know it’s a long road ahead of us and one big win doesn’t get you anywhere.”


Tate was happy with the haul the pair earned on Saturday, and says it will help to have a big check in their pockets.


“This will give us some money to go down the road with, which is nice,” Tate said. “It’s a big step for us heading forward.”


The other winners at San Angelo were bareback rider Wes Stevenson (170 points on two head), steer wrestler Olin Hannum (15.1 seconds on four head), saddle bronc rider Wade Sundell (174 points on two head), tie-down roper Cory Solomon (35.7 seconds on four head), barrel racer Brittany Pozzi (44.32 seconds on three runs) and bull rider Nevada Newman (89 points).


3. Lowe beats star-studded field for Tucson title


TUCSON, Ariz. – Will Lowe is an accomplished, three-time bareback riding world champion, but days like Sunday have to make him smile a little wider.


Lowe beat out a field that included many of the event’s biggest names, winning the finals with an 89-point ride on Beutler & Son Rodeo’s Hollywood Hills, and netting $1,650.


As a result, Lowe, who took second place in the first round with an 85, took home the average title with a score of 174 points on two head. His average score was five points better than Kaycee Feild and Tilden Hooper, who tied for second.


“I just had a better day than those other guys did,” Lowe said. “You really never know what’s going to happen in this event and it’s like the movie Any Given Sunday, where any of us can go out and win it.”


Lowe, who also tied for the win in the short round at San Antonio, hauled in a total of $8,305 in Tucson alone.


“I was fortunate to be on top today and I just think the quality of bareback riders is extremely high and it’s a great event to compete in,” he said.


Other winners in Tucson included steer wrestler Ethan Thouvenell (19.0 seconds on three head), team ropers Erich Rogers and Kory Koontz (21.3 seconds on three head), saddle bronc rider Wade Sundell (172 points on two head), tie-down roper Ryan Jarrett (45.3 seconds on four head), barrel racer Reiney Hatch (52.53 seconds on three runs) and bull rider Cody Samora (90 points on one head).


4. Asay’s comeback gets a jolt at San Antonio Xtreme Bulls


SAN ANTONIO – To say that Kanin Asay dominated the highest-paying Xtreme Bulls in the event’s history in San Antonio on Saturday just might be an understatement.

The Powell, Wyo., resident didn’t just win the championship, he won both rounds along the way. He started by winning the first round with an 89-point effort on Classic Pro Rodeo’s White Liar, which earned him the first-place check of $8,789 and the top qualifying spot in the final round.

In the finals, he drew a familiar bull, D & H Cattle Company’s Lil Moody. Asay had the bull in the third round of the first bracket in the rodeo and rode him for 83 points.

“I was pretty excited to get on him again,” Asay said. “He had exactly the same trip today as he did before. I had to focus and just ride him jump for jump.”

The judges liked Saturday’s performance better and gave Asay 91 points. He was one of only two riders to last eight seconds in the finals and earned the championship with a total score of 180 points. That was worth $28,704 of the $100,000 purse.

Asay spent most of 2011 at home after having hip surgery last June. Before he got on his first bull on New Year’s Eve, he started riding horses bareback to regain his balance and get in shape.


While he was unable to compete, like many other injured rodeo contestants, he relied on the Justin Cowboy Crisis Fund to help pay his living expenses. He and his wife, Sydney, have a 5-month-old son named Kasen.

“If it wasn’t for the Justin Cowboy Crisis Fund, I wouldn’t be here right now,” he said. “I’d be working and taking care of my family. God has allowed great people to donate to the fund, and it’s helped me personally, as well as many of my friends.”

Finishing second behind Asay was Cody Teel. He had a total of 161 points to win $18,612.

Three-time world champion J.W. Harris from Mullin, Texas, was third with an 87.5-point finish from the first round of competition on Classic Pro Rodeo’s Casino. Harris earned $14,476, which will certainly help him in a quest for a Wrangler National Finals Rodeo qualification as he is expected to miss the next four months of competition. Harris was treated on-site by the Justin Sportsmedicine Team and is scheduled to have knee surgery Feb. 29.


5. Tierney beats strong field at San Antonio steer roping


SAN ANTONIO – Fifty of the best steer ropers in the world squared off at the San Antonio Stock Show & Rodeo on Feb. 26 to do battle over shares of the biggest steer roping payoff of the regular season.


Jess Tierney, a 29-year-old all-around cowboy from Hermosa, S.D., emerged the champion of the 2012 event, winning the three-head average and a pretty grand total of $13,551 in 34.9 seconds.

Riding his good friend C.A. Lauer’s horse, Tierney was the model of consistency. An 11.8-second run earned him a seventh-place check for $1,382 in the first go-round, which was won by Kim Ziegelgruber, who turned in a 10.8-second run.


An 11.4-second run was one-tenth of a second too long to place in the second round – which defending champion Trevor Brazile claimed by recording the fastest run of the day at 9.1 seconds – but put Tierney in the lead on two head going into the final round.

Roping last in the final round of 18 ropers – which included Hall of Famers Roy Cooper and Guy Allen, as well as all three of the steer roping members of the Fisher family, Dan and sons Vin and J. Tom – Tierney needed a 12.3-second time to secure the victory.

He made a solid 11.7-second run to split fifth- and sixth-place money with Brazile in the round and finish seven-tenths of a second in front of Ziegelgruber to win the average. The final-round first-place check went to Cody Lee of Gatesville, Texas, with a time of 9.8 seconds.

Tierney, who qualified for his first Clem McSpadden National Finals Steer Roping in 2011, had been focusing his efforts on team roping in 2012, but admitted the win might have him re-evaluating his plans.

“This is such a great rodeo. I’ve always wanted to win San Antonio, and I got a chance today,” Tierney said. “I haven’t been steer roping as much so far this year. I just planned to enter San Antonio and a few of the other good ones. I’ve got a real good team roping partner, Jace Crabb, and I’ve been focusing more on that event. I might have to enter a few more rodeos in the steer roping now.

“San Antonio has a way of changing a lot of guys’ minds about their plans for the year. A good buddy of mine, C.A. Lauer, let me borrow his good horse (“Shep”, the 2007 PRCA/American Quarter Horse Association Steer Roping Horse of the Year) to come down here. He’s just an awesome horse, and I just can’t say enough about C.A. and Buster Record. I lived up there in Oklahoma with them for a while, and they’ve been really good to me.”


6. Other weekend highlights


From Sinton, Texas:


• Trevor Brazile and wife Shada both came out winners at the San Patricio County Pro Rodeo. Trevor took the average in the steer roping with a time of 36.6 seconds on three head, while Shada won the barrel racing with a time of 17.32 seconds.


• Other champions from Sinton were all-around cowboy Bobby Joe Hill, bareback rider Ethan Crouch, steer wrestler Michael Stanley, team ropers Bobby Joe Hill and Rusty Barnett, saddle bronc rider Rhys Angland, tie-down roper Tyler Prcin and bull rider Matthew Hernandez.


From Perry, Ga.:


• Justin Thigpen won the tie-down roping and placed third in the steer wrestling to take home all-around cowboy honors and a total of $2,012.


• Visit www.prorodeo.com for complete results of all PRCA-sanctioned rodeos.

Saturday, February 18, 2012

AAEP Biosecurity Guidelines to Reduce Risk of Infectious Disease Transmission during Breeding Season

AAEP Biosecurity Guidelines to Reduce Risk of Infectious Disease Transmission during Breeding Season:

The American Association of Equine Practitioners urges those involved in the breeding management of mares and stallions to reduce the risk of venereally transmitted diseases by utilizing the association’s “Biosecurity Guidelines for Control of Venereally Transmitted Diseases.” Developed in 2011 by the AAEP Infectious Disease Committee, the guidelines focus on controlling the transmission of equine arteritis virus (EAV), contagious equine metritis (CEM), and equine herpesvirus-3 (EHV-3).


Whether horses are part of a natural breeding program or an artificial insemination program, EAV, CEM and EHV-3 are highly contagious and have been shown to be transmittable between animals by direct horse-to-horse contact, contaminated semen, and also by indirect contact through the use of contaminated equipment and the personnel participating in the semen-collection process.


The guidelines provide recommendations for developing a biosecurity program for horses at a breeding facility, including the pre-breeding care of stallions and mares and protocols for natural breeding and artificial insemination.


“The horse industry has experienced a number of serious infectious diseases over the last four years, including an outbreak of contagious equine metritis (CEM),” said Linda Mittel, DVM, MSPH, Infectious Disease Committee chairperson for the AAEP. “CEM reemerged in late 2008 after being considered eradicated and was a devastating infection for the breeding industry, causing infertility, repeat breedings, as well as trade sanctions for semen and the shipping of horses. Biosecurity procedures are essential for all breeding activities in order to prevent future outbreaks.”


The biosecurity guidelines, along with the AAEP vaccination guidelines, are available at http://www.aaep.org/images/files/BioGuidelinesContofVenTransDis.pdf.


The American Association of Equine Practitioners, headquartered in Lexington, Ky., was founded in 1954 as a non-profit organization dedicated to the health and welfare of the horse. Currently, the AAEP reaches more than 5 million horse owners through its nearly 10,000 members worldwide and is actively involved in ethics issues, practice management, research and continuing education in the equine veterinary profession and horse industry.





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2012 Battle In The Saddle Will Feature Cutting, Roping, Cowboy Mounted Shooting, Barrels, Working Cow, and More

2012 Battle In The Saddle Will Feature Cutting, Roping, Cowboy Mounted Shooting, Barrels, Working Cow, and More:

Heralded as the great American western horse showdown, Battle in the Saddle, July 3-8 in Oklahoma City, is sure to not disappoint. The 2012 event will feature versatility ranch horse competition, cutting, roping, cowboy mounted shooting, barrel racing, working cow horse, ranch sorting and a ranch remuda challenge.


Battle in the Saddle will also play host to the 2012 Merial Ranch Sorting National Championships National Finals. AQHA welcomed the Ranch Sorting National Championships as its new alliance partner. RSNC members who compete on American Quarter Horses have the chance to earn points and qualify for both an AQHA world championship show and the RSNC National Finals during the same class.


Battle in the Saddle is owned by Oklahoma State Fair and managed by the American Quarter Horse Association. All breeds are welcome, but American Quarter Horses competing will receive AQHA points.


Last year’s Battle in the Saddle featured more than $130,000 in added money and an estimated $300,000 in purses. This year’s event will once again be featured on RFD-TV.


Be sure get the latest updates on www.battleinthesaddle.com and the Battle in the Saddle Facebook page.





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No Need to Deworm Mares at Foaling Time

No Need to Deworm Mares at Foaling Time:

By Heather Thomas


Many breeders routinely deworm mares at foaling time, to prevent spread of threadworms (Strongyloides westeri) to newborn foals through the milk. Current thinking, however, is that this deworming is unnecessary and may lead to drug resistance in other types of worms.


Dr. Martin Nielsen (Gluck Equine Research Center, University of Kentucky) says there is some debate whether to treat mares before they foal (and when, and with what) or if it’s better to treat the foal within the first days of life, or even to treat them at all for threadworms.


“We don’t have much evidence that this parasite is very pathogenic. We sometimes see eggs in the feces during the first 2 weeks of life, and foals tend to have diarrhea (often called foal heat diarrhea) but this has turned out to be multi-factorial,” he says. We don’t know how much affect threadworms have, and no studies have evaluated whether it is efficacious to treat the mare.


“Whether or not you treat the mare just before foaling may depend on when she was last treated. If she’s on a good deworming program already, and was treated within the last 2 months, she probably doesn’t need another treatment just prior to labor. If you do treat the mare, you must use a drug with efficacy against migrating stages of threadworms. Don’t use one that only works on parasites within the GI tract. The stages we need to target are in the tissues hiding, waiting to migrate to the mammary gland and into the milk,” he says.


Dr. Craig Reinemeyer (East Tennessee Research, Inc.) says treatments for threadworms usually aren’t necessary, since this parasite is only occasionally pathogenic. “You won’t lose a foal from this parasite. It’s also very easy to treat if we diagnose a foal with a problem.”


He recommends just treating the occasional foal that shows symptoms–and not worry about treating every mare at foaling time, or every foal. “Even if fecal samples from the foal tell you the worm is present doesn’t mean we have to kill it. Foals develop complete immunity to threadworms by the time they are 5 to 6 months old. You never see eggs from these worms in feces of an adult horse; these worms are only passed through the mare’s milk. They are just sitting in the mammary tissue, waiting to be called into action by the hormones of pregnancy and lactation,” he explains.


“These early dewormings merely expose other worms, especially ascarids, to sub-optimal doses (not high enough levels to kill them) of whatever dewormer we were using for threadworms. As a result, the non-targeted parasites have been developing resistance to these drugs. Any time you treat a foal with ivermectin or moxidectin you are treating every worm inside that horse—wherever it might be in the body. That’s not the case when using Panacur at the single one-day dose, or Strongid (a pyrantel product which does not leave the gut). A worm migrating through the lungs or liver will not have much exposure to that drug,” he explains.


“What we’ve done, over time, with our deworming methods, has helped to rapidly select for resistant worms that are no longer susceptible to ivermectin and moxidectin—in these young horses,” says Reinemeyer.


Dr. Ray Kaplan, University of Georgia, says deworming mares at foaling time is totally unnecessary. “Threadworms are a non-issue today. I haven’t heard of a case of threadworm disease for a long time. Treatment at foaling was specifically to control this one particular parasite. Even in the rare situation where a foal might have a problem, threadworms can be treated—and also controlled through management. You only have this problem in a wet, dirty environment,” he says.


Threadworm infection causes temporary diarrhea in young foals and is easily treatable. Deworming mares at foaling time is unnecessary if they are on a good parasite control program, checking egg counts on the mares—to know that their parasites are under control. “If you are doing that, there is no need to give an extra treatment at foaling,” says Kaplan.





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West Nile Virus Mosquito Vector Found in UK After 60 Years

West Nile Virus Mosquito Vector Found in UK After 60 Years:

The British Equine Veterinary Association has released a statement on their website stating that a species of mosquito suspected of transmitting West Nile Virus has been discovered in the UK. This is notable because West Nile Virus has never been found in the UK, and this specific type of mosquito has not been seen in the UK since 1945.


West Nile virus outbreaks in horses, other animals, and humans have been reported in the U.S., Africa, Asia, and even France, but researchers are still unsure as to how this type of mosquito entered the UK region.


It is suspected that accidental transportation by way of an international shipping terminal was the cause.


Click here to read the entire statement.





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Early Colostrum Ingestion

Early Colostrum Ingestion:

By Heather Thomas


It’s very important for every newborn foal to ingest an adequate amount of colostrum very soon after birth. John Madigan, DVM (University of California, Davis) says the amount of colostrum a foal has ingested can be quantified with an IgG test to know if the foal has obtained adequate antibodies.


Several years ago he started recommending hand feeding colostrum before the foal gets up. “During the process of seeking the udder, foals can acquire bacteria that go into the intestinal tract and cross the open gut,” says Madigan. The intestinal lining is permeable for a short time, to allow the large molecules of antibodies in colostrum to slip through into the bloodstream and lymph system, but this also enables bacteria to slip through.


“On a farm where we experienced a large salmonella outbreak, we began this process of getting colostrum into the foals before they nurse the mare, along with washing the mare down and having a clean udder before the foal nurses. Once the udder is cleaned up, we milk the mare (obtaining 4 to 8 ounces of colostrum),” he says.


He recommends use of the Udderly EZ mare milker, a hand-held, trigger operated pump with bottle attached. This makes the milking much easier, faster, and safer and it’s less irritating to the mare than using your fingers because there is no friction on the teat. The bottle can be filled within seconds, and then it can be detached from the pump, a nipple put on it, and the colostrum fed to the foal.


“While the foal is still lying there, and starting tongue movement and suck reflex, we feed him from a bottle. We found that these foals take a bottle very readily, before they stand up.” Once they’ve tried to stand up, they may not be as cooperative–they are focused so strongly on getting up and going to the mare. But the suckle reflex is very strong right after birth and foals will readily suck a bottle that is offered, before they get up.


This will not confuse them nor prevent them from going ahead in their urge to find the udder. “They don’t know where that milk came from; it merely stimulates them to want to get up and look for more. So this was part of our treatment in prevention strategy, to protect the foal from early infection with salmonella, and it was very effective.”


When a foal is born, it’s a race between the pathogens and the antibodies. This simple technique gets colostrum into the gut ahead of the bacteria. It stimulates systemic immunity and gives local coating of the gut, providing antibodies to combat pathogens that are ingested during udder seeking.


If the “good guys” (antibodies in colostrum) get to the gut first, they close the door, so to speak, to pathogenic organisms that might cause disease, preventing penetration of the intestinal lining by bacteria and their toxins. “Research in other species has shown that absorption of antibodies from colostrum inhibits bacterial translocation. The colostrum provides a local antibody, IgA, which is present in the gut (in addition to the IgG molecules that go through into the bloodstream). The IgA stays in the gut to give protection. There is enough evidence to infer that colostrum prevents and reduces bacterial translocation in foals as well,” says Madigan.


A number of circumstances, however, can delay a foal in getting the colostrum quickly, or he may lick the ground or contaminated objects before he actually nurses. “If the foal is weak or becomes chilled, or the mare has a sore and tender udder–anything that delays the first nursing–this can interfere with protection. If a foal is slow to find the udder, he’s hungry and may be licking on anything, and more at risk for bacterial translocation. If you can get some colostrum into the foal soon after birth, he’ll be off to a healthier start.”





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  1. Australian Study Examines Effectiveness of Stored Colostrum For At-risk Foals
  2. Septicemia in Newborn Foals
  3. Attending The Newborn Foal

NCHA Invites All Members to Participate in Important Survey

NCHA Invites All Members to Participate in Important Survey:

The National Cutting Horse Association is asking all of its members to participate in an online survey that will ask questions about your involvement with horses, and more specifically, programs and services offered by NCHA.


If you would like to fill out the survey, click here.


You will be asked to include your NCHA membership ID. If you do not have your ID on hand, you can contact NCHA at (817) 244-6188.





Related posts:

  1. Once-in-a-Lifetime Event, NCHA Futurity Champions’ Cup, Invites All Living Past Champions to Participate, Buster Welch Among Riders
  2. NRHA Membership Survey
  3. Seeking Australian Horse Owners For Survey on the Hendra Virus

Recombinant Hormones Make Mares Cycle in Winter (AAEP 2011)

Recombinant Hormones Make Mares Cycle in Winter (AAEP 2011): Researchers reported good success with inducing follicle development and subsequent ovulation in deep anestrus mares (the stage they're generally in midwinter) using recombinant equine follicle-stimulating hormones (reFSH)....

Kit Kat Sugar, Pete Branch Win Bonanza 4-Year-Old Open; Jewel Bars Cat, Ronnie Rice Second

Kit Kat Sugar, Pete Branch Win Bonanza 4-Year-Old Open; Jewel Bars Cat, Ronnie Rice Second:
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Pete Branch and Ronnie Rice


Stallion Kit Kat Sugar and trainer Pete Branch, 58, Farwell, Texas, who made finals at their first two shows in Fort Worth and Abilene, Texas, marked a 223 in Thursday’s 4-Year-Old Open finals at the Bonanza Cutting in Glen Rose, Texas, to earn $27,991.

Houston Track Off to Vast Improvement Over Recent Years With New Ownership

Houston Track Off to Vast Improvement Over Recent Years With New Ownership:

SAM HOUSTON RACE PARK OFF TO BIG START


Park Boasts 24% Increase in Handle at Meet’s Midpoint


HOUSTON, (SHRP) – Sam Houston Race Park officials are pleased with both the numbers and enthusiasm from racing fans as the 2012 Thoroughbred meet enters its fifth week. Since opening night on Friday, January 20 when 12,856 fans were on hand for the first night of Texas Champions Weekend, the Park has seen significant gains in both attendance and handle.


Live racing takes place each Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday; all have had solid handle numbers with an average of $1,405,902 bet per card by patrons on track and simulcast players across the country. Through the first four weeks of the meet, the total handle is up $4.1 million, which represents an increase of 24% overall. The increases are not just on the host handle (or money bet from tracks and simulcast facilities). On-track average handle is up 33% from the same time period last year. Monday afternoon racing which began in 2010 also continues to surpass expectations. Total handle has averaged more than $1.5 million each Monday with a high of $1,790,127 on February 6, 2012.


Friday and Saturday attendance has currently welcomed more than 20,000 additional visitors compared to Friday and Saturday attendance in 2011. The increase in attendance has also had a positive impact on food and beverage sales. The Park has sold over 30,000 beers on Friday nights, up 74% from 2011; total concession sales are up 70% from last year and the Winner’s Circle restaurant is presently tracking 24% better than in 2011.


Purses are also up averaging $164,000 each day, versus $160,000 last year, the largest in the track’s 18 year history. Every Saturday night, at least one stakes race of $50,000 or higher, is on the card, and many nationally prominent horses have shipped in for the featured events. This weekend’s card features two of the meet’s largest races as a part of the Texas Stallions Series.


Field size is another positive indicator of the eight week meet. The Park is currently averaging 8.8 starters per race. This represents a 5% increase from 2011, and has resulted in some excellent exotic payouts, in particular for the Houston Hi-Five, which made its debut this meet. Offered on the fifth and last race of the card, the Houston Hi-Five boasts a carryover if there are no winning tickets.


“We are absolutely thrilled about our start,” said Andrea Young, Sam Houston Race Park’s President. “The support of the horsemen and our fans has been incredible. We are optimistic that the energy will continue over the last few weeks of the meet.”


The 2012 Thoroughbred meet continues through Monday, March 12, with post times set for Friday and Saturday (7 p.m.), Sunday (5 p.m.) and Monday (1 p.m.). The meet will feature special events including Ladies Night on February 25, The $150,000 MAXXAM Gold Cup on March 3 and Camel & Ostrich Races on March 10. The park will also host a 27-day Quarter Horse Meet from March 22 – May 19.


Sam Houston Race Park is Houston’s premier racing and entertainment facility, located just 15 minutes from downtown Houston, and offers a variety of attractions including 19 luxury suites overlooking the race track, The Pavilion Centre, and award-winning dining options at the Winner’s Circle Restaurant and the Champion Energy Services Jockey Club. Sam Houston Race Park Platinum Partners include Bud Light and Champion Energy Services. For more information on upcoming shows, events and tickets, please visit www.shrp.com.



Texas Stallion Stakes Set for Saturday Night


The third leg of the Texas Stallion Stakes Series will be run at Sam Houston Race Park on Saturday, February 18, 2012. The $100,000 Jim’s Orbit and the $100,000 Two Altazano are races supported by the Texas Thoroughbred Association (TTA) for progeny of nominated Texas stallions. The Texas Stallion Stakes Series (TSSS) is a series run at each of the racetracks in Texas: Sam Houston Race Park, Retama Park and Lone Star Park.


In 2005, the TTA renamed each of the Texas Stallion Stakes races to honor a famous Texas Thoroughbred. The colts and gelding division at Sam Houston Race Park has been named for Jim’s Orbit, who won the Grade 2 Ohio Derby and started in the 1988 Kentucky Derby. The fillies division is a tribute to Two Altazano, winner of the Grade 1 Coaching Club American Oaks in 1994. The accomplished mare, owned by the late Harold V. Goodman, was inducted into the Texas Horse Racing Hall of Fame in 2003.


The draw took place on Wednesday, February 15 for both stakes, which will each be contested at one mile on the main track.


The $100,000 Two Altazano Stakes will feature the top three fillies in the $50,000 Bara Lass Stakes, which took place on January 20 at Sam Houston Race Park.


Cowgirl N Up prevailed by a neck over Nothinbettertodo and Color Code in the seven furlong Bara Lass. Cowgirl N Up is owned and trained by Caroline Dodwell and drew post position four; Larry Taylor will ride the gray daughter of My Golden Song.


Color Code, owned by Will S. Farish, is trained by Steve Asmussen, as is Miss Lederhosen. Owned by Littlebrother Farm LLC, Miss Lederhosen, a daughter of top Texas sire, Valid Expectations, won the Texas Stallion Stakes on July 9 at Lone Star Park.


Trainer Bret Calhoun looks for a good effort on Saturday evening from Nothinbettertodo, who is one of the few contenders to have competed at a mile.


“She ran one of her best races in the Bara Lass,” said Calhoun. “That inside post was tough and forced her hand. She drew a little better in this stakes and should have more options.”


Jockey Cliff Berry reunites with Nothinbettertodo and Jesse Campbell will pilot the other Calhoun filly, Shewantsaprenup.



Seven colts and geldings will square off in the $100,000 Jim’s Orbit and Calhoun has one of the top contenders in Sword Trick. Owned by Clarence Scharbaurer, Jr., Sword Trick won the $50,000 Groovy Stakes on Texas Champions Day weekend and was honored as the Texas Thoroughbred Association’s 2-year-old champion.


“He’s been thriving all summer and in the Groovy, he showed that he is learning to relax and rate,” said Calhoun.


This will be the first attempt at a mile for the gelded son of Early Flyer, but Calhoun feels the added ground will not be an issue.


“In my mind, if a horse can run well at seven-eighths of a mile, the flat mile is not out of the question,” stated Calhoun.



Asmussen won the Jersey Lilly and Champion Energy Stakes at Sam Houston Race Park and is also well-represented in the Jim’s Orbit with the entry of Boca Bay and Patchwork. Boca Bay, owned by Farish, is the more experienced of the two colts with eight previous lifetime starts. Patchwork, also sired by Too Much Bling, broke his maiden at first asking at Sam Houston on February 10. Jermaine Bridgmohan will ride Boca Bay, who drew the rail and Roman Chapa has the return call on Patchwork.


Trainer Danny Pish won the Two Altazano last year with Going Away Baby, owned by George A. Wolff. While he does not have a filly for the Two Altazano, he will saddle At Full Pelt, who he owns in partnership with Delwin and Seleta Lovell. The son of a son of Captain Countdown is making just his fourth career start, but broke his maiden impressively here on January 30. Jockey Chris Landeros has the call.


“This is a really nice crop of 3-year-olds,” said David Hooper, executive director of the Texas Thoroughbred Association. “We appreciate the support of each of the Texas racetracks in keeping this series alive and maintaining the purse level of $100,000 for these stakes.”


The $100.000 Two Altazano Stakes will run as the eighth race followed by the $100,000 Jim’s Orbit as race 9 on the Saturday evening card.



Monday’s Muddy Mania at Sam Houston Race Park


Racing on Monday, February 13 took place on a day in which heavy rains hit the Houston area and the track was rendered muddy. Other than the turf races being switched to the main track, the ten races took place on time and with no mishaps.


However, racing on an off-track presents its share of challenges, maybe not so much for the racehorses, but certainly, the human connections involved. Bathing the mud-streaked horses takes twice as much time for the grooms and of course, the jockeys have to make adjustments by wearing rain pants and donning extra goggles when they ride on the slop.


Jockey Jeffery Burningham won the 5th race on Monday aboard Cowgirl Cool for owner/ trainer Ronald Kotara. The 7-year-old mare rallied from the back of the ten-horse field, passing horses as she turned for home, and drawing off by three-lengths in the one-mile event. Both Cowgirl Cool and her rider were caked in mud as they galloped back to the winner’s circle.


“It was splashing up pretty good, but didn’t bother me at all,” said Burningham. “You just know you are going to get dirty. I would rather ride in the cold and mud than in the heat.”


He made three goggle changes during the race and credits practice during morning works as quite a bit of dexterity is involved in flipping the muddy goggles.


Some of the most affected workers are the valets, who have the arduous chore of washing the jockey boots, pants, silks and head gear as well as their saddles. Rick Pomposelli, a longtime valet at Sam Houston Race Park, explains that many steps are required to clean the equipment and prevent staining of the clothing.


“You have to clean the leather carefully and pre-treat clothing for stains before washing, which always takes twice the time,” said Pomposelli. “Rainy days are part of racing, but they are a valet’s nightmare.”


Trainer, Jockey and Owner Standings


The first four weeks of the 2012 Sam Houston Race Park Thoroughbred meeting have been completed and Karl Broberg remains in sole possession of first place with wins from 15 of his 50 starters. Steve Asmussen added another stakes win, sending out Great Mills in last Saturday’s $75,000 Champion Energy Services Stakes. He has ten wins and is tied for second with Joe Offolter, who won three races last week. Brent Davidson follows closely with six top finishes and Mindy Willis and Danny Pish are tied with five winners each.


Glen Murphy, who was the leading rider in the 2000 Sam Houston meet, added six wins last week and leads all riders with 22 trips to the winner’s circle. Apprentice Gerardo Mora is second with 18 wins. Larry Taylor is third with 14 victories and Chris Landeros, who gave Great Mills a very professional ride last Saturday, follows with 13 wins. Roman Chapa rounds out the top five with 12 victories to date.


In the owner standings, Steve Asmussen, who was honored as leading owner in 2005 and 2010, has four wins. Horses owned by Clarence Scharbauer, Jr., Monarch Thoroughbreds, LLC, Hall’s Family Trust, Pozo e Luna, Inc. and Ronald Kotara have each won three races this meet.


Gleam of Hope Nominated to the Maxxam Gold Cup


Gleam of Hope, a Grade 3 winner from the barn of Michael Stidham, has been nominated to the $150,000 Maxxam Gold Cup at Sam Houston Race Park. The mile and one-eighth handicap, set for Saturday, March 3, has a noted history of attracted top older horses.


Gleam of Hope, a 5-year-old Kentucky-bred, won the Grade 3, Jefferson Cup at Churchill Downs and was third in the Grade 3, River City Handicap last November, also at Churchill. He has won 5 of his 19 career starts and bankrolled $353,029 for owners Terry Hamilton and Robert W. Morgan.


“He is nominated to the Maxxam, but we are also considering the Mineshaft Handicap (on February 25) at Fair Grounds,” said Stidham from his New Orleans base. “We gelded him after his race at Arlington Park (August 28). Since then, he has become a more consistent racehorse.”


Mary Rampellini of the Daily Racing Form wrote last week that Alternation, owned by Pin Oak Stable and trained by Donnie Von Hemel, is pointing to the Maxxam. The 4-year-old son of Distorted Humor just eclipsed the $400,000 mark with his definitive score in the $100,000 Essex Handicap at Oaklawn Park on February 4.


Coyote Legend, winner of the $100,000 Star of Texas Stakes on Texas Champions Weekend at Sam Houston Race Park, also a possible Maxxam starter, according to his trainer, Bret Calhoun.


Last year’s champion was Z Humor, a 6-year-old son of Distorted Humor, trained by Steve Asmussen for Zayat Stables LLC. He is now standing stud at the Haras Urama in Venezuela.


Nominations for the Maxxam Gold Cup close on Wednesday, February 22.


Fans Encouraged to Name Rachel Alexandra’s Colt


The long-awaited first offspring of 2009 Horse of the Year Rachel Alexandra was born on January 22. Her owners, Barbara Banke and Harold McCormick, are asking racing fans to submit names for the colt, whose sire is Curlin, 2007 and 2008 Horse of the Year.


Fans should submit their name suggestion to either www.stonestreetfarms.com or VisitRachelA@Stonestreetfarms.com by midnight (EST) on February 19. If a suggested name is chosen, Stonestreet will host the winning fan and a guest for an overnight stay in the guesthouse at Stonestreet with a private tour of the farm and visit with Rachel Alexandra and her colt.

Texas A&M Researchers Unlock Quarter Horse Genome

Texas A&M Researchers Unlock Quarter Horse Genome:

COLLEGE STATION, TX, (TAMU) – A truly American horse breed, the American Quarter Horse first came to being in the early colonial era in America. And in a study recently reported in the journal, BMC Genomics, researchers at Texas A&M University’s College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences (CVM), working with collaborators in the Texas A&M College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and the AgriLife Genomics and Bioinformatics Center, have sequenced the first Quarter Horse genome – unlocking the secrets of what makes this breed so unique.


Genome sequencing is not a new science, but advances in sequencing technology, often referred to as next-generation sequencing, have made it easier and cheaper to sequence the genome of an individual, which can then be analyzed for clues causing genetic disorders and distinctive traits. The Texas A&M Quarter Horse is the first horse to be sequenced using next-generation sequencing technology.


“Genome sequencing aids our study of normal and abnormal genetic variation,” said Dr. Scott Dindot, Assistant Professor in the Department of Veterinary Pathobiology at the CVM. “This project is important because it is a start towards understanding what genetic factors make breeds unique, and what mutations may play a role in presenting or diagnosing disease.”


Dr. Noah Cohen, Professor in the Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences in the CVM and collaborator in the study, underscored the importance of the role genetic variation plays in the disease process.


“This study represents a valuable contribution to our understanding of genetic variation in horses,” said Cohen, “including efforts to study the relationship between genetic variation and susceptibility to important diseases in Quarter Horses and other breeds.”


The first horse genome to be sequenced and assembled, a Thoroughbred mare, was completed by a large international consortium. This reference assembly was used to map the Quarter Horse genome and to identify differences in genetic information between the two horses. The sequence data from the project has been made available publicly for researchers interested in equine genetics.


“The horse used in the study, a mare named Sugar, is the descendant of key foundation sires in the Quarter Horse breed,” added Dindot. “We were able to identify several genetic variants in this mare, both good and bad, known to be common among Quarter Horses. Results from this study have increased our knowledge of genetic variation in horses three- to four-fold, and proved that through collaborations such as this, we can one day apply this state-of-the-art technology to identify and possibly to manage genetic disorders not only in horses, but also in other species.”


The genome sequence of a Quarter Horse has a the potential to have a tremendous impact on the equine industry, as the American Quarter Horse Association represents the largest breed registry in the United States. The information from this study may lead to improvements in performance in horses, and facilitate the management of health of horses everywhere.


“Many diseases and ‘syndromes’ are the result of genetic variation,” said Dr. Jason Sawyer, Texas AgriLife Research scientist and Associate Professor of animal science. “Perhaps more importantly, the ability to combat infectious diseases may be greatly impacted by the underlying genome and the variation that arises during recombination. This study has identified areas of variation that may play a role in the health and disease resistance of horses. While more research must be done to specifically identify desirable and beneficial variants, this study has set the stage to enable those future studies.”


Funding for the study was provided by the G. Willard and Ginger Pool Equine Teaching and Research Endowment, the Link Equine Research Endowment, Texas A&M AgriLife Research, Texas A&M Department of Animal Science, and the Department of Veterinary Pathobiology at the CVM.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Quarantine on N.C. Horse Facility Lifted This Week After Isolation of First EHV-1 Case in the State

Quarantine on N.C. Horse Facility Lifted This Week After Isolation of First EHV-1 Case in the State:

State veterinary officials lifted a month-long quarantine on a Rockingham County horse stable this week after no more horses exhibited symptoms of equine herpesvirus, EHV-1. In early January, a horse from the stable was taken to the College of Veterinary Medicine at N.C. State University and tests confirmed it had EHV-1. The horse was quarantined to the equine isolation unit of the hospital. It did recover from the virus.


The N.C. Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Veterinary Division acted quickly to prevent the spread of this disease even before the virus was confirmed. NCDA&CS field veterinarians and animal technicians immediately started working with the stable owner to identify other horses that could have had contact with the ill horse. Once they received notice of a positive test result, veterinary field staff put quarantines on six other stables and notified owners of what symptoms to watch for. No other horses exhibited symptoms on those farms.


“It is a testament to our preparedness activities and the cooperation that we received from the College of Veterinary Medicine that we were able to respond so quickly to this virus,” said State Veterinarian David Marshall. “This is a highly contagious virus, and cooperation from all parties was the key to ensuring that it didn’t spread any further.”


North Carolina has an active horse community and highly active horse facilities. EHV-1 has been detected in many states, but this was the first time the highly contagious virus was confirmed in North Carolina. The virus poses no threat to humans.





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  1. EHV-1 Confirmed in N.C. Horse Yesterday
  2. N.C. State Vet College to Host Horseman’s Youth Day
  3. Equine Quarantine Facility Ready For WEG Athletes

Portion of Purchases from Select Pfizer Equine and Cattle Products, Until April 30th, Go to Support Students

Portion of Purchases from Select Pfizer Equine and Cattle Products, Until April 30th, Go to Support Students:

Pfizer Animal Health announces the return of the FFA and American Association of Bovine Practitioners (AABP) Foundation Support Program and the addition of the American Association of Equine Practitioners (AAEP) Foundation Support Program. Since its inception in 2008, Pfizer Animal Health and its customers have contributed more than $3.6 million to local FFA chapters and veterinary student scholarship funds.


A portion of purchases from qualified Pfizer Animal Health cattle and equine products made between Feb. 1 and April 30, 2012, will be donated on behalf of local veterinarians and animal health suppliers to the local FFA chapter(s) of their choice, the AABP Foundation – Pfizer Animal Health Veterinary Student Scholarship Fund or the AAEP Foundation.


“Connecting FFA members with their local veterinarians is incredibly valuable in educating them about the animal health industry,” says Lori Randle, regional director, National FFA Foundation. “This program also provides local FFA chapters with funds for traveling to educational and leadership seminars. This has been an excellent program, and we look forward to continuing it.”


In previous years, more than 1,100 veterinarians, animal health suppliers and dealers across the country have participated in the FFA/AABP Foundation Support Program, which is part of Pfizer Animal Health’s Commitment to Veterinarians™, an initiative supporting veterinarians through training and education, research and development, and investment in the future of the veterinary profession.


“The AABP Foundation – Pfizer Animal Health Veterinary Student Scholarships will help ease some of the financial burdens recent graduates take with them into practice,” says M. Gatz Riddell Jr., DVM, executive vice president of AABP. “By targeting students with a proven interest in food animal practice, these scholarships allow more students to enter the field of their choice than ever before. These scholarships should also help address the need for more veterinarians in rural veterinary practice.”


John Mitchell, DVM, AAEP president says the addition of support for the AAEP Foundation will help deliver on the foundation’s core mission of improving opportunities for careers in equine medicine.


“Many new veterinarians face serious financial burdens from years of education,” Dr. Mitchell says. “In fact, this debt may unduly influence where they choose to practice and in what field. Providing scholarships to veterinary students helps ensure continued interest in equine veterinary practice.”


Support for the FFA as well as the AABP and AAEP Foundations helps promote the future of agriculture, states Julian Garcia, group director, U.S. Cattle and Equine Marketing, Pfizer Animal Health.


“Our support to all three organizations helps honor the assistance and encouragement many of our team members at Pfizer Animal Health received when they were students,” Garcia says. “Many of us at Pfizer Animal Health have been directly involved with these organizations, and now it’s our chance to work with our veterinary clinic, dealer and distributor partners to give back. In turn, we are supporting the next generation of our industry.”


For more information, or to enroll in the FFA/AABP/AAEP support program, call 866-611-2626, contact your local Pfizer Animal Health representative or visit www.pfizerperformancepays.com.


About Pfizer Animal Health


Pfizer Animal Health, a business of Pfizer Inc., is a world leader in discovering and developing innovative animal vaccines and prescription medicines, investing an estimated $300 million annually in animal health product research and development. For more information about how Pfizer Animal Health works to ensure a safe, sustainable global food supply from healthy livestock and poultry; or helps companion animals and horses to live longer, healthier lives, visit www.PfizerAH.com.


About National FFA Organization


The National FFA Organization is a national youth organization of 540,379 student members as part of 7,489 local FFA chapters in all 50 states, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. The FFA mission is to make a positive difference in the lives of students by developing their potential for premier leadership, personal growth and career success through agricultural education. The National FFA Organization operates under a federal charter granted by the 81st United States Congress and it is an integral part of public instruction in agriculture. The U.S. Department of Education provides leadership and helps set direction for FFA as a service to state and local agricultural education programs. For more, visit the National FFA Organization online (http://www.FFA.org), on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/nationalFFA), on Twitter (http://twitter.com/nationalFFA) and FFA Nation (http://FFAnation.FFA.org).


About American Association of Bovine Practitioners


The American Association of Bovine Practitioners (AABP), an international association of veterinarians organized to enhance the professional lives of its members through relevant continuing education that will improve the well-being of cattle and the economic success of their owners, increase awareness and promote leadership for issues critical to cattle industries, and improve opportunities for careers in bovine medicine.


About the AAEP Foundation


The AAEP Foundation, Inc. (www.aaepfoundation.org), a 501(c)(3) organization, was created in 1994 as the charitable arm of the American Association of Equine Practitioners. The AAEP Foundation’s mission is to improve the health and welfare of the horse through support of research, education, benevolence and the equine community. Since its inception, the Foundation has allocated more than $2.2 million to support its mission.





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TAHC: What is a CVI? Certificate of Veterinary Inspection is a document signed by a vet stating that an animal has been examined & is healthy

TAHC: What is a CVI? Certificate of Veterinary Inspection is a document signed by a vet stating that an animal has been examined & is healthy

Nasal Shedding of Equine Herpesvirus-1 from Horses in an Outbreak of Equine Herpes Myeloencephalopathy in Western Canada

Please note this is not information about a new outbreak, but publications from studies done during the outbreak of 2011. In this study, asymptomatic, afebrile horses shed the virus in their nasal passage for 9 days. It is important to understand EHV-1 to adequately protect your horses and your farms. This is a small piece of new information. Please vaccinate for EHV with a single antigen vaccine (that means not using a combo vaccine for your herpes protection). - Ben Buchanan

Nasal Shedding of Equine Herpesvirus-1 from Horses in an Outbreak of Equine Herpes Myeloencephalopathy in Western Canada:

Background

There is little information on the duration of nasal shedding of EHV-1 from horses with naturally occurring equine herpesvirus myeloencephalopathy (EHM).

Objectives

To evaluate the duration of nasal shedding of EHV-1 in horses affected by EHM.

Animals

One hundred and four horses naturally exposed to EHV-1, 20 of which had clinical signs of EHM.

Methods

All horses on affected premises were monitored. Those horses developing EHM were sampled in a longitudinal outbreak investigation. Nasal swabs were collected daily from 16 of 20 horses affected by EHM. A qPCR was performed on 98 of 246 nasal swab samples to determine nasal shedding duration. Historical and clinical information was analyzed to evaluate potential risk factors for developing EHM and duration of shedding during this outbreak.

Results

The last day shedding was detected in any horse was Disease Day 9. EHV-1 was detected in two-thirds of horses tested on Disease Days 0–3. The amount of EHV-1 DNA found in nasal swabs varied markedly and was not associated with disease severity or age. The odds of developing EHM were greater for febrile horses (OR = 20.3; 95% CI 3.4–390.3; P = .01) as well as for horses attending the riding clinic (OR = 4.1; 95% CI 0.84–21.65; P = .08).

Conclusions and Clinical Importance

Biosecurity measures should be implemented for a minimum of 14 days beyond the onset of clinical signs of EHM. Animal managers cannot rely on the severity of clinical signs to predict the duration of EHV-1 shedding.

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Why Do Horse Business Owners Everywhere Need to Know About Land Use Planning?

Why Do Horse Business Owners Everywhere Need to Know About Land Use Planning?:

While driving home from work, a horse owner notices bulldozers being unloaded in an empty field next to their picturesque mini-farm just outside city limits. A few frantic phone calls later, the truth is revealed: a strip mall is soon to be erected. Signs along the road announcing a proposed zoning change for the property had gone unnoticed, and neither the horse owner nor his peers had taken time to attend their town’s planning board meeting to voice an objection. Now it was too late.


Unfortunately, scenarios such as this are repeated on a daily basis across the United States. To help combat this trend and as part of a new public educational initiative, the Equine Land Conservation Resource (ELCR) will conduct the first in a series of forums titled “Secrets of Land Use Planning Revealed – And Why You Should Care”, to be held March 10, 2012 at Shannondale Farm in Alpharetta, GA. This revolutionary event will be the first of three educational forums scheduled for 2012 and 2013 at various locations around the country, leading up to ELCR’s 2014 National Conference.


Land use planning is an important activity that helps a community grow and function in the manner that is needed and desired by its residents. As the population in a community changes, there is a need to plan for how area land will be used. With the Census Bureau predicting the U.S. population to increase by nearly 100 million people by 2050, many communities will face dramatic changes in land use.


“For this reason, it is critical for horsemen to learn how to be a part of this planning process in order to conserve space for equine activities,” said Deb Balliet, CEO of the Equine Land Conservation Resource. “We currently have over 9 million horses in our country, and it takes at least 36 million acres of land to feed them. But we are losing space at 6,000 acres a day. In order to preserve a future for the equestrian landscape and lifestyle we love, all horse enthusiasts need to join in this effort, especially on the local level. This forum will help teach people how to make that difference.”


These ELCR community land use planning programs are designed to provide attendees with an understanding of the planning process, useful conservation tools, and real-life examples that will help participants become active in land use planning within their communities. Presenters will include methods for protecting horse farms, ranch lands trails and facilities, in addition to providing ways to promote new trails and facilities. “Sprawl is gaining an ever greater foothold on open lands, so careful planning for smart growth is one of the keys to ensuring a future for our equine activities, sport and industry,” explained Denise O’Meara, ELCR’s Education Coordinator and forum organizer. “This educational event is designed to provide the information necessary to allow every horse lover to take part in their community’s land use planning process and advocate for the places and spaces their horse community needs.”


All forums are open to the general public and leaders of breed and discipline organizations are encouraged to attend so that they can share the materials with their members. For more information about this special event, please visit the ELCR website http://www.elcr.org/index_partners_atlanta.php, or for online registration, visit http://www.elcr.org/index_partners_mtg_details.php.


About the Equine Land Conservation Resource (ELCR): The Equine Land Conservation Resource is the only national not-for-profit organization advancing the conservation of land for horse-related activity. ELCR serves as an information and networking resource for land and horse owners, organizations, agencies and equine enthusiasts on issues related to farm and ranch land conservation, land use planning, farm and ranch land stewardship/best management practices, trail access and sustainability, liability and equine economic impacts. For more information about the ELCR visit our website at www.elcr.org or call (859) 455-8383.





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Bill Brewer Named Interim NCHA Executive Director

Bill Brewer Named Interim NCHA Executive Director:
bill brewermt4
Bill Brewer


Bill Brewer,
65, executive vice president of the American Quarter Horse Association for 17 years, has been selected to take over as the Interim NCHA Executive Director effective March 1. He was employed with the AQHA for 37 years and retired in March 2009. Brewer will also chair the selection committee charged with finding and recommending a new NCHA executive director.

SAM HOUSTON POSTS DOUBLE-DIGIT LIVE, EXPORT HANDLE INCREASES OVER 2011

SAM HOUSTON POSTS DOUBLE-DIGIT LIVE, EXPORT HANDLE INCREASES OVER 2011:

By David Hooper, Executive Director, Texas Thoroughbred Association


AUSTIN, (TTA) – Double-digit handle increases have been recorded for both the live on-track product and the simulcast export signal for the first three weekends of Sam Houston’s 2012 meet compared with the first three weekends of the 2011 season. And that is on top of double-digit increases posted on Friday and Saturday night cards last year compared with the average daily handle on comparable nights in 2010.


Through 11 programs in 2012, handle on Sam Houston’s live racing has been $1,473,495 with $13,812,331 bet on the live simulcast export product for a cumulative total of $15,285,826, an average of $1,389,620 per card. Due to one cancellation in 2011, there were 10 programs in the books for the first three weeks and on-track live handle amounted to $1,071,168, with $10,824,250 bet on the live simulcast export product for a cumulative total of $11,895,418, and an average of $1,189,541. To date, cumulative on and off-track handle on the live product is higher in total by $3,390,408 and on average by $200,080.


Andrea Young, Sam Houston’s president and CEO, commented, “When you believe something will be good for your business and then see it happen, you have to be happy. Posting double-digit increases year to year makes you feel we’ve made some good decisions.”


In addition to the handle increases, Young noted that purses are averaging $164,000 per day, higher than the $160,000 projected, and field size had grown 5% to 8.8 starters per race.


$75,000 CHAMPION ENERGY SERVICES FEATURES TURF SPRINTERS SATURDAY NIGHT

A full field of older turf sprinters will be in the Sam Houston Race Park spotlight on Saturday night when the $75,000 Champion Energy Services goes postward at 10:28pm for a 5-furlong test on the lush Connally Turf course.


Great Mills, owned by Ro Parra’s Millennium Farms, will break from the outside for Steve Asmussen, who will be trying to win a second consecutive Sam Houston stakes. He sent out his own Pleasantly Blessed to win the $50,000 Jersey Lilly last Saturday under Roman Chapa who guided the favorite through an opening on the inside while Jermaine Bridgemohan had to steady and check with runner-up Artemus Kitten in mid-stretch while in the midst of a strong rally.


Great Mills is shipping from the Fair Grounds along with Trelawny, the top money winner in the field with earnings of $311,188, Southern Style and Uno Ducksy. Flat Back will invade from Oaklawn Park and Penney N a Prayer will make the short trip from Delta Downs. There are four locals attempting to defend their Sam Houston turf headed by Solar Charge, winner of the Spirit of Texas Stakes on Texas Champions Weekend for Carolyn Hanak’s H & H Ranch and trainer Karl Broberg, along with Her Man, Great Hope and Winchester Bay.


TRC APPROVES 100% OWNERSHIP CHANGE, LOCATION FOR AUSTIN JOCKEY CLUB

On February 7, during a regularly scheduled meeting in Austin, the Texas Racing Commission approved a 100% change of ownership of the Longhorn Downs license from Austin Jockey Club to KTAGS, whose majority interest is owned by Cliff Thomas, the owner of several Speedy Stop convenience stores. The TRC also approved a change of location to a 148-acre site owned by Thomas in Creedmoor. Both votes were unanimous 8-0 decisions.


In other action, the Commissioners voted the following approvals: designation of the Texas Horsemen’s Partnership as the organization to officially represent owners and trainers in the state for the next two years; a rule change to allow claimed horses to race elsewhere in a stakes after verification of the stewards; and, COO Bryan Brown’s request to be able to adjust breed split percentages for simulcasting and the Escrowed Horse Purse Account to assure adequate purses for both the Quarter Horse and Thoroughbred meets with no negative impact on projections for each meet.


EARLY 2012 TRIPLE CROWN NOMINATIONS INCREASE 8 PERCENT OVER 2011 TO 398

There are 398 early nominations for the 2012 Triple Crown races, an increase of 32 over the number for 2011, and the largest total since 412 early nominations were received for the 2009 Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont Stakes.


Whether the increase is due to a healthier economy, or owners’ skepticism over the ability of 2011 2-year-old champ Hansen and runner-up Union Rags to win at Classic distances, is open to debate.


There are two Texas-breds among the nominees and both were bred by Glenda Perryman’s La Bahia Stud Inc. She still owns Lune de Caro, to date an unstarted Cozzene colt trained by Leonard Powell.


The other Texas-bred is Orient Dancer, a gelded son of Orientate who has a win and a second in five starts for Ruth and Martha Knox, with the latter also the trainer.


RACING’S GAMING REVENUE TARGETED IN INDIANA, MARYLAND, PENNSYLVANIA

Gaming revenue dedicated to purses and breed incentive programs in Indiana, Maryland and Pennsylvania has been targeted for redirection to support other programs in bills already filed in Indiana and Maryland, and in Pennsylvania Governor Tom Corbett’s budget proposal.


The Pennsylvania program’s rapid growth could take the biggest hit of all three states as Governor Corbett proposes to shift as much as $73 million in each of the next three years from the Race Horse Development Fund to pay for other agriculture-related programs. Since the advent of casino operations in the Keystone State five years ago, purses, breed programs and horsemen’s pensions have enjoyed revenue streams totaling more than $1.1 billion with the state deriving $3.1 billion and tracks collecting $4.2 billion. Cuts to the state and track share are not part of Governor Corbett’s proposed changes, which are being strongly opposed by the Pennsylvania Equine Coalition comprising horse groups representing Thoroughbred and Standardbred interests.


In Maryland, a bill has been introduced shifting 7% of video lottery terminal revenue for purses and 2.5% for breed programs generated at casinos to a new school construction fund.


In Indiana, there is a renewed effort to cut the amount horse racing and breeding receive from track slot operations by 57.5% from 97% to 39.5%, with a cap of $27 million per year. The remaining 57.5% would be directed to the state’s general revenue fund.


Fast furlongs…Equibase News Service reported promising economic indicators for the first month of 2012 compared with January 2011 as the $65,827,045 paid in purses reflected a 2.75% increase, and, although the $818,695,886 was down 1.1% there were only 315 racing days in the U.S., 15 fewer days, or 4.55% less than in 2011…The Humane Society of the United States has cautioned the U.S. Department of Agriculture that the agency must comply with a 2007 Washington D.C. District Court ruling that enjoins USDA from restarting horse slaughter inspections without first conducting environmental review of the impacts of such operations…The New Jersey Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association has renewed its efforts to lease state-owned Monmouth Park and assure the 2012 race meet is held as scheduled…Penn National Gaming, the 50% owner of the three MAXXAM tracks in Texas, reported an 11.4% increase in total revenues from casino and track operations in 2011 over 2010, and announced plans to close Beulah Park near Columbus, Ohio, and build a new horse track in Youngstown…Louisiana native E.J. Perrodin, who was one of the leading riders at Lone Star Park during the inaugural 1997 season and regularly rode on the Bayou State circuit, abruptly retired last Friday at Fair Grounds at age 55 after logging 3,083 wins in his 35-year career…Mona Romero, former executive director of the Louisiana HBPA, received a 13-month prison sentence plus three years of supervised release and ordered to pay $21,562 in restitution for conspiracy to commit mail fraud in the organization’s 2008 election of directors…A bill to legalize table games at Maryland casinos and add a casino in Prince George’s County, home of Rosecroft Raceway, has been introduced…Donnie K. Von Hemel, whose training prowess has gained national attention in the past year thanks to the graded stakes successes of Alternation and Caleb’s Posse, had Pin Oak Stable’s Alternation in terrific shape for a comeback score in $100,000 Essex Handicap at Oaklawn Park last Saturday… Scrimshaw, sire of four stakes horses after the Grade 2 winner ended his career with earnings of $461,842, was bought by Shirley Browne on behalf of R & S Racing for $6,500 at the Fasig-Tipton Texas Mixed Sale last December and the 12-year-old will stand the 2012 breeding season at Double S Thoroughbreds in Poyner, TX, for $1,500…Going Ballistic, winner of the 2007 Super Derby (G2) and $1,195,567 in career earnings racing for Kindred Thoroughbreds, has been retired at age 8 to stand at Victory Rose Thoroughbreds in Vacaville, CA…Breeders Cup Ltd. has received an application from Del Mar Thoroughbred Club to host the 2-day event, but not before 2015…It is interesting to note Delaware Park’s 100-day meet will be conducted on a Monday-Wednesday-Thursday-Saturday schedule in 2012, thereby minimizing live race-day competition in the region with the popular Monmouth Park meet except on Saturdays…HBO’s “Luck” returns for its next segment at 8pm CST on Sunday.

Brand Re-Registration Period Ends Feb. 29 in Texas

Brand Re-Registration Period Ends Feb. 29 in Texas:

FORT WORTH, (TSCRA) – The Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association (TSCRA) reminds ranchers that the next brand re-registration period ends Feb. 29, 2012. The State of Texas requires that brands be re-registered in the county or counties where the owner operates every ten years.


Larry Gray, executive director of law enforcement at TSCRA, says that branding is the number one way to prevent livestock theft. Livestock theft continues to be a common problem throughout the United States, especially with recent record high cattle prices.


TSCRA was established in 1877 to help prevent and solve agricultural crimes. Since then, the association’s law enforcement division has expanded to include 30 special rangers stationed throughout Texas and Oklahoma who work alongside local law enforcement agencies to protect citizens against agricultural crimes, including livestock theft.


Although Texas does not have a statewide brand registry database, TSCRA has market inspectors stationed at 105 Texas livestock auctions that collect brands and other identifying marks on 4 million cattle sold annually. They report this information to TSCRA headquarters in Fort Worth, where it is entered into the nation’s largest brand recording and retrieval system. This system currently houses more than 102,000 brands, the largest brand registry in the U.S.


This database is the first source checked when livestock is reported stolen, and has aided in the arrests of livestock thieves and the recovery of hundreds of thousands of stolen livestock.


Gray says that while Texas law does not require you to brand your cattle, he highly encourages it as a way to protect your business.


To help guide ranchers through the brand re-registration process, TSCRA has launched www.tscrabrands.com. Working in conjunction with the 254 county clerk offices, this site provides all the necessary paperwork and information to register brands, as well as information on current brands, designing and reading brands.