Rood Eye
Saturday 6th April 2019 12:28pm [Edited]
4,103 posts
The racing industry in Britain is all about money and glamour, on the face of it.
If you happen to own a leading stallion, you can pocket £1 million per week (I'm not joking!) simply by letting it have its way with all the lady horses that will be delivered to its stable door by owners keen to acquire a fleetfooted foal.
The less glamorous side of the racing industry is largely concerned with the question of what happens to foals who are not good enough even to begin a racing career and to experienced horses that have reached the end of their racing careers.
I'll give you a clue: you can't give a racehorse to somebody who wants a pet for his darling daughter or to somebody, even an experienced rider, who is looking for something upon which to amble along leafy country lanes on a Sunday afternoon.
A lucky few will see their days out in an English field but owning any horse is an expensive business and, when you phone the vet, it becomes very expensive indeed.
No, the fact of the matter is that any racehorse that isn't winning money for its owner is almost certainly going to end up on a Frenchman's dinner plate.
Accurate figures for slaughtered racehorses in the UK are difficult to come by but I doubt that anybody in the racing or slaughtering business would think a figure of 7000 per year wildly inaccurate.