T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1577.1 | ? | CSCMA::SMITH | | Wed Jan 08 1992 11:19 | 2 |
| Just curious, how high do you have to bid to beat the meat market?
|
1577.2 | | BRAT::MATTHEWS | DEAth Star | Wed Jan 08 1992 12:32 | 6 |
| IF THE HOSRE IS 1K LBS I THINK ITS ABOUT 700.00
I thought meat prices were about .33.
where are these auctions?? and also what time?
are they registere horses??
|
1577.3 | | BOOVX1::MANDILE | Always carry a rainbow in your pocket | Wed Jan 08 1992 12:52 | 14 |
| Every 2nd Friday of the month at Chipaway Stables in
N. Dartmouth, MA. Starts at 7:00pm.....they sell off
the livestock last.....
Next one is 1/10, BTW!!!!!
Yes, there are registered horses, also grades, youngsters
and ponies. Anyone can bring a horse/pony/donkey/cow/etc.
to sell. You pay a % fee to sell your animal, I think it's
20% of the selling price.
Being an auction, it's unpredictable on what will be up for
sale. I have seen registered paints, QH, TB's.....
L-
|
1577.4 | | BOOVX1::MANDILE | Always carry a rainbow in your pocket | Thu Jan 09 1992 16:04 | 5 |
|
Note: The Chipaway auctions start back up again in
March.
There is no auction 1/10!!!!
|
1577.5 | Same problem everywhere! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Admire spirit in horses & women! | Thu Jan 09 1992 16:45 | 8 |
| They aren't making it in lots of places. I read in this week's Blood
Horse editorial column about the prices lower class TB mares were
bringing at auctions. Lots of them were selling for under $500. The
editorial said that a full 25% were selling for $500-$1,000.
Many of these mare were bought by slaughter houses for $700 or less. The
editor went on about how such mares deserved better even if they were
culls. I agree but I would extend that to ALL horses.
|
1577.6 | Slaughter house bill in CA | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Fri Jan 10 1992 08:16 | 9 |
| I read an article in a western horse magazine discussing a bill a
group in CA is trying to pass to improve the conditions of slaughter
bound horses. Many of the horses are infact registered, but that
dosen't seem to matter to the industry.
I was shocked to read the conditions these horses were kept, and can
only hope this bill passes. I don't know much about the situation
in Mass, but I hope it is better than it is in CA. Does anyone
know how I could find out more about Mass slaughter house regulations?
|
1577.7 | | BOOVX1::MANDILE | Always carry a rainbow in your pocket | Fri Jan 10 1992 09:37 | 16 |
| I don't think there IS a slaughterhouse in Mass......
The horses I know of going to one are taken to CT.
BTW, Current pricing for a horse is around .38-.40 cents a lb.
(this price varies according to demand.....)
There is rumor, however, that come spring, prices may jump to
$1 a lb, possibly due to some lifting of some kind of regulation.
(Most of our horsemeat is shipped to Europe...so maybe it's an import
reg....) I wish I knew more....
But the impact would mean no riding horses available for under
$1500.00 (average sized horse weighing 1000 lbs = $1000, you
get my drift....) That means most horses are worth more as meat
than as a saddle horse. Sad........
|
1577.8 | | DELNI::KEIRAN | | Fri Jan 10 1992 10:13 | 15 |
| I had heard over the summer that for a time the slaughter house
for horses was shut down because some bad horsemeat had gotten
to Europe and made people sick. How true this was or what the
situation is now, I don't know. There are no slaughterhouses
in Mass, any horses taken to places like FLAME in Littleton are
shipped to Ct. for slaughter. I could never ever take a horse
there knowing what they do. There is a woman in Maine that takes
standardbreds off the track and retrains them to riding horses.
She works closely with the 4H and will place horses in homes with
the right to take them back if she feels they aren't properly being
cared for. If you donate a horse to her program, she will give you
the name of the people who have it and you can go visit it if you
want. Its a great program that seems to be working well, considering
she only gets a $50 donation for the horse. Last time I spoke to
her she had 30 horses and a waiting list of people!
|
1577.9 | Economics | PHAROS::FANTOZZI | | Fri Jan 10 1992 10:42 | 9 |
|
I read an article in my local paper about groups that are adopting
horses and trying to find them homes. This one place was in Colorado I
think. They said the current economic situation is forcing people to
give up their horses because they no longer could afford the expense of
them.
Mary
|
1577.10 | | CX3PT3::GORE::CBUTTERWORTH | Give Me Wings... | Fri Jan 10 1992 11:13 | 9 |
| re: .9
Mary, can you see if you can find the name of the place
in Colorado? I live there and I'd be interested in
contacting them when we look for our next horse.
Thanks!
\Caroline
|
1577.11 | sad to say, but | REGENT::GARROW | | Fri Jan 10 1992 11:19 | 7 |
| It's a sad state, but if there's a buck to be made some people will do
anything for it!!!
Some where along the line money bacame more important than life for
some people...
|
1577.12 | Where does the meat go ? | ASDS::BOOTH | | Fri Jan 10 1992 12:33 | 3 |
|
What do these slaughter houses do with the meat ?
|
1577.13 | I hope it doesn't pass | ABACUS::FULTZ | | Fri Jan 10 1992 12:47 | 17 |
|
Alot of meat is used in Dog food..
Prices are kept down because the US doesn't allow americans
to eat horse meat. But, as stated in the previous note
if European bill pass's and horse are legally (It is done
illegally(sp) today) shipped abroad. Then Prices will boom.. People
will start raising horses to slaughter instead of cows.
I've been to many auctions and I feel that there is a need
for the KILLERs there are some horses that just don't deserve
another chance. What upset me the last time I went was
7 month old colt was sold for 100.00 (he went to the killers).
Donna Fultz
|
1577.14 | | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Fri Jan 10 1992 13:14 | 21 |
| The Bill in CA I mentioned wasn't specifically for the slaughter house
but more for regulating the business. For example, did you know
that the horses are allowed to be shipped long distances cramed in
2 story trailers designed for cows? They arn't able to balance
themselves correctly because they can't stand up.
The bill will limit the number of horses per trailer to 28 (I can't
imagine that many horses in a trailer).
All horses being shipped over state lines must have proof of ownership
and coggins.
So I would think that the horse bought in auctions for meat in Mass
may use the same pratices outlined about currently allowed in CA. I
find that deplorable!
Many European countries raise horses for food like we do beef, I don't
see anything wrong with that. In fact I think culling stock in the US
will help eliminate the poorer examples of breeds, and will only help
the horse. but that can be a discussion for another day.....
|
1577.15 | I think it's state laws not federal | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Admire spirit in horses & women! | Fri Jan 10 1992 15:07 | 7 |
| I don't think there is a US law against selling horse meat for human
consumption. I think it's state laws. When I was in graduate school in
NJ, NY had a law against selling horse meat but NJ did not.
I think it's more a matter of American society's reluctance to eat
horses than anything else that prevents a horse meat market. Of course,
there are also societies that eat dogs but that's another conference.
|
1577.16 | | BOOVX2::MANDILE | Always carry a rainbow in your pocket | Fri Jan 10 1992 16:16 | 6 |
| The meat is packed for shipment to Europe......that is,
the horses are slaughtered here, dressed, packed and shipped.
Not that much is used in dog food anymore....beef, chicken
and lamb are the main ingredients in most dogfood nowadays...
|
1577.17 | | CSC32::M_HOEPNER | Standing on the edge is not the same | Fri Jan 10 1992 18:18 | 13 |
|
The meat market situation is just going in a cycle. About 10 to 12
years ago, horse prices WERE $1.00 a lb. And lots of good saddle
horses were going to the killers because the normal casual horse
buyer couldn't afford to compete with the killers. It drove the
prices up on the good horses. And gave an avenue to get rid of
the less desireables -- the physical cripples, the mental cripples,
and unfortunately a few good horses. Reports of horse stealing
increased.
This encouraged people to start freeze marking their horses.
Mary JO
|
1577.18 | Freeze Marking | BRAT::FULTZ | | Sun Jan 12 1992 16:22 | 5 |
|
What's freeze Marking?
Donna Fultz
|
1577.19 | | TLE::DINGEE | This isn't a rehearsal, you know. | Mon Jan 13 1992 09:36 | 23 |
|
<Can'o'worms> <My 2 cents> <Gentle flame>
In the Canine notes file I used to see lots of discussion
about breeding, and breeding responsibility. Although some of
those notes were extremely irritating and downright rude (I
don't even bother reading it any more, because of that), it
did raise my conciousness with regard to 'responsible breeding'.
And I think this is a good place to bring up the subject.
We are responsible for educating ourselves about breeding before
we jump into it to make a buck - what's prepotency? what am I
breeding to get? how do I get it? what DON'T I want? How do I
avoid it? and on and on. Always, but especially now when the
market won't support what there is out there, and you do see
many going to slaughter.
What I've seen in this notes file does not indicate irresponsiblity;
in fact, just the opposite - caring, loving, concern. But if anyone
reads this, and thinks twice about just breeding a new baby without
educating themselves, then that's good.
That's it...I'm off the soapbox now.
|
1577.20 | | BOOVX1::MANDILE | Always carry a rainbow in your pocket | Mon Jan 13 1992 10:54 | 7 |
| Freeze Marking (Branding) is a way to mark your horse
that is much less disfiguring than a hot brand. I
can't remember the chemical they use, (other than it
is like liquid nitrogen, freezes on contact) but the result
is a permanent white colored "brand" that is usually
along the neck, under the mane. The method causes the
hair to grow back in white.....
|
1577.21 | | CSLALL::LCOBURN | Spare a horse,ride a cowboy | Mon Jan 13 1992 12:02 | 2 |
| I agree 110% with .19.
|
1577.22 | BLM adopt-a-horse | CSC32::HOUGH | | Mon Jan 13 1992 13:36 | 11 |
|
i believe the info on the place in Colorado has to do with adopting
the wild horses/burros from the BLM (Bureau of Land Management).
the selling is done thru the BLM, and most horses are "green-broke"
by the inmates in a program at the prison in Canon City. i knew one
person (not very well) that had to go to Canon City to pick up the
horse. i don't have much more info, but you could contact the BLM.
kathy
|
1577.23 | | CX3PT1::LAVETA::CBUTTERWORTH | Give Me Wings... | Mon Jan 13 1992 19:05 | 6 |
| thanks Kathy! I've already got one "green-broke" one! :-) So
it's going to be awhile before I go after another one, but I'll
keep it in mind.
\Caroline
|
1577.24 | Controlled breeding ? | KAHALA::HOLMES | | Tue Jan 14 1992 11:51 | 19 |
| Doesn't the nature of breeding animals mean that you will
get some unsuitable individuals ?
Suppose we start a fantasy-farm to breed Grand Prix Dressage
horses. Since we have an unlimited budget we are of course
breeding the best to the best.
What would the sucess ratio be per foal born ?
I have no idea, 1 out of a 100, 1 out of a 1,000 ?
I thought some of the bragging about European Warmbloods and
recently Icelandic Ponies was that there are no unsuitable
individuals, that there is "another" market for them.
(I agree all of the abuses we have all heard about should be stopped).
I get as attached to the horses I ride as much as anyone else but
this is necessary.
|
1577.25 | | KOPEC::ROBERTS | | Tue Jan 14 1992 12:10 | 27 |
| If a particular individual horse is not a good example of the breed,
this means that you should not use it in breeding. It doesn't mean
that you have to slaughter it. But. lets face it, one reason there are
so many extra horses is that the ecomony is so bad. And there are a
lot of breeders out there feeding horses that were bred two or three
years ago, when things weren't quite so bad. I think too many people
went into the breeding business -- I was one of them. It's easy to say
that people shouldn't breed a horse they won't be able to sell, but how
do you know that beforehand? I was standing a Thoroughbred stallion
who has impeccable conformation for dressage and/or eventing, with just
what people seemed to want -- good sturdy legs, 9 inch bone, wonderful
gaits. Now, it's almost impossible to get bookings for your stallion
unless you have some foals fo people to see. So I spent a long time
looking for really good mares, and produced 4 foals over two years.
These foals were *great* -- and I still just about gave them away.
These babies had everything going for them -- good dispositions, great
conformation, *princely* bloodlines..... So it's not just people
getting rid of culls, because even the good ones dont sell.
Personally, if it came to it, I would rather put a horse down and bury
it on my farm than send it to the killers. But, by the way, my
accountant said that the IRS would frown on this. Not selling the
horse could be considered as evidence that I was not really operating
the farm as a business, but just trying to get a tax write-off for my
hobby. Grim, huh?
-ellie
|
1577.26 | | BOOVX2::MANDILE | Always carry a rainbow in your pocket | Tue Jan 14 1992 12:17 | 20 |
| Re: Controlled Breeding
What gets me is the "breeding for breedings sake" mentality
that seems to prevail. Like the young girl (14?) who announced
she was going to breed her mare (the mare obviously not breeding
quality, borderline nag, actually, and 200 lbs underweight, to boot!)
so she could have a baby colt. This mare had a ewe neck, splayed
front feet, no withers, a hammerhead, you name it. When I told the girl
she would have to put 200 lbs on the mare BEFORE she could be bred,
I was met with a blank stare, and then a comment that she couldn't
afford to feed the horse to do that. I have seen some pretty poor
breeding of horses, just because they have papers, too.
Re .0 This same auction had a 5 mth old colt standing in a pen, waiting
its turn to go.....the owner couldn't sell it, and he/she had to
feed it, so off to the auction it went. Guess where this "cute little
baby" ended up?
|
1577.27 | \\ | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Tue Jan 14 1992 13:03 | 4 |
| I was told that not all the horses bough at the auction end up as meat,
the keep the good ones for resale.
Can anyone confirm this, or was someone trying to be nice to me....
|
1577.28 | Breeding is not a crap shoot. | TLE::DINGEE | This isn't a rehearsal, you know. | Tue Jan 14 1992 13:20 | 16 |
|
> Doesn't the nature of breeding animals mean that you will
> get some unsuitable individuals ?
Of course there are no sure things (even death and taxes?),
but that's no excuse not to do as much as possible to reduce the
risk and to strive for the best possible, in any discipline.
And, when one makes the effort to educate one's self, it's AMAZING
what a person can learn. For instance, computers are now being used
by breed registries to match mares with stallions! Genetics is NOT
the law of averages. An ugly horse can throw beautiful babies, and
a gorgeous horse can produce monsters, as can matching recessive
genes. Breeding is NOT a crap shoot.
There is no excuse for irresponsible breeding of any animal.
|
1577.29 | no | BRAT::FULTZ | | Tue Jan 14 1992 13:30 | 14 |
|
Not all horses sold at the auction are sold for meat.
If you want a horse you will have to pay over the meat market
price say it's a $1.00 a pd for a horse and a horse weight
in at 1500 pds (they weight them out back). then you would
have to buy the horse for more than 1500 dollars.
Alot of horses at the agawam auction are baught by the
owner and he uses them as trail horses and then sells them
to people who might be interested after riding them.
donna
|
1577.30 | not always... | MPO::ROBINSON | starry eyes sparkling ablaze | Tue Jan 14 1992 14:19 | 6 |
|
A friend of mine is a horse dealer, she buys lots of horses
at auction for training and resale. (~200 a year).
Sherry
|
1577.31 | | BOOVX1::MANDILE | Always carry a rainbow in your pocket | Tue Jan 14 1992 15:37 | 4 |
| There are buyers at a horse auction for different purposes.
Horse dealers, who buy to resell as a riding horse, individuals
looking to buy themselves a horse, and individuals who are in
the "meat" business.
|
1577.32 | BLM and slaughter houses | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Admire spirit in horses & women! | Tue Jan 14 1992 19:34 | 32 |
| re: BLM-adopt-a-horse program
That program was recently called to task by the Government Accounting
Office(GAO) for removing too many horses from the range, allowing
wholesale adoptions(read slaughter houses), and not monitoring welfare
of adopted horses.
GAO has now required BLM to:
1. Develop actual data on range conditions and wild horse capacity
2. Where overgrazing is shown, take steps to improve growth of
native vegetation
3. If wild horses are removed from the range, domestic livestock
must be removed in proportion.
There was a report on this issue in the May 91 issue of Cornell's
Animal Health Newsletter. In the June issue, there was the following
question from a reader:
"Q: In your article on the federal wild horse program you mention
wholesaler operations that are involved in the slaughter of horses. Is
there still such an industry in operation in this country?
A: Yes, there is a large horse meat industry in this country. The
United States is in fact the WORLD'S LARGEST SUPPLIER of horsemeat.
According to a recent report, the total number of horse carcasses
inspected annually by the US Department of Agriculture has risen from
139,000 in 1983 to 299,120 in 1988. Horse meat products must pass
inspection by the US Department of Agriculture. Major buyers are
European countries and Japan. A study from the University of Illinois
conducted by Dr. K.H.Kline and associates states that the horse meat
industry has always been an integral part of the overall horse economy
in the US because it determines the residual value of all horses."
|
1577.33 | | MPO::ROBINSON | starry eyes sparkling ablaze | Wed Jan 15 1992 09:03 | 7 |
|
John, I thought I had heard that the program for the
prisoners to train mustangs had been discontinued? Do
you know anything about that?
Sherry
|
1577.34 | Couldn't find anything | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Admire spirit in horses & women! | Thu Jan 16 1992 13:11 | 15 |
| Sherry,
I couldn't find anything on the prison program to train mustangs. I
remembered reading SOMETHING about such a program recently but couldn't
remember where until I reviewed the notes in this topic! It was right
here and that was the first I had heard about that program. I knew of
others in which prisoners were working with TB's off the track, etc but
I hadn't heard about this particular program.
Sorry, I couldn't help.
John
(PS Is Wayne willing to travel out West? We haven't found anybody as
good as the Robinson clan yet and we've been here 4 years!)
|
1577.35 | come-oooon 7 | KAHALA::HOLMES | | Thu Jan 16 1992 19:29 | 22 |
|
> For instance, computers are now being used
> by breed registries to match mares with stallions! Genetics is NOT
> the law of averages. An ugly horse can throw beautiful babies, and
> a gorgeous horse can produce monsters, as can matching recessive
> genes. Breeding is NOT a crap shoot.
All of this, when done for GENERATIONS OF ANIMAL breeding, has the intended
effects but the breeding of any individual is without a question
A CRAP SHOOT.
What else would you call:
> An ugly horse can throw beautiful babies, and
> a gorgeous horse can produce monsters, as can matching recessive
I brought this up because I didn't like the attitude that anyone
who bred an animal they could not sell was an idiot and wanted to
demonstrate why it is so difficult to be sucessful at it.
|
1577.36 | Ain't NO way! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Admire spirit in horses & women! | Thu Jan 16 1992 19:56 | 17 |
| I'll second that. Even though computers are being used to match mares
with stallions, they do so STATISTICALLY (e.g. this pedigree crosses
well with that line 47% of the time; sometimes a scoring system for
conformation, speed, or whatever is used with the pedigree ). We simply do
not know enough about the genetics of horses, the extent to which any given
conformation/personality trait is inherited etc.
If we did have all the genetic knowledge needed to breed "perfect horses",
don't you think the TB breeders would be using it? If there was ever any
group of breeders that would take advantage of ANY edge they could get
over the competition, it's the TB breeding INDUSTRY. They ARE businesses.
Many of them make their living at it.
The knowledge and technology to do what was suggested in the earlier
note simply DOES NOT EXIST. Breeding is an ART aided by science. We
cannot yet predict with any accuracy what the result of a particular
mating will be. Why else would so many full siblings be so different?
|
1577.37 | Full siblings | MR4DEC::GCOOK | Save the Skeets | Fri Jan 17 1992 09:56 | 13 |
| Boy, I'll second John's comment about full siblings!
I have a beautiful stallion with a gorgeous pedigree (not just my
biased opinion) and a lovely mare with a pedigree that complements
his in every way.
She has produced three fillies by him. And, while the girls all
have some traits in common like really nice legs, and wonderful
attitudes towards their work, they also have some major differences.
They do not look like 1, 2, 3, cut with the same cookie cutter.
Here's another question: How much do you think environment/atmosphere
affects how horses turn out?
|
1577.38 | A lot | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Admire spirit in horses & women! | Fri Jan 17 1992 12:50 | 7 |
| IMHO, environment affects how they turn out quite a bit.
Feeding, medical care, turn out, deworming program, shoeing and
handling all affect the horse either mentally or physically or both.
Inadequate nutrition will stunt their growth. Overfeeding leads to bone
or joint problems. etc
|
1577.39 | we have some control | TLE::DINGEE | This isn't a rehearsal, you know. | Fri Jan 17 1992 15:40 | 18 |
|
> I brought this up because I didn't like the attitude that anyone
> who bred an animal they could not sell was an idiot and wanted to
> demonstrate why it is so difficult to be sucessful at it.
I don't like that attitude either; it's unfair and unrealistic.
Stuff happens; but I advocate doing all you can to breed the best.
And it certainly is not a crap shoot; in a crap shoot there is no
control whatsoever. There are some very definite reasons why a
beautiful horse can create monster babies and vice-versa. And ways
to avoid them if you know certain things like lineage, prepotency,
and the basic laws of genetics; people who look at none of this are
making it no more than a crap shoot.
No, we can't do it 100% right every time, but we do have some
control. We mustn't use the fact that we don't have TOTAL control
an excuse for not exercising ANY control.
|
1577.40 | lady in Maine? | MASADA::FORD | | Tue Jan 21 1992 10:59 | 6 |
| can anyone give me the name, address, phone of the woman in Maine
rehabing horses?
Thanks
Darlene
|
1577.41 | | DELNI::KEIRAN | | Tue Jan 21 1992 12:27 | 4 |
| The lady who retrains the standardbreds is Diane Parsons, her number
is 207-993-2640.
Linda
|
1577.42 | Texas horses being stolen and slaughtered
| RANGER::BOOTH | | Tue Apr 28 1992 09:56 | 4 |
|
There is an article in the Boston Globe today about lots of horses in
Texas being stolen and sold to the slaughter houses. One person just had a
$20,000 dollar horse stolen and turned up in the meat market !
|
1577.43 | Yet another example | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Montar con orgullo | Tue Apr 28 1992 14:23 | 10 |
| There was a similar article in EQUUS a few months back. The stolen
horses were from CA in that case. The owners tracked down 2 of the 3 stolen
horses to a TX slaughterhouse. If I remember right, the thieves were
actually other boarders at the palce where these horses were boarded!
The owners located the horses themselves and they ended up PAYING the
slaughterhouse a "reward" for holding the horses until they could get
there to pick them up. The "reward" was much larger than the the price the
slaughterhouse had paid the thieves for the horses. I think the thieves
were eventually caught in the act. They were too late to save the 3rd
horse.
|
1577.44 | | BTOVT::CASAZZA | | Tue Apr 28 1992 16:23 | 4 |
| Sounds like time to re-institute the "classic" penalty for
horse stealing.
Joe
|