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Thread: Barbaro !

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    SumPoosieCat's Avatar
    SumPoosieCat is offline Senior Member
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    I am a racing fan. I love the horses and everything about it. I was at the Kentucky Derby this year and saw the 8 horse Barbaro win in dramatic fashion. I was watching the Preakness yesterday and saw the 8 horse win again and the Kentucky Derby winner fight for his life. The sadness of seeing Barbaro come up lame is unlike anything I have seen in sports. I hope such a beautiful animal can be saved.

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    I'm not really a big horse racing fan. I'm a big time lover of all animals. I was very sad to see this happen.
    Don't worry, be happy. Meher Baba

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    Sad thing is that when a horse starts their training to be a race horse, they quit being a horse as most know them and pretty much become a machine so to speak. The horse will attempt to run to the finish until it either collapses and dies or physically cannot move. Horse racing as well as dog racing to me is just cruel to the animals. No I am not a member of PETA or anything like that, I just do not condone animal racing. I do not have anything against anyone who watches, participates or works in the horse industry. If it's is what you do , that's what you do, it doesn't bother me.

    [ 05-21-2006, 12:08 PM: Message edited by: the saint ]
    If what you did yesterday still looks big, you haven't done much today.

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    It is a cruel fact that many will never achieve any success and will be destroyed. I have a tough time with that one. Even the successful ones face an uncertain future. Thoroughbreds were bred to race. And the only reason most of the 50,000+ a year are even born is for some kind of competition. I guess I have a tougher time excepting what happens to most after an uneventful career. Or in cases like Ferdinand, Alydar and Exceller, what happens after a very successful career

    The first race I ever watched was the 1973 Kentucky Derby. After the early 80's I don't think I watched a single race for nearly 20 years, but I found new interest in it a couple years back when Smarty Jones arrived on the scene. I am not so much a fan of horse racing as I am of the horses themselves. Every one of them has an interesting story. Without horse racing, there would be no thoroughbred. Without thoroughbreds I think something would be missing in the world. We would never know the Secretariats, the Ruffians, or the John Henrys.

    As far as Barbaro goes. He walked back to his stall Sunday night. He has a long ways to go, but it is amazing that they even have a chance of saving him. I hope that he goes on to lead a life of leisure at stud.
    banned

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    SumPoosieCat's Avatar
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    The more you understand HORSE BREEDING the more you understand humans and how important good breeding in humans is just as important and telling.

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    Doug is offline Senior Member
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    He's actually being held at the New Bolton Center, which is about 5 mins. from my house

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    ¡Ahhh que barbaro!!

    Pos que no?

    Claro que si oiga!... LOL

    -Rieleros del Norte

    Translation:

    What a barbaro!, isn't he?, of course he is!
    -North Railers

    [ 05-24-2006, 09:01 PM: Message edited by: Ramón Cokeaholic ]
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    Barbaro's condition has taken a turn for the worse in the past week

    http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/...n1804674.shtml

    (CBS/AP) Barbaro was doing "much better" Friday morning, a day after his veterinarian said the Kentucky Derby winner was a "long shot" to survive a potentially fatal hoof disease.

    "He had a good night last night, and even slept on his side," Dr. Dean Richardson told The Associated Press early Friday before re-entering the George D. Widener Hospital for Large Animals to check again on the 3-year-colt. "He's doing much better."

    Richardson appeared a bit more upbeat than he was Thursday, when he told a packed news conference that Barbaro has a severe case of the disease laminitis in his left hind leg, and termed his condition "poor."

    Laminitis is a potentially fatal condition that causes the tissues that connect the hoof to the foot to swell and separate, says The Early Show's resident veterinarian, Dr. Debbye Turner.

    Doctors have removed much of the affected hoof and must now wait until it regrows. As long as painkillers keep Barbaro comfortable, Richardson says they won't give up.

    "If he starts acting like he doesn't want to stand on the leg, that's it — that will be when we call it quits," a blunt Richardson said Thursday during a news conference at the University of Pennsylvania's New Bolton Center.

    "It could happen within 24 hours," he added.

    The vet, who has been treating Barbaro since the colt's breakdown, said Thursday that Barbaro looks fine — "his ears are up, he's bright, he's looking around." But that doesn't reflect the true nature of his condition.

    "I'd be lying if I said anything other than poor," he said. "As long as the horse is not suffering, we are going to continue to try to save him. If we can keep him comfortable, we think it's worth the effort."

    Barbaro is being treated aggressively with pain medication and remains in the same stall he's been in since being brought to the intensive care unit.

    Only the sight of fiberglass casts on both hind legs — a longer cast is on the right leg — gives any indication that something is terribly wrong with Barbaro.

    "If you look at this horse, it'd be hard to put him down," Richardson said.

    That precisely is the awful task that could be imminent because of a disease that has no cure.

    "It's a devastating problem in horses that nobody has a solution to," Richardson said.

    Until his misstep at the Preakness, Barbaro's career was nothing short of brilliant.

    He won his first five starts, including the Florida Derby. His 6½-length victory at the Derby was so convincing he was being hailed as the next likely Triple Crown champion — and first since Affirmed since 1978.

    But seconds after the gates swung open at Pimlico, that career was cut short when the colt broke down, his right hind leg flaring out awkwardly because of three broken bones.

    Race fans at Pimlico wept and within 24 hours the entire nation seemed to be caught up in a "Barbaro watch," waiting for any news of his surgery and condition.

    And for the longest time, it all seemed to be going well.

    Barbaro's first six weeks of recovery were relatively smooth — despite five hours of surgery to insert a titanium plate and 27 screws into his three shattered bones.

    Each day brought more optimism: Barbaro was eyeing the mares, nickering, gobbling up his feed and trying to walk out of his stall. There was great hope Barbaro somehow would overcome the odds and live a life of leisure on the farm, although he'd always have a hitch in his gait.

    Richardson, along with owners Gretchen and Roy Jackson and trainer Michael Matz, all believed the colt had a chance to recover.

    Until last week, when Barbaro's condition steadily worsened.

    The colt underwent three surgical procedures and four cast changes on the injured leg, followed by a hoof wall resection.

    "I really thought we were going to make it two weeks ago," Richardson said. "Today I'm not as confident."

    Within hours of the grim update, roses and apples began arriving at the hospital, and hundreds of get-well e-mail messages were posted on a Web site set up by the New Bolton Center.

    The vet didn't mince words: "It's as bad a laminitis as you can have. It's as bad as it gets."

    He said he has discussed the situation closely with the Jacksons, who have stressed that their main concern is for Barbaro to be pain free.

    Several telephone messages left for the Jacksons and Matz were not returned.

    Richardson said Barbaro's injured right hind leg was healing well, but because a horse has to be evenly balanced to carry his weight, laminitis set in on the other foot. Secretariat, the 1973 Triple Crown winner, was euthanized due to laminitis in 1989.

    "The reason we cut away the hoof wall is because the hoof wall is not connected" to the bone, he said. "If you had a nail that was separated from the end you'd pull it off. It's dead tissue that's in the way of living tissue."

    Richardson said it would take several months for the hoof to grow back, and as long as six months to be completely healed.

    Barbaro has been fitted with a sling to prevent sudden movements and allow him to shift his weight from side to side. The main goal is comfort.

    "The sling is on only some of the day, when it's off, he can lie down," Richardson said. "We are not torturing this horse."

    Edgar Prado, the jockey credited with saving Barbaro by quickly pulling him up in the Preakness, was devastated by the grim prognosis.

    "It's very upsetting," he said. "Barbaro has shown to everyone what a fighter he is. He showed it on the track and with all the surgeries he's had. It just goes to show what kind of courage he has. He's a true champion, and is fighting every step of the way.

    "All we can do now is hope and pray. We'll need a miracle, but maybe it will happen."
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    Doug is offline Senior Member
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    I drove by New Bolton the other day

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    Y'know... believe it or not. One of the owners of Funnycide was my drivers ed. teacher and teaches math at the community college. Crazy!

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