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This factsheet was completed by People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) . Please direct any questions or
comments to PETA directly at 757-622-7382 or info@peta.org.
Carriage Horses: Don't Get Taken For A Ride
What could be more romantic than a leisurely carriage ride on a warm summer
evening? In the late 1980s, Whitey, a nine-year-old gelding, collapsed while
pulling a carriage during a summer heat wave in New York City. A passing nurse
gave Whitey an IV saline solution, and sympathetic police officers sprayed him
with cool water for two hours. Eventually Whitey managed to get back on his
feet. Another carriage horse, Misty, died from apparent heat exhaustion during
the same heat wave.
Despite the national attention that was focused on the carriage horse
industry after Whitey's collapse--and the outrage of romantics
everywhere--little has changed for the horses.
A Hard Haul for Horses
Many horses who end up pulling carriages through city streets are
"breakdowns" from harness racing tracks. Standardbreds are often trained to race
by being tethered to the back of a truck that drives increasingly faster, so
carriage horse operators consider these horses "street savvy."(1) But
standardbreds are much smaller and lighter than traditional "draft horses" and
are not accustomed to pulling heavy loads. Many other carriage horses are
breakdowns from Amish farming communities. Regardless of their source, most
horses, as veterinarian Holly Cheever points out, "enter the carriage horse
trade with a legacy of previous injuries and debility."(2) When horses can no
longer pull heavy carriages, they are sold to rendering plants or dog food
companies.
Even for healthy horses, a carriage ride is not an easy trip. Most cities
have only minimal regulations governing working conditions for carriage horses,
and these regulations are rarely enforced. Carriage horse operators know all the
loopholes in their city's laws. An officer with the Canadian SPCA has said, "[I]f
regulations state that a horse can work for nine consecutive hours, but [fail]
to say within a 24-hour period, [drivers will] work the horse for nine hours,
give the horse an hour or two of rest, then come back on the road."(3) As a
result, many horses work 12 or more hours a day, often in extreme weather
conditions.
As in the case of Misty, weather conditions sometimes prove fatal for working
horses. Carriage horses are exposed to bitter cold and scorching heat. Carriage
Operators of North America, a trade organization to which only a small
percentage of carriage horse operators belong, says horses may work if the
temperature is nine degrees Fahrenheit, well below freezing.(4) In summer
months, horses suffering from dehydration or heat stress can die in just a few
hours. Some cities outlaw carriage rides when the temperature reaches a certain
degree, but often the official weather bureau reading does not accurately
reflect the temperature on the streets. A study published by Cornell University,
for example, found that the air temperature recorded by the weather bureau can
be nearly 50 degrees cooler than the actual asphalt temperature.(5) And the New
York City Department of Transportation found that asphalt surfaces can reach 200
degrees Fahrenheit.(6)
Accidents Waiting to Happen
Horses and heavy city traffic can also be a deadly mix. Despite carriage
horse operators' claims, most horses are not comfortable working among cars and
trucks, and many accidents, injuries, and even deaths--to horses and
humans--have been caused by horses becoming "spooked" in traffic. According to
Cheever, it is normal for horses to "react to threatening situations with panic
and flight."(7) A survey of national carriage horse accidents revealed that 85
percent of all accidents were the result of an animal spooking. Seventy percent
of the time there was a human injury, and 22 percent of the time there was a
human death.(8) The survey also found that in New York City, which has the
highest carriage horse accident rate in the country, 98 percent of the horses
who "spooked" became injured.(9,10) Injuries and fatalities resulting from
collisions between cars and carriage horses have occurred in almost every city
that allows carriage rides, including Cincinnati, Ohio; Salt Lake City, Utah;
Charleston, South Carolina; Denver, Colorado; Baltimore, Maryland; and Houston,
Texas.
Driving Horses to Ill Health
The smoke and exhaust fumes from urban traffic are also dangerous for horses.
In a study by veterinarian Jeffie Roszel, "tracheal washes and samples from
respiratory secretions of these horses showed enormous lung damage, the same
kind of damage you would expect from a heavy smoker."(11) Horses' nostrils are
usually only 3 to 3 1/2 feet above street level, so these animals are "truly ...
living a nose-to-tailpipe existence."(12)
Carriage horses also routinely suffer at the hands of poorly trained drivers.
Because they are constantly walking and standing on hard streets, "lameness and
hoof deterioration are inevitable" in carriage horses, says Cheever. "The
problems are worsened by the inexperience of the gross majority of the owners
and drivers, who are either incapable of recognizing lameness or are unwilling
to suffer financial loss by removing a horse from service for a few days."(13)
Many drivers don't know how to fasten harnesses correctly, and either leave
straps so loose they rub and chafe the horse's skin, or buckle the straps so
tightly they pinch. And few horses are fitted with new horseshoes as often as is
needed.
Unstable Conditions
Conditions for carriage horses aren't much better when the horses are off the
streets. Raids on carriage horse stables have exposed stalls with no hay or
other bedding, stall floors covered with urine and manure, poor ventilation in
the stables, and horses who had no free access to water. Many stables have
stacked floors--like parking garages--with steep ramps leading from one floor to
the next. The floors in one stable were so rotten, they often gave way under the
weight of the horses, repeatedly causing animals to break their legs.(14) In
1991, two horses owned by a carriage horse operator in New York died after being
fed bad hay.(15)
It Isn't Romantic
Not surprisingly, carriage horse operators view attempts to regulate their
industry--through stipulations on where and how long horses can work,
temperature restrictions, and mandatory veterinary care--as economic threats.
One carriage horse operator in Charleston, S.C., even said, "[L]egislation is
ridiculous."(16)
In her classic novel, Black Beauty, Anna Sewell wrote, "My
doctrine is this, that if we see cruelty or wrong that we have the power to
stop, and do nothing, we make ourselves sharers in the guilt."(17)
People around the world agree and are increasingly recognizing that it's the
carriage horse industry--not just the horses--who are taking them for a ride.
Pressure from concerned residents has resulted in bans on carriage horses in a
growing number of cities, including Palm Beach, Florida; Santa Fe, New Mexico;
Las Vegas, Nevada; London; Paris; and Toronto.
References
- King, Marcia, "The Carriage Trade: Putting the Cash Before the Horse,"
The Animals' Agenda, June 1992, p.43.
- Cheever, Holly, D.V.M., Letter to legislators, September 1991, p.1.
- King, The Animals' Agenda, p.43.
- King, Marcia, "Focus on the Reality," Advocate, Summer 1992,
pp.15-16.
- Cheever, p.3.
- King, Advocate, p.16.
- Cheever, p.2.
- King, Advocate, p.18.
- "NY City: Have You No Pity?," Factsheet, Carriage Horse Action Committee,
p.2.
- King, Advocate, p.18.
- Ibid, p.18.
- Cheever, p.2.
- King, Advocate, p.19.
- Eddy, Eric, "Inhumane Carriage Horse Stable Exposed," Our Town,
November 30, 1986.
- Associated Press, "Bad Hay Blamed in Horses' Deaths," Democrat and
Chronicle, August 26, 1991.
- Evans, Charlotte, "Quaint Or Cruel?," Equus, Number 139.
- Wynne-Tyson, Jon, ed., The Extended Circle: A Commonplace Book of
Animal Rights, 1989, p.320.
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