This entry was posted on 7/1/2009 9:22 PM and is filed under uncategorized.
Wednesday July 1 2009
I see with a lot of pressure from horse
people worldwide, the Adventurists putting on this Mongol Derby (who
are not an equine tour company, and have apparently never put on a
horse event in a first world country, much less a third world country),
have suddenly proclaimed horse welfare "firmly" at the top of their
agenda.
Now, instead of "Essentially once the starter gun goes
off you are on your own", and instead of 2 jeeps "following the race
from a distance" there is now a "fleet of back up jeeps," or a "fleet
of jeeps," or the event is supported by five off-road vehicles running
alongside the riders (um, which five riders?) and 2 standby 4x4
vehicles.
Now instead of having no established route to follow,
and the riders being on their own: "Luck? Judgement? Ask a passing
herder? Ride in concentric circles for a week? Divination... You will
be given a map before the start with the locations of each Urtuu and
the rest is down to you," there is an "established route" to follow, or
a "route marked out by the horse stations."
Now, instead of the
riders "tackling the challenge of semi-wild horses and surviving alone
in the wild steppes of Mongolia", and "It's dangerous, it's unsupported
and you could die," now the "safety and welfare of the horses and
riders on the Mongol Derby is of paramount importance to us as
organisers. With a network of first class professionals, both
veterinary and medical, the Mongol Derby's support network is
exemplary; before, during and after the race." Now, the "welfare of the
horse is guarded and monitored at all times" (I'm a little vague on the
math here... 26 riders and horses - or 600 horses, if you want to count
all of them - spread out over days or weeks and how many kilometers,
with the 5 off-road vehicles following the 5 riders.)
Most
enlightening and comforting, now there is also an "extensive horse
welfare program and emergency back up system" in place. There's a
"fantastic team of equine experts and veterinarians", or "respected
British and Mongolian equine experts," or "a network of Mongolian
vets". (Mongolia must have a lot of vets, no?) An unnamed British
equine vet "with 32 years of experience" will follow the Derby in one
of our "fleet of back up jeeps" and the Mongolian vets will have with
them "high quality veterinary medicines."
Now instead of:
"They're going to give us GPS locations to the wells, where we'll be
able to get water, and they don't guarantee that the wells will have
water" (apparently said by a contestant - but surely this can not be a
real quote!), a recent revision was made "to increase the number of
water sources" (um... new wells dug?) that have been clearly plotted
for horses and riders, or, an "extensive list of confirmed water
sources." Now the provision of water is a prime deciding factor in the
route for the horses. Now, "The route will under no circumstances be
taken through any area without adequate water provision and has been
designed with this primarily in mind."
There still is that
weight thing, though. Horses can safely carry up to 20% of their body
weight. Mules can carry 25% safely. 95 kg, or 209 pounds, (the weight
limit of the riders plus equipment and personal things), is 20% of a
454 kg, or 1000 pound animal. I haven't seen a 14-hand pony yet that
weighs anywhere close to 1000 pounds.
Karen C in her
blog entry today
raised some valid points, besides wondering what really happens to the
horses after they are raced. Namely, who is supplying batteries for the
GPS units? My GPS only goes 11 hours without a charge (or plug in,
which you won't have at the Urtuus in Mongolia). What about the
emergency beacons? They will need fresh batteries too. Keeping the
GPS's and emergency beacons functional every day would seem rather
important since they are paramount to horse and rider safety, and
riders will be limited on the weight they can carry. Will the Mongol
Derby organisation provide enough batteries for all 26 riders every day
at each Urtuu?
All of this new info is from the
June 30th press release and the newly released Mongol Derby Horse Welfare and Race Logistics Information from the Adventurists.
It all looks great. After all, IT'S ALL WRITTEN ON PAPER, SO IT'S TRUE.
Right?
(Although, which written word is true: those before the press release,
or those in the press release?). Now we can all stop worrying and start
kvetching about something else.
(An aside, TOTALLY unrelated to
this event. I do not believe everything my government and governmental
officials have put in writing, or told me, the last decade. Some of it
has indeed proved to be false. And now, back to the Mongol Derby.)
Now,
aside from the weight factor, I commend the Adventurists organization
for seriously addressing valid concerns from serious horse people
around the world, and from CLEARLY disassociating themselves from
endurance riding or racing. ("The Mongol Derby is not an endurance race
for the horses...")
However, I remain skeptical of all of their written declarations.
Since
only the riders and Adventurists organization will be there in Mongolia
during the Mongol Derby, the world won't really know if all or any of
these written declarations will come to pass, will they?
So, how
about this: if the Adventurists are dead set (no pun intended) on their
wild and crazy Mongolian Adventure, and they are dead serious (no pun
intended) on horse safety being at the forefront of this entire
adventure, why don't they also bring along a few independent expert
horsemen to independently audit the event?
How about a horse
expert (who really does ride horses, a lot) from the Adventurists
organization (surely there is one), a rider from the Long Riders'
Guild, and a third horse riding expert that both agree upon? They can
ride in the fleet of jeeps following the riders. That way there can be
no question that the WRITTEN WORD is actually what goes down. Riders
will still have their uninhibited wild and crazy adventure, horses will
indeed be taken care of, the horse world will be put at ease, and Tom
Morgan will be absolutely vindicated
How about it, Tom??