Monday, February 26, 2007

Mysterious Hong Kong Horse Virus Strikes Island Racecourse

The FEI can't be pleased with the news out of Hong Kong this week. The island city will be hosting the Olympics 18 months from now, but last week horses at the local Sha Tin track were ravaged by an unidentified flu-like virus and fever, as reported in today's South China Morning Post.
.
The newspaper article states that the head of veterinary regulation for the Hong Kong Jockey Club, Brian Stewart, contends that test results from the Hong Kong government laboratories have ruled out equine influenza and it is "99 per cent" certain that the nine racehorses in one stable and two lead ponies were not infected with an equine herpes virus.

Whatever did affect them has abated, and the horses are recovering.

The outbreak took place over the same period of days when Hong Kong's superstar horse Silent Witness was saying farewell to 35,000 loyal fans before he entered quarantine in preparation for his flight to Melbourne, Australia, where he will enter retirement at the "Living Legends" farm for celebrity retirees.

An unspecified bilateral degenerative hind limb lameness caused the great racehorse's retirement.

1 Comments:

At Tue Feb 27, 02:52:00 AM EST, Blogger Rising Rainbow said...

I find this information on a new virus interesting but scarey at the same time. It's amazing how fast new viruses travel around the world.

I think we got our first cases of West Nile virus in horses late this past summer. I don't know what next summer will bring. And now, maybe, there's another one to keep track of.

 

Post a Comment

<< Home