|  “God despises money. Look at the people he gives it to.” It's  amazing how vulgar people become as they get rich. The crassness first shows up  in their home and clothes which both become laughable. Next in their food  which unfortunately is not laughable. Bangalore’s wildlife department recently  raided restaurants and found monitor lizards, partridges, deer, black buck,  peacocks and hares-- all endangered Indian species on offer to wealthy  diners.  The illegal trade in vanishing species flourishes as demand  for exotic meats rises.  The nouveau riche pay silly sums to impress. You  read about spoilt kids of self made men bragging about visiting Singapore  and Kenya to devour monkeys and zebras. Their games are equally loutish. Polo,a killer for horses, has become  fashionable with the new rich and the useless who have fallen for its sly  marketing as a sport for kings. Polo teams are snapped up by socially  insecure  wannabes. Polo matches are sponsored by arms dealers and   attended by fading royalty desperate for their pictures in the papers,   hired starlets, retired generals thirsting for free drinks, shady  businesswallahs hoping to cadge contacts over alcohol and, alas, the press. The  same sorry lot go round and round.  A jeweller who recently paid Rs 40  lakh for a polo event serving strawberries and champagne, refused a request to  fund an orphanage.  He told me his son wanted to be a polo player  and needed to meet horse and team owners.
 Polo is a team sport  played on horseback.The objective is to score goals against an opposing team.  Riders score by driving a white wooden or plastic ball into the opposing team's  goal using a long-handled mallet. Each polo team consists of four riders and  their mounts. Play occurs in seven-minute periods, called  chukkers. The  full game is played over eight chukkas. More than one pony is needed by each  player to play polo in order to allow tired mounts to be changed between or  even during chukkers. The group of ponies ranging between 2-6 for one player is  referred to as a "string
 Polo has been declared one of the world’s most dangerous sports,  both for the player and his mount. But while the rider elects to play, the  horse has no choice.  With so many players and horses on a field  hurtling at 30 miles per hour, needing to stop on a dime and turn quickly,  anything can happen.The rider wears a protective helmet with a face  guard,  knee high riding boots, gloves, wristbands, knee pads and spurs.  The stirrup irons are heavier than normal and their leathers  wider and thicker  to aid players standing in the stirrups. The only protective gear for the horse  is polo wraps from the knee to the ankle. It’s not unusual to see a horse  and rider tumble and roll together as they hit the ground. Collisions are  common. Mallets often hit and hurt both riders and mounts as well as trip the  speeding horses. Falling and breaking ankles is common. But while injured  riders are rushed to hospital, the best an injured horse can expect is a bullet  in the brain.
 Although full-sized adults, polo mounts are called ponies.  The demands on a polo pony are severe. He needs speed, stamina, agility  and maneuverability to be able to  stop, turn and spring forward all of  which is far harder than simply running which is natural to the  animal.  Training the horse to cope under extreme pressure generally  begins at age three and lasts from about six months to two years. It starts  with ‘breaking in’ or taming the horse to submit to his  handler.  Tamers use techniques including blows and bucking, gagging,  pulling at the mouth and whipping. Sometimes training is hurried. If a mare is  good, she is usually highstrung and training in a hurry can trigger collapse.  The animal is then deemed unfit for use and killed.
 Cruelty continues on the field.  In order to compel greater  obedience, riders attach a small spiked wheel at the end of the spur called a  rowel which digs into the animal’s undersides causing excruciating pain  and bloody gashes from being rowelled too hard.
 Another so called performance  enhancing practice is  blood doping. This entails giving the  horse a blood transfusion in the mistaken belief that this increases  energy.  The blood is taken earlier from the horse and  stored. During the match, the horse is stripped after each chukker, cooled down  and injected with its own blood before returning to the game.
 Sometimes  the heart of the horse ruptures or literally "bursts" with extreme  exertion. Last month in Delhi, a polo  horse died of a heart attack during a game. Spectators witnessed his death  throes after which he was slung over a beam and thrown off the field. He  is the second horse this year to thus collapse.
 Frequently players tire out their mounts by pulling them up too  suddenly or frighten them in very rough ride offs.  A fearful horse will  stop short and, no matter how vicious the whip, hesitate to continue. Yanking  the mouth to turn can often  break it, while gag bits routinely cut  it.  Everytime the reins are jerked, the pain intensifies provoking the  animal to act up. Should the rider get angry with the horse, the problem  escalates. In one case, a polo pony had her tongue ripped off by the bit.
 The pony's mane is roached - completely shaven - and tail braided  so that it will not snag the rider's mallet. Considered an obstruction, long  tails are often docked with their ends  being cut off to make them V  shaped. The operation is  painful as the tail vertebrae are connected with  the brain and spinal column. In fact , the SPCA sued a polo club that had cut  4-10 joints of a horse. The court decided against conviction only because too  many people were guilty of the same crime, and also the horse wasn’t yet  dead!
 Horses  play during only one season of the year when they are carted all across the  country . Overstabling the rest of the year can lead to polo ponies becoming  bored, lonely and aggressive. The expense of maintenance leads to corners  being cut.  For instance, regular shoeing is overlooked during the non  playing season. Shoes left too long put a strain on the tendons, increasing  fragility of the legs. Since saddles are expensive, they are not made for each  horse.  Instead owners  make do with one size for all resulting  in ill fitting tacks with sharp bits causing injury to the animal.
 What happens to a polo pony past his prime? He is either  shot or sold to riding clubs and schools who underfeed and overwork him.   A horse just dropped dead at Delhi’s Amity Riding school, one of the many that  misuse horses.
 Culture implies refinement and living with respect for all.   The caveman ate and played howsoever he could. The nouveau riche of this  country resemble him in their primitive intellect and desires. Alas, their  pieces of silver are dragging  all of India down with them, destroying an  old and gentle civilization.
 To join the animal welfare movement contact gandhim@nic.in Comments Dear Ms Gandhi, I came across and  read your article (<http://www.bihartimes.com/maneka/poloponies.html>) on  cruelty to polo ponies in India.  I am extremely saddened and makes my eyes water. However, at the same time, I  would humbly request you to refrain from carte blanche every polo player and  the game as such. I play at the Cambridge University Polo Club, and I started  riding because I love animals. In fact, I used to spend hours cuddling and  grooming calves in my grandpa's farm when I was young. I don't eat meat, not  just because I was brought up as such, but because I cannot feel good about  animals being killed. Moreover, I can  guarantee you that though the term "breaking" is used nobody breaks a  horse! Please refer to this wikipedia article –  <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_breaking>. Of course, there will be  some "idiots" who still do literally "break" a horse. I  don't think British law or RSPCA would allow that in this age and time. If there is a problem  in India,  I entirely support you and your arguments. Those filthy people should be  punished by law. However, my request is not tarnish a sport because of  "some" Indians. In fact, by polo  regulations no pony can be used for more than one chukker in a game. Each  chukker lasts only 7 min, after which the horses go to rest. The players get a  new pony for each chukker. There is mandated long period of rest between two  chukkers when the same horse is used. Neither of the dodgy practices that you  mention happen nor are allowed. If polo ponies are  not literally "broken", but trust is earned and they are willingly  trained, then carefully and affectionately taken care of and played on, as  described above, I don't see polo as a sport being awful on the horses or  anything. In fact, every time we get out to the polo fields the horses love to  start cantering! I do not know how much experience you have had spending hours  with such horses and how they feel... I hope I have not got  you the wrong message here. I sympathise with your core cause of preventing  cruelty to animals. However, you seem to subtly suggest against all forms of  domestication and use of animals in human life. Animals enrich human life and  vice versa; it would be a poor world and culture without animals in our lives. Mowgli.Cambridge, England.
 frommowgli.cam@googlemail.com
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