logo
Authorities take action over horror horse whip video

Authorities take action over horror horse whip video

Perth Nowa day ago

An Australian Olympian filmed whipping a horse 42 times has claimed he was doing so in an effort to save the animal's life.
The footage, taken around two years ago at his stables in NSW, shows Heath Ryan repeatedly striking a horse named Nico as it bucks in distress.
The video was recently shared online, sparking widespread outrage.
WATCH THE VIDEO BELOW: GRAPHIC CONTENT WARNING
Now Equestrian Australia has provisionally suspended Ryan from national and international competitions while it investigates the incident.
Ryan, who competed at the 2008 Beijing Olympics and is a three-time Australian three-day event champion, claimed the footage was taken by a disgruntled former employee.
The 66-year-old said the whipping of the six-year-old gelding was a last resort to prevent the horse from being euthanised.
'Oh my goodness! The most awful video of me on a young horse has just surfaced,' Ryan wrote in a lengthy Facebook post.
If you'd like to view this content, please adjust your .
To find out more about how we use cookies, please see our Cookie Guide.
He described the situation as 'life-and-death' for Nico, who he said was destined for the knackery.
'I have never ridden anything like it. I am so sad this was caught on video. If I had been thinking of myself, I would have immediately just gotten off and sent Nico to the knackery,' he said.
'That video was a life-or-death moment for Nico and of that I was very aware. I felt I genuinely had to try my very hardest to see if Nico would consider other options. By the end of that initial ride, I did feel Nico was responding.'
Ryan added that after a few more days of training, Nico began responding well and no longer required 'excessive driving aids.'
However, Equestrian Australia strongly condemned the footage.
'Equestrian Australia is extremely alarmed and concerned by the treatment of the horse shown in this footage,' the organisation said in a statement.
'We have imposed a provisional suspension of this person's membership and all associated rights, privileges, and benefits while the matter is investigated.' Heath Ryan at the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games. Credit: MIKE CLARKE / AFP
Ryan also claimed that Nico had previously attacked its former owner.
'The horse grabbed her by the mouth, ripped her out of the saddle, and savaged her,' he said.
'It would stop, then turn around and try to grab you like a stallion. It had done this with its previous owner, who had never hit it.'
'(The whipping) turned everything around. This horse went on to have its best interests looked after. Clearly, in hindsight, it wasn't horse abuse. It was actually saving its life. That's irrefutable. It's just that when you look at it, I understand—it's bloody horrendous.'
'And if you think I enjoyed that, I did not. I hated it, but I felt desperate. This horse was maybe as good as dead. Could I talk to it? Could I open up channels of communication?'
The video was shared by US equestrian channel Dressage Hub, whose owner Susan Wachowich said it 'infuriates me to the core.'
With 7NEWS

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

After decades of heartbreak, South Africa clinch historic victory over Australia in world Test final
After decades of heartbreak, South Africa clinch historic victory over Australia in world Test final

The Age

time25 minutes ago

  • The Age

After decades of heartbreak, South Africa clinch historic victory over Australia in world Test final

London: Australia have lost their World Test Championship title to South Africa after the Proteas pulled off a nervy fourth innings chase at Lord's, to end decades of trauma in big finals. Aiden Markram (136) guided his side to within just six runs of victory with a magnificent century before he was finally caught by Travis Head off Josh Hazlewood, but the damage was already done. Just minutes after the crowd stood to applaud Markram as he left the field, keeper-batsman Kyle Verreynne hit Mitchell Starc through the covers to clinch a remarkable five-wicket victory after Pat Cummins' men made the Proteas sweat by keeping runs tight and taking the wickets of Temba Bavuma and Tristan Stubbs. Australian desperation was underlined by how Cummins burned through all his team's three DRS referrals in the space of about an hour as he tried to gamble for wickets. They also appealed for a catch at short leg off Travis Head's boot, but replays showed the ball had hit the ground first. Even Verreynne would have been sent on his way late, caught behind attempting to ramp Starc. It was ultimately a decisive triumph for the South Africans, who claimed their first win in a major global tournament final after years of near misses, most recently at last year's Twenty20 World Cup in the Caribbean. All up, their heartbreak in knockout games at the biggest tournaments – the men's 50-over world cup, the Twenty20 world cup, and the men's Champions Trophy – spanned two quarter-finals, 12 semi-finals and one final. 'Years in the waiting… [against] the biggest opposition, in Australia, they've given us so much heartache over the years, but now the exclamation mark of an ICC event,' said former Proteas skipper Shaun Pollock in commentary after the winning runs were struck. 'They'll be singing, they'll be dancing on the streets of South Africa.' But this win was their eighth Test match victory in as many games. Steve Smith could only watch the final stages from the team balcony in the members' pavilion after suffering a compound dislocation of his right little finger after trying to take a catch on the third day.

After decades of heartbreak, South Africa clinch historic victory over Australia in world Test final
After decades of heartbreak, South Africa clinch historic victory over Australia in world Test final

Sydney Morning Herald

time25 minutes ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

After decades of heartbreak, South Africa clinch historic victory over Australia in world Test final

London: Australia have lost their World Test Championship title to South Africa after the Proteas pulled off a nervy fourth innings chase at Lord's, to end decades of trauma in big finals. Aiden Markram (136) guided his side to within just six runs of victory with a magnificent century before he was finally caught by Travis Head off Josh Hazlewood, but the damage was already done. Just minutes after the crowd stood to applaud Markram as he left the field, keeper-batsman Kyle Verreynne hit Mitchell Starc through the covers to clinch a remarkable five-wicket victory after Pat Cummins' men made the Proteas sweat by keeping runs tight and taking the wickets of Temba Bavuma and Tristan Stubbs. Australian desperation was underlined by how Cummins burned through all his team's three DRS referrals in the space of about an hour as he tried to gamble for wickets. They also appealed for a catch at short leg off Travis Head's boot, but replays showed the ball had hit the ground first. Even Verreynne would have been sent on his way late, caught behind attempting to ramp Starc. It was ultimately a decisive triumph for the South Africans, who claimed their first win in a major global tournament final after years of near misses, most recently at last year's Twenty20 World Cup in the Caribbean. All up, their heartbreak in knockout games at the biggest tournaments – the men's 50-over world cup, the Twenty20 world cup, and the men's Champions Trophy – spanned two quarter-finals, 12 semi-finals and one final. 'Years in the waiting… the biggest opposition in Australia, they've given us so much heartache over the years, but now the exclamation mark of an ICC event,' said former Proteas skipper Shaun Pollock in commentary after the winning runs were struck. 'They'll be singing, they'll be dancing on the streets of South Africa.' But this win was their eighth Test match victory in as many games. Steve Smith could only watch the final stages from the team balcony in the members' pavilion after suffering a compound dislocation of his right little finger after trying to take a catch on the third day.

Dolphins rookies urged to mine golden generation
Dolphins rookies urged to mine golden generation

Perth Now

time31 minutes ago

  • Perth Now

Dolphins rookies urged to mine golden generation

The 10 rookies on Australia's swim team for the world titles are being urged to mine a golden generation's expertise while they can. Dolphins hierarchy have selected a 40-strong team for the world championships in Singapore starting July 27. The team was settled on Saturday night moments after Lani Pallister broke a 10-year-old Commonwealth record in the last race of the selection trials in Adelaide. Pallister won the women's 1500m freestyle in 15 minutes 39.14 seconds, one second inside the previous Commonwealth benchmark set by New Zealander Lauren Boyle in 2015. Pallister was the standout swimmer of the meet, also breaking Ariarne Titmus' Australian record in the 800m freestyle and dipping under four minutes for the first time to win the 400m free. "It has been a good week ... it has shown what I can do," Pallister said. Australia's team is book-ended in age by 16-year-old Sienna Toohey and 31-year-old Cam McEvoy, who will race at an astonishing seventh world championships. Toohey is among the Dolphins' debutants being told by Swimming Australia's head coach Rohan Taylor to pick the brains - and study the methods - of their battle-hardened teammates. Taylor was reluctant to compare the strength of the fresh Dolphins pod to previous teams. "All I can compare is the type of athlete we have on the team - they're just competitive," Taylor told AAP. "They hate losing more than they they like winning, I think. "There's just a certain character; we have got an abundance of them. "What you have with Kaylee (McKeown), Mollie (O'Callaghan), Kyle (Chalmers) is super-competitive and they're infectious to the team. "So while we have them, we want to grow the others to learn how to be like that." Taylor was impressed with how the emerging swimmers thrived under the stress of selection trials. "You can't create that kind of pressure and expectation on someone before it actually happens," he said. "There's one thing to see them progressing ... what is pleasing is the ability to actually deliver. That is really a skill and that's the skill we look for. "Now it's going to an international meet, can you repeat your performances? That is the next step for these guys." Other swimmers securing selection on Saturday night included Paris Olympic 50m freestyle silver medallist Meg Harris. The 23-year-old won the one-lap dash in 24.17 seconds after dropping out of the 100m free following a heat swim. "I did so well last year in the 50, I want to see if I have any more potential in that," Harris said. And Kyle Chalmers' stunning form continued by equalling his personal best in the 50m butterfly, winning in 22.89. Chalmers is unlikely to swim the event at the worlds given it's scheduled on the same day as the 4x100m freestyle relay. "I'm always going to put the team first before my individual races," Chalmers said. "I haven't done any butterfly training just yet so I'm excited to be able to go to that leading into the next Olympics."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store