Twenty-one polo horses collapse, die in Florida

MIAMI, (Reuters) – Twenty-one horses from a  Venezuelan team competing at the U.S. Open Polo Championship  died after collapsing before a match in Florida, officials said  yesterday. The International Polo Club of Palm Beach said the Lechuza  Caracas team was preparing its horses for an afternoon match  when two collapsed and others began “exhibiting dizziness and  disorientation.”

“From the reports I’ve received, they came out of their  trailers and they were dizzy … and began toppling over,” said  Terence McElroy, spokesman for the Florida Department of  Agriculture. “It’s my understanding that all of these horses  have died, 21 in total.”

McElroy said 15 of the horses had been transported to a  state facility in Kissimmee, where necropsies and other tests  would be conducted. There was no obvious indication of what had  caused the horses to collapse, he said. The polo club, located in Wellington, about 70 miles (113  km) north of Miami, confirmed in a statement that horses had  died but did not cite a number. It said the cause of death had  not been determined.

“It could be the water, hay, bedding, we just don’t know,”  John Wash, president of club operations, told local media.

Lechuza Caracas team veterinarian James Belden said the  horses died one by one, “almost certainly of an intoxication of  some sort that they consumed,” the Palm Beach Post reported.

Belden said it was unlikely that the horses had died from  tainted medication or had been given anabolic steroids because  they are banned in England, where the team competes.

“I’ve been in practice 50 years. I’ve never seen anything  like this,” he told the newspaper.