Sunday Silence battles what appear to be his longest
odds yet.
Report
From Japan: On-the-Scene Account of Sunday Silence's Battle
Reported by: Barbara J. Bayer, The Blood-Horse Magazine; BloodHorse.com
Date Posted: 8/13/02 8:39:38 AM
HAYAKITA, HOKKAIDO, JAPAN (August 13) -- It's the ninth anniversary
of the death of Zenya Yoshida, the founder of Shadai Farm. Rain
has fallen for most of the day, growing stronger toward evening
and the mood is grim at Shadai Stallion Station. In a barn set back
from the others, a barn that was especially built to accommodate
the aging Northern Taste, Sunday Silence battles what appear to
be his longest odds yet.
Laminitis
in the stallion's left foreleg has worsened and Sunday (as the Stallion
Station staff members refer to Sunday Silence) has for the past
two days remained standing. Apparently the pain has worsened in
both forelegs, in the left from the laminitis and in the right from
the original infection for which he was operated on three times.
''He has drawn his weight back over his hindquarters like a horse
about to jump and has his feet drawn somewhat together in order
to take the weight off them," said spokesman Eisuke Tokutake.
"Before he would lie down a lot but now he's staying standing.
If he lies down I don't think he's going to get up again. Then again,
maybe he will. He's such a strong horse.''
Sunday's
front legs are kept bandaged and electromagnetic tabs have been
applied from the withers along his back and over his hindquarters.
The horse has a good appetite and has, since June, been kept on
strict rations in order to help reduce the weight his legs have
to bear. Rotating shifts of staff workers and veterinarians watch
over him round the clock, according to Tokutake. Special shoes have
been made to elevate the heel of the right leg, where the tendon
is separated.
Swelling
in the hindlegs has worsened as well and it has failed, unlike earlier,
to go down. Signs of laminitis have also appeared in the hindlegs.
The stallions's temperature is also often elevated. ''Mentally,
though he's very strong and holding his own. His eyes are still
bright and you can feel his power,'' Tokutake explains.
''I
wouldn't say we've given up on him. But, the pain is going to get
worse and I would say that we do feel that it isn't right to have
him continue fighting this. I think he could go on like this for
a while yet. The question really is when we are going to have to
say, it's enough.'' That decision, Tokutake says, will largely be
made by the farm's veterinarian.
Offers
to help Sunday in his fight have come in from around the world,
especially from the United States. ''Since it hit the news in the
States we've had many calls from veterinarians and farriers offering
their help. The response has been really amazing. We've had people
offering to come over immediately, people saying there's no reason
for a horse to be put down because of laminitis and people claiming
to have cured all kinds of laminitis cases. We've had someone, I
believe it was an American Indian, give advice on herbal treatments
and Japanese calling too to give advice on Chinese herbal treatments.
We've had get-well wishes and prayers offered from overseas too,''
Tokutake says. ''Unfortunately, though, it's not just a case of
laminitis. He's not in a condition to be treated really, because
of the infection in the right foreleg.''
The
response from the home fans has been mixed and relatively reserved.
Some have sent get-well wishes and folded chains of tiny paper cranes,
in what is a traditional get-well gesture. There has also, sadly,
been a barrage of anger and frustration launched at the farm. Many
Japanese fans, Tokutake says, have called to berate the staff. ''People
call to yell at us, demanding to know why we can't help him. We've
gotten a lot of e-mail messages like that as well.'' But mostly,
Japanese have stayed away. ''We've had such a run of bad luck, End
Sweep, El Condor Pasa, now Sunday. People don't know what to say.
Sometimes I think God is having some fun with us. We can't see the
cause of this, this infection. It seems to be something to have
come from inside.'' Buddhist priests, as is the traditional Japanese
custom in times of misfortune, have been called in to cleanse the
farm.
All
media persons have been barred from actually looking in on the proud
champion. ''You wouldn't have people traipsing in and out of a sickroom
of a bedridden person," said Totutake. "We simply don't
want people from outside seeing him.''
The
depth of Tokutake's feelings for the stallion are more apparent
when he says, ''I want people to remember him as he always was,
kicking and biting and strong. He was always so high voltage, so
wired, that I often thought he would one day hurt himself. He wasn't
crazy but he was so electrifying,'' Tokutake says. ''I'd think,
how is he ever going to grow old and be able to put up with the
boredom of life after retirement?''
Tokutake's
face darkens. ''Everyone here is so affected by this,'' he says.
''For us, sure, it is a business, but, it's so much more, with Sunday.
He's not a friendly horse. His attitude has always been of someone
above you, like a boss. We've all come to rely on him so much, too
much. We earn our keep because of him. Because of him people came
to the farm. He brought in the money, the people, the talk. He's
taken care of us. He is the boss. He's the proprieter.'' Tokutake,
who started working with Shadai just as Sunday Silence's first foals
were born, says he wishes he could see Sunday Silence grow old,
like the farm's most senior member, the 31-year old Northern Taste.
''Northern Taste is full of life. It's unbelievable. The order of
things just seems wrong.''
''You
know,'' Tokutake says, ''I'm a man who has always enjoyed his drink.
But. . . the sake just doesn't taste good anymore. Not good at all
and so I've stopped drinking.'
Zenya
Yoshida, the founder of Shadai, was responsible for purchasing and
bringing Sunday Silence to Japan. ''It's the anniversary of his
death today,'' Tokutake says. ''Sunday is so much like Zenya was.
They both worked so hard from a young age. Strong-willed, fiery,
with a strong sense of self. They both did so much for this farm.
I don't know. Maybe, Zenya is coming to take Sunday with him.''
Copyright © 2002 The Blood-Horse, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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