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The bond between horses: Simonsig & Triolo D'Alene

Discussion in 'Horse Racing' started by PNkt, Nov 16, 2016.

  1. PNkt

    PNkt Well-Known Member

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    The horse Simonsig left behind - the tragic end to an equine love affair
    Wednesday 16 November 2016

    The death of Simonsig on Sunday has left another horse at the yard of Nicky Henderson without his soul mate. Andy Stephens spoke to the trainer to find out more.

    By Andy Stephens


    Do racehorses grieve or pine for one another? The next weeks and months at the yard of Nicky Henderson may reveal the answer as it dawns on one horse that his best friend is not coming home.

    Simonsig and Triolo D’Alene were always a source of fascination at Seven Barrows, as well as at Hillswood Stud, in Wiltshire, where they would spend their summer holidays. They were racing’s odd couple, joined at the hip.

    Where one would go, the other would follow. Where one stood, so would the other. They grazed and played together, lived in the same box and spent their holidays as one. Inseperable, according to Henderson.

    This was a delightful and most unusual equine love affair between a chestnut and a grey, which came about quite by chance. Henderson recalled with clarity at a media event at Newbury on Tuesday where and when the friendship first blossomed.

    “It goes back to about four years ago when they were among ten horses we turned out for their summer holiday at Hillwood Stud," he said. "It was an amazing field of stars with others like Bobs Worth and Finian’s Rainbow in there.

    “When we went back the next morning we found the eight bays together and the other two [Triolo D’Alene and Simonsig, or Simon as those closest to him called him] at the opposite end of the field. It went on and on like this. For the whole of that summer they never met; eight one side, two the other.

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    Triolo D'Alene gives Simonsig a nuzzle during one of many contented days together. (Sarah Henderson)

    “Simon and Triolo went off on their own - the grey and the chestnut. I don’t know whether they’d been pushed out by the bays or they had just decided they were different, but it was the most extraordinary thing.

    “It was always the same. Any time you went there there was just the two of them together, even though they were themselves cheese and chalk in character.”

    Hillswood Stud is run by Charlie and Tracy Vigors. They have witnessed most types of unusual thoroughbred behaviour, but nothing quiite like this.

    “They knew each other inside out and had a special bond," Tracy said on Wednesday. "They would spend their days playing and scratching in the field, and would eat out of the same feed pot. They were an amazing sight.

    “They were always 100 per cent happy with themselves - lovely, easy horses to have around and proper gentlemen.

    “They had a perfect partnership with no hierarchy. They were on level terms through and through - best mates at all times.

    “Bobs Worth did try to get in on the act at one stage. He was in there for a little bit, but did not quite master it. I think it was a case of two’s company, three’s a crowd.”

    Henderson was not inclined to split the pair up when they returned to his yard, not least because the pair had respiratory issues which required lots of fresh air.

    “We realised that when they had married up like they did in the field, we may as well keep them together,” he said.

    Initially, they were turned out in a big indoor school during the winter. They were equipped with more rugs than others, to keep them warm, but Henderson became so trusting of their relationship that he eventually left their hind shoes on.

    Usually this would be inviting trouble because horses can kick out ferociously and hurt one another, especially when armed with steel plates. “But I knew they would not touch each other,” he said.

    Later on, they moved into a big barn box. Their routine of being turned out in a field together once they had worked always remained the same.

    “Off they would go, as soon as they had done their work,” the three-time champion trainer said. “That happened every day unless it was pouring down with rain.

    “They would be together, side by side, day in and day out. And when they came into their stable they would still be side by side.”

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    Mirror image: The equine best friends would often strike the same pose. (Tracy Vigors)

    On Sunday, amid sombre scenes at Cheltenham, the union came to a tragic end. Simonsig fell for the first time under Rules, broke his leg and could not be saved.

    Just minutes before the Henderson team had already been a whirl of emotions after Sprinter Sacre had paraded in front of bulging stands following shock news of his retirement.

    One of the greatest two-mile chasers to have graced the turf was clapped and cheered continuously during four or five laps of the paddock, with videos of his magical wins and Andy Williams' The Impossible Dream playing as a sound track.

    The other horses for the Schloer Chase were walking around at the same time, so Simonsig witnessed and heard all the adulation. The dual Cheltenham Festival winner might have even thought it was for him.

    Henderson and his staff were still processing all this when the beautiful grey came down and, moments later, took his last breath. It left them - and many others at the racecourse - totally shattered.

    The immediate thoughts of Henderson were not for himself but for Dave Fehily, the lad who looked after Simonsig, Ronnie Bartlett, the owner, and last, but not least, Triolo D’Alene.

    “What’s Triolo going to say,” Henderson mumbled to himself while talking to the media.

    Now, a few days on, the pain slightly less raw, he was able to expand.

    “We were going through all these emotions, all the people involved, and then it occurred to me: hang on, Triolo. What’s going to happen to him?”

    Henderson believes the 2013 Hennessy winner would have had an inkling that something was amiss when the horsebox and its hushed passengers arrived back at the yard on Sunday evening.

    Horses at his stable, and those at others, communicate with each other when the lorries pull up returning from the races. The familiar sound of the engine, voices, followed by doors clattering open and shut and then the clip clop of hooves always triggers excitement among those who have spent the day at home.

    Like dogs barking at the return of an owner, they want to make themselves heard.

    “He knows that horsebox coming back up the drive and, I promise you, he will have expected Simon to come back with it. He really would have,” Henderson said of Triolo D’Alene. “They start whinnying for each other.

    “And then the horsebox comes back and his great friend isn’t there….”

    Henderson’s eyes became moist and it felt like intruding on his grief, but he continued: “How much does that affect a horse? I just don’t know. It’s something nobody can tell you, but you can’t help feeling it would affect him.

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    Henderson believes that the loss of Simonsig will impact on Triolo D'Alene. (Tracy Vigors)

    “I’m probably being stupidly sentimental but those two horses? They were quite something.”

    There are precedents. Scroll through horse forums and you will find owners who have noticed a marked deterioration, at least for a time, in one horse after surviving a long-time companion. Some can go off their food, become subdued or lose condition. Others have continually charged around their surroundings, as if searching for their mate.

    The legendary Man O’ War, also a chestnut, died a short time after his longtime groom, Will Harbut, passed away. The horse apparently stopped eating when Harbut no longer appeared at his door and many believed he succumbed to a broken heart, although the supreme American champion was 30 years of age.

    Horses and humans are wired very differently but a study this year showed our four-legged friends can recognise emotions in our faces.

    Triolo D’Alene will have seen many sad ones in recent days but will not lack for Polos or pats over the weeks ahead. That is no SP returned.

    Tracy Vigors said: “We texted a couple of guys at Nicky’s on Sunday night and said ‘go and give Triolo a hug, he’s going to be missing his mate tonight’."

    But she also offers hope that the lone horse will get through any confusion he might be suffering. “When you wean a foal off a mare, they have a few days of panic and stress and then life goes on," she said. "It's harsh but, like humans, horses can be resourceful. They get on with their working lives and hopefully there will be no long-term problem.”

    On Tuesday the nine-year-old had an away day at Newbury. He galloped in the company of two stablemates plus Many Clouds, the Grand National winner, ahead of another tilt at the Hennessy Gold Cup, a race he won in 2013, on Saturday week. He is a best-priced 33-1 to reclaim his crown.

    "He had a nice gallop round and you could not say he looked miserable,” Henderson said. “But, whooa, you think of all the people this is going to affect, and then you suddenly think of him. Horses have to be close to human, don’t they?”
     
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  2. PNkt

    PNkt Well-Known Member

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    Sniff :emoticon-0106-cryin
     
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  3. Ron

    Ron Well-Known Member
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    They do tend to get attached to another horse/pony in time but you can't be 100% certain what they are thinking. Sometimes I feel they have a longer term attachment to a particular human than to another horse. We have 2 ponies 33+ years old that have been together with us since foals and I'm dreading one of them going.
     
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  4. NassauBoard

    NassauBoard Well-Known Member

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    Wait until Barney reads this!!
     
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  5. stick

    stick Bumper King

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    This sort of story is not unusual. I have seen it at Longsdons yard too where two horses have what they call a marriage and want nothing to do with any of the others at the yard. They are stabled in a barn seperate to the rest of the string. (Long Lunch & Hannibal The Great)
     
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  6. Doalittle

    Doalittle Well-Known Member

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    There is a really nice interview with Nicky Henderson on the final furlong podcast about Simonsig and Sprinter Sacre. Really worth a listen. He talks about Simonsig and Triolo D’Alene.

    http://www.attheraces.com/finalfurlongpodcast
     
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  7. Sir Barney Chuckles

    Sir Barney Chuckles Who Dares Wins

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    Look it’s a poignant, moving and respectful piece but to be honest I was expecting something like this to come out and to be perfectly frank it’s akin to something that Goebbels, the Stasi or ‘Mandy’ Mandelson would have released following ‘adverse’ news.

    As Stick says this sort of story is not unusual and if you wanted to ‘spin’ it another way you could say that without National Hunt racing the special bond between the 2 horses would still exist.
     
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  8. Ron

    Ron Well-Known Member
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    Of course Barney. Goes without saying
     
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  9. woolcombe-folly007

    woolcombe-folly007 Well-Known Member

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    One of my horses recently passed away! (In the summer) His best friend of 10 years who he was stabled next to, went out in the field every day, fed with with who was an ex racer himself was 34 which is ridiculously old especially for a thoroughbred 2 weeks later passed away! Coincidence i don't think so! The bond between horses is incredible! I just hope Trilo is ok!! I bet his work won't be the same for a while tho!
     
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  10. woolcombe-folly007

    woolcombe-folly007 Well-Known Member

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  11. ChelseaCOE2012

    ChelseaCOE2012 Well-Known Member

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    Hopefully Triolo will honour his friend Simon and Simon will be up there looking over him and helping him win some more races. RIP Simon

    And Barney, if you haven't got anything nice to say and all you're going to do is moan and whine like a little girl then keep it zipped and **** off
     
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  12. woolcombe-folly007

    woolcombe-folly007 Well-Known Member

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    Disagree with that! Look at Vautour if Simon had retired or not even raced at all what's to say he wouldn't have broken a leg in the field, got cast in the box or even get colic! Look a Kauto survived years of racing and then when he Retired he had his injury!
     
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  13. Ron

    Ron Well-Known Member
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    What are you disagreeing with Wooly. Of course bonds between horses exist outside horse racing. Misunderstanding here somewhere I think
     
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  14. Cyclonic

    Cyclonic Well Hung Member

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    This is a really ticklish subject and one being debated at the very best institutes. It appears now that animal grieving is some species is pretty much a given, but to what extent can't be ascertained. And which animals can be added to the list is also up for discussion. There are cases where an animal can appear to be grieving, but it may also just an instance of inquisitiveness. There is also well documented paperwork supporting the grieving process in animals like elephants, some birds and primates, among others. There can be no doubt that bonds between animals are real and in cases can lead to grief, but it's important that we don't let ourselves be led into any expression of an anthropomorphic nature.
     
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  15. woolcombe-folly007

    woolcombe-folly007 Well-Known Member

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    I thought you were agreeing with Barney about if NH racing didnt exist then the bond between the two would still be here <ok> But as you bit of misunderstanding maybe :D
     
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  16. PNkt

    PNkt Well-Known Member

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    Animals certainly grieve - look at how elephants react when they find the bones of another elephant.

    We had 2 cats, a brother and sister, from 9 weeks old. When they were just over a year old the boy was run over and killed. For several days his sister just sat on the garden wall looking for him and waiting for him to come home.

    They do "get over it" pretty quickly, but they do know that things are different and that their companion is no longer there.
     
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  17. OddDog

    OddDog Mild mannered janitor
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    Same experience with guinea pigs Princess - one died and the other one just sat there all miserable
     
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  18. Sir Barney Chuckles

    Sir Barney Chuckles Who Dares Wins

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    Cor blimey are you introducing censorship onto the forum?!? And what exactly have I said on this thread that ain’t nice or true?!? Answers on a postcard please to the usual address…
     
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  19. Sir Barney Chuckles

    Sir Barney Chuckles Who Dares Wins

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    Horses are horses you don’t need National Hunt racing to form a special bond between them! Where in the name of sanity do you get it from that animals only 'bond' if they are involved in NH racing?!? Special bonds will exist between horses involved in NH racing and special bonds will exist between horses who are a million miles away from NH racing.
     
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  20. SaveTheHumans

    SaveTheHumans Well-Known Member

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    Or they could be tied to a tree, left starving with no one to care for them and die a slow and painful death barring their magnificent owners sending them to the fantastic trainers of the jumps.

    To put another 'spin' on it.
     
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