July 17, 2017
Partnerships, pancakes and chuckwagon poles
Dr. Baljit Singh was well aware of the work veterinary medicine researchers and their students are doing through a partnership with the 荔枝视频 Stampede, but as he donned his brand new Wranglers and shiny big belt buckle last week, he wasn鈥檛 aware there would be so many pancakes.
鈥淚 like how the whole city really partakes in the Stampede, from going down to the grounds to organizing pancake breakfasts everywhere,鈥 says Singh, who started as the dean of the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine (UCVM) last fall. 鈥淚 never realized the magnitude of the Stampede or the extent to which people participate. There鈥檚 lots of fun.鈥
And, there鈥檚 lots of science.
Take the work by Dr. Renaud L茅guillette, UCVM鈥檚 first Chair in Equine Sports Medicine. He studies how to prevent injuries in high-performance horses at the Stampede. Over the years, he鈥檚 researched the respiratory systems of barrel racing horses and those entered in the Heavy Horse Pull Competition.
This summer, L茅guillette supervised a new study 鈥 a unique collaboration between the faculties of veterinary medicine, engineering and kinesiology 鈥 looking at a piece of equipment that connects chuckwagons to the team of horses. 鈥淒r. L茅guillette is doing a research project testing how chuckwagon poles respond to stress of competition,鈥 says Singh. 鈥淔inding a way to ensure the poles don鈥檛 bend or break could help prevent injuries among horses during the chuckwagon races.鈥
Dr. Ed Pajor, professor in animal behaviour and welfare at UCVM and Anderson-Chisholm Chair in Animal Care and Welfare, has also done a lot of research with animals at the Stampede including a paper published last year on the emotional state and stress levels of bucking bulls.
This year, Pajor is studying whether bulls 鈥 not normally provided shade in the holding pens 鈥 prefer the sun or shade, and is looking for early clinical signs of heat stress and behaviour changes. 鈥淭he current thinking is that bulls out in the pasture are used to living out in the sun so they really don鈥檛 care if they鈥檙e in the sun or the shade,鈥 says Singh, 鈥渂ut no scientific study has been done so Dr. Pajor is beginning by doing a small-scale study that will inform a larger study next summer on the well-being of rodeo animals.鈥
Back at the first Stampede rodeo in 1912, cowboys were likely less concerned about bulls in the sun or how horse鈥檚 lungs work, but thinking around animal welfare has progressed. 鈥淭he nature of the agricultural community has shifted since the first Stampede was held more than 100 years ago,鈥 says Singh. 鈥淭he way we handle animals, the way we treat animals, the societal norms and thinking have changed quite a bit for the better.鈥
And as the partnership between UCVM and the Stampede continues to grow, building knowledge around the health and welfare of animals involved in the events, Singh expects animal food production will become a bigger focus. 鈥淔ood, and where food comes from, is a vehicle that connects our rural and urban communities,鈥 he says. 鈥淯CVM and the Stampede are discussing this now 鈥 how we can do a better job creating awareness about food.鈥
In the meantime, the dean says he enjoyed the sense of community around the 荔枝视频 Stampede as well as 鈥渁ll the pancakes.鈥
Dean Singh chats with members of the Vet Med research group studying the effect of shade on bulls performing at the 荔枝视频 Stampede. From left: Jennifer Pearson, Anneliese Heinric, and Alycia Webster.