8
Hastings has announced that purses have been increased to a minimum of $10,000 for lower end horses. BC-bred bottoms winners run for a minimum of $12,500. Horses that made their last start in 2014 at Hastings, and return to run for a claiming price of $5,000 or less are eligible to receive $2,000 to offset wintering and spring training costs. A new “Waiver Claiming” rule will permit horses laid off for 90 days or more to run without being eligible to be claimed when they start for the same claiming price, or above, upon returning to the races. Allowance purses now top out at $25,000 and optional claimers will run for $20,000. Two new Stakes for BC-bred or owned horses have been added to the BC Cup Day program, the Pegasus Distaff ($75,000) and the Redekop Classic ($100,000). The two new races with purses enhanced by sponsorships from the Pegasus Training & Equine Rehabilitation Center and Peter Redekop will add $75,000 to the BC Cup Day purses. The BC Cup Classic and Distaff ($50,000 each) will be moved to Friday, August 21 and tops a card of excellent racing featuring six Stakes to kick-off racing during the PNE. Purses for all four Sales Stakes will be raised from $50,000 to $60,000. This will mean that BC-breds, with the two new races on BC Cup Day and the increase in the Sales Stakes, will have the opportunity to compete for $215,000 more in Stakes money than was available to them last year. The 2015 British Columbia Derby purse has been increased to $250,000, up from last year’s $150,000. Stakes races will pay 2% from 6th through 8th for a minimum of $8,000 for runners finishing 8th or better. The Champions Starter Series (for horses that have started for $8,000 or less since January 1/2014) will again offer $50,000 championship races for both colts & geldings and fillies and mares. This year the championship races will be contested at 1 1/16 miles. The Ship n’ Win Program has been enhanced in an effort to attract more horses from other jurisdictions. Owners of eligible horses that start 3 times at Hastings will receive up to $3,000, plus a 30% bonus on their first purse if they finish in the top three. Bits & Bikes Serving the British Columbia Horseracing community www.horseracingbc.ca HorseRacingB C April 2015 Issue # 70 FREE! HorseRacingBC Subscription Can’t find a copy? Anyone wishing to receive this paper on-line can email [email protected] and simply ask to be put on a safe and secure mailing list. You will receive the paper in a unique PDF format each month. Looking For Old Photos Looking for old photos that show the history of BC racing. Photos will be reproduced and published and returned safely. No win photos please The Thoroughbred Ladies Club of BC The TLC of BC, whose charity work and scholarship program has benefited backstretch workers at Hastings Racecourse since 1973, meets the first Tuesday each month. If you would like to join them in their worthwhile efforts or help at the occasional function, please call: Linda Sentes 604-318-7949 Barb Williams at 604-542-8951. Wanted: Foal photos and stallion bios. Do you have a new foal? Send photos to; jimreynolds@uniserve. com. We are also looking to celebrate BC stallions and we are looking for bios and photos of your stud. Send your stories to [email protected] Positive News for 2015 Hastings’s sensation Herbie D, is training successfully for this season at Hastings Rebecca Brown photo courtesy of HBPA Full Circle: First Nations Performance Society Will perform June 14 – A non- profit arts organization with a mission to create opportunities for Aboriginal artists, writers and performers to entertain and share Aboriginal traditions and experiences. Canadian Thoroughbred Horse Society (BC Division) Our new address is: #7 – 5492 Production blvd. Surrey, bc v3s 8p5 Our new contact numbers are: Telephone: 604.534.0145 Fax: 604.534.Cths (2847) Two-Year-Olds In Training Standardbred Canada has released the first list of 2015 two-year-olds in training. The list is available at the following link: www.standardbredcanada.ca/ content/two-year-olds-in- training.html

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Hastings has announced that purses have been increased to a minimum of $10,000 for lower end horses. BC-bred bottoms winners run for a minimum of $12,500.Horses that made their last start in 2014 at Hastings, and return to run for a

claiming price of $5,000 or less are eligible to receive $2,000 to offset wintering and spring training costs.A new “Waiver Claiming” rule will permit horses laid off for 90 days or

more to run without being eligible to be claimed when they start for the same claiming price, or above, upon returning to the races.Allowance purses now top out at $25,000 and optional claimers will run

for $20,000.Two new Stakes for BC-bred or owned horses have been added to the BC

Cup Day program, the Pegasus Distaff ($75,000) and the Redekop Classic ($100,000). The two new races with purses enhanced by sponsorships from the Pegasus Training & Equine Rehabilitation Center and Peter Redekop will add $75,000 to the BC Cup Day purses. The BC Cup Classic and Distaff ($50,000 each) will be moved to Friday,

August 21 and tops a card of excellent racing featuring six Stakes to kick-off racing during the PNE.Purses for all four Sales Stakes will be raised from $50,000 to $60,000. This will mean that BC-breds, with the

two new races on BC Cup Day and the increase in the Sales Stakes, will have the opportunity to compete for $215,000 more in Stakes money than was available to them last year. The 2015 British Columbia Derby purse has been increased to $250,000, up from last year’s $150,000.Stakes races will pay 2% from 6th through 8th for a minimum of $8,000 for runners finishing 8th or better.The Champions Starter Series (for horses that have started for $8,000 or less since January 1/2014) will again

offer $50,000 championship races for both colts & geldings and fillies and mares. This year the championship races will be contested at 1 1/16 miles.The Ship n’ Win Program has been enhanced in an effort to attract more horses from other jurisdictions. Owners

of eligible horses that start 3 times at Hastings will receive up to $3,000, plus a 30% bonus on their first purse if they finish in the top three.

B i t s & B i k e s

Serving the British Columbia Horseracing community

www.horseracingbc.ca

HorseRacingBCApril 2015Issue # 70

FREE! HorseRacingBC SubscriptionCan’t find a copy? Anyone wishing to receive this paper on-line can email [email protected] and simply ask to be put on a safe and secure mailing list. You will receive the paper in a unique PDF format each month.

Looking For Old PhotosLooking for old photos that show the history of BC racing. Photos will be reproduced and published and returned safely.No win photos please

The Thoroughbred Ladies Club of BCThe TLC of BC, whose charity work and scholarship program has benefited backstretch workers at Hastings Racecourse since 1973, meets the first Tuesday each month. If you would like to join them in their worthwhile efforts or help at the occasional function, please call: Linda Sentes 604-318-7949 Barb Williams at 604-542-8951.

Wanted: Foal photos and stallion bios.Do you have a new foal? Send photos to; [email protected]. We are also looking to celebrate BC stallions and we are looking for bios and photos of your stud. Send your stories to [email protected]

Positive News for 2015

Hastings’s sensation Herbie D, is training successfully for this season at Hastings

Rebecca Brown photo

courtesy of HBPA

Full Circle: First Nations Performance Society Will perform June 14 – A non-profit arts organization with a mission to create opportunities for Aboriginal artists, writers and performers to entertain and share Aboriginal traditions and experiences.

Canadian Thoroughbred Horse Society (BC Division) Our new address is:#7 – 5492 Production blvd.Surrey, bc v3s 8p5Our new contact numbers are:Telephone: 604.534.0145Fax: 604.534.Cths (2847)

Two-Year-Olds In TrainingStandardbred Canada has released the first list of 2015 two-year-olds in training. The list is available at the following link:www.standardbredcanada.ca/

content/two-year-olds-in-training.html

Page 2: #70 april '15 horseracingbc

www.horseracingbc.ca April 2015Issue # 70

Two new stakes races have been added to BC Cup Day on Monday, August 3

while two established BC Cup stakes are moving to a huge Friday Night Live program August 21 on the eve of the 2015 PNE Fair.Hastings GM Darren MacDonald, BC Racing, announced the addition of a new $100,000 Redekop Classic for B.C. bred and owned colts or geldings 3-years-old & up as well as a $75,000 Pegasus Distaff for B.C. bred and owned fillies and mares 3-year-olds & up.“Our horsemen, owners and breeders want to extend a sincere thank you to Mr. Peter Redekop and Pegasus Training & Equine Rehabilitation Center owner Dr. Mark DeDomenico for sponsoring these additions to our stakes schedule,” MacDonald said.By adding the new races to the BC Cup Day program, MacDonald said the traditional $50,000 BC Cup Classic and $50,000 BC Cup

Distaff restricted to B.C.-breds will be moved to Friday Night August 21.That now provides us with six challenging stakes races on both August 3rd and August 21st,” MacDonald noted. “It will put Hastings Racecourse front and centre in August with over $675,000 in purse money from just those two dates alone.”On another positive note, the CTHS Sales Stake races on Monday, Sept. 7 – four in total – have had their purses increased to $60,000 each from $50,000. With the opening of the 2015 thoroughbred season at Hastings set for the April 25-26 weekend, MacDonald said he is encouraged by the fact that more than 550 horses are currently on the grounds with more on the way.The 2015 regular season schedule and revised stakes schedule are available at the CTHS website: www.hastingsracecourse.com

Hastings Adds Two New Stake Races… Six Stakes Now Set for Friday Night Live – August 21

…an excerpt from Jay Hovdey’s column in the Daily Racing Form, April 3rd, 2015It has been a bedrock contention of this corner for years that efforts to shoehorn Thoroughbred horse

racing into the sporting culture as a major player have been doomed by the game’s intrinsic personality flaws.No amount of chatter

about a “league office” or an all-powerful “commissioner” or

trainers called “coach” could ever cause racing to be confused with the NFL or the NBA, nor would a “national marketing strategy” inspire an onrush of new customers to a world so rife with the archaic and arcane.

Still, horse racing has every right to be viewed as a fascinating, idiosyncratic niche pastime with a cadre of true believers and a patronage that mixes blue collar with upper crust. There is not a darn thing wrong with something being identified as a throwback (bowling, vinyl, handwriting), as long as its consumers are being thrown back to a something that fills a yearning for an admirable, bygone ideal.Horse racing should

be a small, polished gem of a sport with a few headline-inducing days that afford nothing more than a peek inside an exotic world where the curious are welcomed but not relied upon for ongoing business. Horse racing does not need new fans as much as it needs to take perfect care of the fans it has, which means horse racing must stop trying to be hip, or liked, or trending, and spend more time and resources on getting the little things right.

By Jay HovdeyDaily Racing Form

Racing News

Opinion…Hovdey: Fix what’s broken, leave the rest

Harness Racing BC has named a New Executive Director

Officials with Harness Racing British Columbia recently announced the organization’s new executive director.The organization has announced that Carla

Robin is the group’s new executive director. It was announced in January that HRBC’s former executive director, Jackson Wittup, was leaving the position to become the new race secretary at Century Downs in Balzac, Alberta.Harness Racing British Columbia has stated that

Robin brings a wealth of experience in the equine sector, as well as marketing, managing provincial and international equine events, and working with municipal and provincial governments to promote and protect the equine industry.2015 HRBC BOARD OF DIRECTORSBREEDER CATEGORYBreeder

Donna ScrannageHeather Davies

Rick TurnerKelly MacMillan

Owner

Paul GilleyRoss Sharp

Bill PambrunBryan Buchanan will be appointed

to a vacancy at AGM

Trainer/DriverGordon AbbottSandra RobertsJim MohorichTravis Tracey

Page 3: #70 april '15 horseracingbc

www.horseracingbc.ca Arril 2015Issue # 70

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“Outstanding Home in Upscale Fraser Heights” 6493 sq. ft. 5 bedrooms plus 2 bdrm “Legal Suite” 1/2 acre private lot. Spacious home theater. Top quality throughout this home. Plenty of space for the large family.

Vet Talk… Everyone hopes for happy, healthy foals, but what happens when things don’t go according to plan and you’re faced with a weak foal fighting for its life?“The important thing

is to act right away,” says Dr. Carolina Palacios, a veterinary anesthesiologist at the Western College of Veterinary Medicine’s Veterinary Medical Centre. “If a foal is born and not breathing or has a low heart rate, the owner should be the first one to start CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation).”Cardiopulmonary

arrest is when the body’s heart and lungs stop working. The result is a lack of adequate blood flow and oxygen to the brain and body — a severe, life-threatening event that requires urgent intervention.A foal needing car-

diopulmonary resusci-tation will have a heart rate less than 50 beats per minute and will be gasping for breath. This medical emer-gency often happens after a long, difficult birth (dystocia).As a first effort to

save a foal’s life, a horse owner or veteri-narian can try CPR.

The success of this emergency procedure is improved by early intervention so pre-paredness is key, says Palacios.She adds that owners

should be able to check the vital signs of their foals so they can detect any problems early — especially during the foal’s first five minutes of life. Here are key facts to remember:A newborn foal’s

heart rate should be between 80 and 100 beats per minute. Check the heart rate by putting your hand over the foal’s chest and feeling for the heart beat.A newborn foal’s

respiratory rate should be between 60 and 80 breaths per minute. This can easily be accessed by watching the foal breathe.You should also know

how to check capillary refill time—an indica-tor of cardiovascular function. Press on the foal’s gums until the spot turns white. In a normal foal, the white spot will return to pink in less than two sec-onds when pressure is released,Clear any membranes

or remaining placenta from the newborn foal’s nostrils and

mouth. Drying the foal vigourously can help to stimulate breathing and warm the foal.“Cleaning the whole

foal is the first thing that should be done,” says Palacios. “If the owners see any mem-branes or they can see any fluids, get rid of all these. If needed, start CPR which is compressions and ventilation.”She adds that if you

suspect that your mare is struggling and your new foal may be at risk, call your veteri-narian immediately so he is at your farm or acreage before the foal is born.But if your veterinar-

ian hasn’t arrived yet and your newborn foal is in distress, you will have to start CPR since time is of the essence. Ideally there should be two people present: one to start CPR and the other to call the veterinarian.“Owners should at

least feel comfortable giving some breaths and giving some compressions until the veterinarian arrives,” say Palacios, adding that basic CPR con-sists of chest compres-sions and assisted breathing.To give chest com-

pressions, interlock

you fingers and place your hands over the widest part of the foal’s chest. Compress the chest by one-third of the width and allow the chest to completely recoil between com-pressions. Give com-pressions at a rate of 100 to 120 beats per minute.You can provide

breaths to the foal with a mask and pump or by mouth to nose. To perform mouth to nose, close off one nostril and place your mouth over the other. Blow into the nostril and watch the chest rise while doing so. Give breaths at a rate of 10 to 20 breaths per minute.If there are two

people available, breaths and compres-sions should be given simultaneously, says Palacios. The person doing compressions should switch roles

every two minutes to avoid fatigue. If you’re alone, alternate giving 15 compressions and then two breaths.Prevention and

preparedness are key in increasing your foal’s chance of survival, stresses Palacios. Here are some tips:Post your veterinar-

ian’s contact informa-tion in the barn.Call your veterinarian

immediately if you suspect there may be a problem with the mare or foal, especially in the event of a difficult birth. Know how to assess vital signs in your newborn foal and know what is “nor-mal.” A foal’s normal temperature is 37.5 to 37.9 °C, a regular heart rate is 80 to 100 beats per minute, normal respiration rate is 60 to 80 breaths per minute and the ac-cepted capillary refill

time is less than two seconds.Be comfortable

performing basic CPR while waiting for your veterinarian to arrive. Palacios recommends Foal CPR — a phone app (available from Veterinary Advances Ltd.) that provides notes, pictures and videos.When it comes to the

life of your foal, don’t take any chances, says Palacios. Taking a few minutes beforehand to prepare yourself for a possible emergency may be a life-saving decision for your foal.

Hayley Kosolofski is a third-year veterinary student from Sherwood Park, Alta., who is the undergraduate student representative for the WCVM’s Equine Health Research Fund.

CPR and preparation can save foal’s life By Hayley Kosolofski

Page 4: #70 april '15 horseracingbc

www.horseracingbc.ca April 2015Issue # 70

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Page 5: #70 april '15 horseracingbc

www.horseracingbc.ca Arril 2015Issue # 70

Midland Liquidators is currently open on the Langley Bypass! We are a local family-run company that has been caring for customers in the Lower Mainland for over 30 years. At our store you will find amaz-ing deals on a very wide variety of items, fantastic customer service, and ever-changing products. Come in and see the great deals we offer on; Tools, Tarps, Canopies, Work Gloves, Pressure Washers, Paint Supplies, Safety Supplies, Power Tools, Ladders, Scaffold Mesh, Raingear, Work and Safety Clothing and much More.

Big Tarps, Medium Tarps, Small tarpsWe are the Best Tarp Store in BC!

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Page 6: #70 april '15 horseracingbc

www.horseracingbc.ca April 2015Issue # 70

TREATING INFLAMMATIONInflammation is a direct result of lameness in performance horses. One of the main causes of lameness and inflammation is repetition in the exercise program or the discipline that they are performing in. If you cannot remove the inflammation you cannot repair your horse.We have tried using magnet blankets and wraps and found that they could not remove the inflammation. We have found no scientific evidence to rebuke our findings. If anyone has information to the contrary please contact us as we really need all of the information on the topic.It has been explained to us that when a horse is over worked or becomes injured through accident, the cells start a process that lowers the bioelectric activity which is normal in a healthy horse. This causes a reduction in oxygen and fresh blood supply to the compromised cells. This starts the inflammation cycle in some or one of the following groups: muscles. Joints, tendons, ligaments or hooves. The LEG SAVER’S waveform polarizes and penetrates the cellular membranes and allows the increase of the flow of nutrients to and toxins from these damaged cells. This process quickly increases the oxygen and blood supply to the injury (inflammation). This is how the LEG SAVER starts to work at the cellular level in the horse’s body to reduce and eliminate the inflammation.

The LEG SAVER is the only product that will remove or reduce the inflammation in all injured horses. BLOOD FLOW IS THE ONLY WAY TO REDUCE AND ELIMINATE INFLAMMATION. THE LEG SAVER CREATES BLOOD FLOW TO THE INJURY.When treating the horse with the Ting Point therapy you can really accelerate the healing process by treating the main organs through the Ting Points and Meridians. We have been doing this for 15 years with tremendous success. Treat the LUNGS, HEART, LARGE INTESTINE, IMMUNE SYSTEM), LIVER (hooves & muscles), KIDNEY (bones), BLADDER, STOMACH, SPLEEN AND OTHERS. The results are truly amazing. The process is easy and efficient. You can treat the Race Horse heart and lungs and achieve a 20 to 30% increase in their stamina at the end of the race. There is one caveat as you must reduce the amount of exercise you do the week before the race or event.

For further information and a demonsration contact:

GARY DESROCHESwww.equi-stimlegsaver.com

[email protected] 1-800-595-7408 toll free

1-604-215-3622

Inflammation is the main cause of lameness in performance horses. One of the main cause is repetition in the exercise program or the discipline that they are performing in. If you cannot remove the inflammation you cannot repair your horse. If the inflammation is not removed & or controlled from the joint arthritis is the end result guaranteed. The infection will manifest itself and invade all of the other joints in the body over time. Anti-inflamatories will not remove the inflammation but will mask it and facilitate increase the damage to the joint. The Scientists at Stanford University indicate that you cannot remove the pain in the joint if you do not know you have a problem. If there is any heat in the joint you have inflammation in the Synovial fluid in the joint. This attacks and destroys the cartilage and membrane in the joint. The doctor heading this study was Dr. Bill Robinson and as-sociate professor of immunology and rheumatology at Stanford. He describes these findings “a paradigm change” One of their conclusions was that inflammation is not caused by excessive wear and tear. If inflammation is present there is 5X the possibility of joint pain and lameness.The use of drugs including Bute and other anti-inflammatories are a mistake as they do not remove the inflammation and only cause more damage. If you have inflammation you cannot remove it with poultice, or sweating the joint. These foolish therapies only make the joint fluid less functional and open to other infections like viruses and arthritis. We have tried using magnet blankets and wraps and found that they could not remove the inflammation. We have found no scientific evidence to rebuke our findings. If anyone has information to the contrary please contact us as we really need all of the information on the topic.The main causes of inflammation are: Repetitive injury, surgery, injury from fall, overweight, blood sugar imbalance. This sugar imbalance is very common as horses receive a lot of additional sugar in their diet. Sugar also attacks the brain and causes long term issues other than lameness.It has been explained to us that when a horse becomes injured through accident or over worked the cells start a process that lowers the bioelectric activity which is normal in a healthy horse. This causes a reduction in oxygen and fresh blood supply to the compromised cells. This starts the inflammation cycle in some or one of the following groups: muscles. Joints, tendons, ligaments or hooves. The LEG SAVER’S waveform polarizes and penetrates the cel-lular membranes and allows the increase of the flow of nutrients too and toxins from these damaged cells. This process quickly in-creases the oxygen and blood supply to the injury (inflammation). This is how the LEG SAVER starts to work at the cellular level in the horse’s body to reduce and eliminate the inflammation. The LEG SAVER is the only product that will remove or reduce the inflammation in all injured horses.

Blood Flow is the Only Way to Reduce and Eliminate Inflammation. The Leg Saver Creates

Blood Flow To The Injury & Kill The Bacterial or Viral Infection Guaranteed.

When treating the horse with the Ting Point Electro Therapy you can really accelerate the healing process by treating the main organs through the Ting Points and Meridians. The Ting Point Electro Therapy (LEG SAVER) increase of Oxygen Supply in the blood which strengthens any organ that is treated with this amaz-ing therapy. We have been doing this for 15 years with tremen-dous success. Treat the LUNGS, HEART, LARGE INTESTING (IMMUNE SYSTEM), LIVER (hooves & muscles), KIDNEY (bones), BLADDER, STOMACH, SPLEEN AND OTHERS the results are truly amazing. The process is easy and efficient.You can treat the Race Horse heart and lungs and achieve a 20 to 30% increase in their stamina at the end of the race. There is one caveat as you must reduce the amount of exercise you do the week before the race or event which reduces the stress and chance of injury to the joints, tendons, ligaments and more. Works great on humans as well. Ting Point Electro Therapy Kills Cancer, Ebola & Arthritic Vi-ruses And Many More In Humans. Ting Point Electro Therapy Is Totally Holistic.

Inflamation In Horses The Main Contriburtor To Lameness.

advertorial

Advertorial

Pedro Alvarado

After a few successful years as a trainer Pedro Alvarado proved his point. He is a good horseman, But training doesn’t always pay what a jockey makes and he has decided to return to race riding—something he is exceptional good at. The consummate professional he can be seen on race days, before the fans arrive and the hotdogs are still warm,jogging the track, examining it, running a few feet off the rail, swinging wide in the turns, testing the depth and the footing—a lone figure in the early afternoon. “It’s just what he does,” said someone on the backstretch.

“Makes sense to know it if you make your living over it.” And Pedro knows this

racetrack, the physical side of it and the mental—knows how tough it can be. In his career Pedro has been leading rider four times and a huge fan favourite—they know a winner. We’ve had only a few riders of his calibre since the 1970’s and 80’s when the jock’s room was full of quality riders. But his determination this spring is evident and he is probably the hardest working hombre on the backstretch—working like he has something to prove.Born in 1965 in

Jalisco, Mexico, a state on the west coast known as the centre of the tequila producing industry. His family wasn’t involved in racing but an uncle used to play the ponies and introduced him to the game when he was

eight years old. As he grew older he started asking people around the track how he could get into racing and found out that there was a jockey’s school at Hipódromo de las Américas in Mexico City. Young Pedro attended the school for two years. The local Mexican

tracks had good riders but his heroes were Lafitte Pincay and Angel Cardero who used to come to Mexico City for the big races. After an apprenticeship, with a talented ex-rider

turned trainer named Jose Brava, he emigrated to Spokane, Washington when he was 19 years old and in the winter he went to Santa Anita to gallop horses where he met arguably the best rider of the 90’s, Patrick Valenzuela. He learned a lot working and galloping with such California superstars. But life found him in

Vancouver and he naturally drifted to Hastings racetrack where he met racing secretary Lorne Mitchell who helped

him with the necessary immigration forms to ride in Canada.“And that was it,”

says Pedro. “Within six weeks I was riding here. Vancouver has been good to me. I’ve been very happy at Hastings.For young people

who want to become a jockey Pedro offers sound advice.“It’s a beautiful

game,” he says in a surprisingly poetic turn of phrase. “If you love horses it’s beautiful, but it’s very tough. Especially if you are mentally weak,

because you’ve got to take a lot of beatings. You have to want it. A champion has to

know all aspects of his sport, all its facets. That’s why Pedro, ever methodical, jogs the track each day before the races.I want to win races

and I think for the first two races it helps to know the racetrack and know where the best part of the track is. After that, of course, the track changes and everybody knows how it is, but for the first couple of races it gives me an advantage.”

Page 7: #70 april '15 horseracingbc

www.horseracingbc.ca Arril 2015Issue # 70

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#100- 624 Agnes StreetNew Westminster, BC V3M 1G8

Remembering…

With great sadness and heavy hearts the children of Ron Principe announce his passing on February 25, 2015, at the age of 84, in Mission,BC. Ron was a man of many trades and talents but his biggest passion was his career as a jockey and a horse trainer, a passion he inherited from his grandfathers, Pop Principe and Grandfather Kirby. He travelled the race track circuit around North America, won several races in United States and was the key figure in the training of the first female jockey at Hastings Park.In recent years he came back to Hastings Park the place that truly brought him enjoyment and his presence there will be sadly missed by his ‘Race Track Family’. A Celebration of Ron’s Life will be held at a later date for friends and family.

Ron Principe1931 - 2015

Born in Burns Lake, B.C. Audrey moved to Burnaby in 1985 where she worked at the race track at Hasting Park helping with the horses and washing horse blankets. Whenever Audrey did something she had a tendency to take it to the extreme. Getting to know and to like Audrey could have been a bit of a challenge for some of the people that she encountered. She always seemed to have her guard up and could come across with a very crusty disposition at times. If she had something on her mind it usually found a way out. However, those that were able to get past that crusty exterior and find their way into her heart found that it was pure gold. She would give you anything she could if you were counted among her friends.In the final chapter of her life Audrey was living in Langley, working at Walmart and, of course, working on a couple of her favorite multi-level marketing projects. She met and befriended many nice people both at work and in the community at large. The people that liked Audrey liked her a lot. While she was crotchety at times, she had a heart of gold. She will be missed.

Audrey Brietkopf1939 - 2015

Page 8: #70 april '15 horseracingbc

www.horseracingbc.ca April 2015Issue # 70