I'm posting this topic here, as an 'impartial' member of the Coffee Shop forum - grahame may have been reluctant to post such, as he has a vested interest in greyhounds - although I haven't asked him whether that's the case here.
So, from
the BBC» :
On Saturday, Towcester Racecourse in Northamptonshire will host the annual English Greyhound Derby, with a £175,000 prize at stake for the winner.While adored by some, the event has previously been a target for animal rights protestors, who claim the welfare of dogs is at stake so long as racing continues.
BBC News looks at where the divisive sport stands in 2025.
Earlier this year, the Welsh government announced it would ban greyhound racing "as soon as practically possible". It followed cross-party calls for a ban, a government consultation and a petition that attracted some 35,000 signatures.
No timeline has been announced for the ban, but it was welcomed by a coalition of animal welfare charities including the Dogs Trust, which said England, Scotland and Northern Ireland should follow suit. "Greyhound racing is inherently dangerous for the dogs involved, and running at speed around oval tracks causes significant injury to many dogs," it said. "In some cases, the injuries are so severe that it is necessary to euthanise the dog."
However, the
UK▸ culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, said in February that there were "absolutely no plans" to extend the ban announced in Wales.
According to data published by the Greyhound Board of Great Britain, 109 dogs died trackside at races in 2023. The number does not include deaths which may have occurred during training, or that have resulted later from injuries incurred during racing.
In 2023, welfare group Animal Rising scaled scaffolding in a bid to disrupt the greyhound derby at Towcester. The racecourse said the action had cost it "thousands of pounds" in security, but racing had not been disrupted.
That BBC news article continues, in some detail, so I won't quote all of it here - but please do click on
the link if you would like to read more.
Meanwhile, I have become increasingly familiar with grahame's two greyhounds, in Melksham. They are both great characters, the senior one leading their pursuits over the lawns towards squirrels, pigeons, a neighbour's cat, or indeed anything else they spotted 'on the ground'.
Chris.
