Horse-Drawn Buggies Banned in Motul, Yucatan, Mexico
Stop Horse Drawn Carriages
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businesses.
Motul carriage horses often toiled all day in the hot
sun. They carted tourists by their backs and drove residents like taxis.
Now, an adapted motorcycle engine will work instead.

In an historic move, yet another city in Mexico officially banned
horse-drawn carriages. Motul, in the state of Yucatán, will now use
motorized, gas-powered buggies, reported Mexico News Daily.
Animal advocates around the world have long fought to end this regular
practice of animal cruelty.
Carriage horses labor for long hours in blistering weather conditions.
Though common, rides in urban settings are especially dangerous. Loud noises
can scare, spook, and stress horses. Pavement may cause painful damage to
their hooves.
Likewise, Motul carriage horses often toiled all day in the hot sun. They
carted tourists by their backs and drove residents like taxis. Now, an
adapted motorcycle engine will work instead, according to The Yucatán Times.
Cities throughout the State of Mexico, especially popular tourist
destinations, blazed a similar path of animal welfare.
In 2017, the city of Guadalajara replaced their 55 horse-drawn carriages
with a more ethical adapted motorcycle engine.
“We cannot continue to mistake the idea of tradition with animal abuse,”
then Guadalajara Mayor Enrique Alfaro Ramírez said. “That no longer has a
place in Guadalajara; we’ve put a stop to it today.”
Two years later, Mérida outlawed horse and buggies, followed by Progresso
last year and Cozumel this past May. And in Acapulco, authorities recently
starting enforcing animal welfare laws from over five years ago.
Lady Freethinker applauds the global effort to bring cruel tradition into
the modern era.
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