
The World Equestrian Games is the sport's premiere event, held ever four years. Hundreds of horses and their humans have already traveled from around the world to Tryon International Equestrian Center in Mill Spring, North Carolina, for the 13-day celebration of dressage, vaulting and more.
The center is more than 300 miles from the state's mandatory evacuation zones on the coast.
But areas in the western part of North Carolina are at risk of heavy rain and flooding depending on the track Florence ends up taking, CNN meteorologist Taylor Ward said.
Organizers and participants are maintaining a hopeful outlook. Opening ceremonies began late Tuesday afternoon under cloudy skies. By the end, rays of sunshine had fought through the cover.
The center was a refuge for horses from five states during 2017's Hurricane Irma and "robust contingency plans" are in place, said the World Equestrian Federation, which is known as the FEI.
The center has 1,288 permanent stalls on site and all barns are built to conform with the International Building Code to withstand winds up to 90 mph, FEI said. Numerous generators are on site, along with two high-volume wells, both of which are attached to emergency generators and supply drinkable water, the statement said.
"The horses are in the safest place here on site," the organization said.
Trans-Atlantic flights carrying more than 500 horses on 19 planes on Emirates SkyCargo began earlier this month. Remaining flights are scheduled to arrive this week.
State and federal health officials inspected each animal upon arrival. Some with "low-risk, poorly transmitted diseases" that are uncommon in the United States were allowed into the country, said Dr. Michael Neault, director of livestock health programs for the North Carolina Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. The agency developed quarantine plans for the animals at the venue, as it has done for animals in previous international competitions on American soil.
"This allows for a true world championship. Mitigation strategies were developed and implemented by both agencies to prevent establishment of these disease in the US," Neault said.
Both North and South Carolina have temporarily suspended some requirements restricting the movement of horses from one state to another if evacuations become necessary. As host of the World Equestrian Games, North Carolina's waiver says the exceptions do not apply to animals participating in the games, the state's waiver says.
"The current plan is to keep all horses secured on site and shelter in place. If evacuation becomes necessary because the location cannot keep them secured, they will be transported under USDA seal to the federal quarantine facilities located in New York and Florida," a USDA spokeswoman said.
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