HeresHoping
Well-Known Member
It's a long one...please feel free to skip to the third last paragraph.
Having decided that I have been spending far too long looking for another horse within the confines of my meagre budget to the detriment of my work (no work = no pay = no horse anyway), I decided to bite the bullet, (wo)man up and take a trip out to a dealer who had a few good looking youngish jobs advertised.
I did my homework (i.e. trawled through here and took on board comments, noted that the reputation of said dealer was no worse than some of the others) and armed myself with my husband who was instructed to mention the fact that he is a litigation lawyer at the earliest opportunity

and drove a couple of hours to Essex.
We got there half an hour late thanks to traffic
which was a tad embarrassing. Anyway, the two I'd come to see were in their stables. I inspected the first, a pretty warmblood two weeks off the boat with a very sweet temperament. Dismissed the second as although he had excellent breeding, I thought he was lacking bone and was very upright in the pasterns. Neither were exactly well covered.
Went back to the first and had a feel for a pulse - seemed normal - so perhaps this very placid nature was just her. Her fetlocks felt a little warm - but they all did so I thought that could possibly be due to being in on a warm day. He then popped a saddle on and said 'up you hop'. Must admit, that surprised me - but he was in a rush to get to a show. Surprised me enough that I didn't watch her trot up. B***er.
Anyway, to cut a long story short, I loved her. She made me look like an incompetent novice with washing line reins flapping and a somewhat lavatorial seat but I loved her. Our canter was a disaster - wrong leg. Twice. Then she kept going disunited. Fourth time, dealer suggested shortening my reins and using my legs
o) and she floated. We annihilated the 1' cross pole a couple of times and then flew the 2' 6" upright a couple of times. Wow, what a jump. Should have gone higher but I was conscious of the time. Which is a bad thing.
So, I put a 10% deposit (refundable, with witnessed receipt) down on her and said subject to vet. He told me that she'd been vetted coming off the boat but I told him that after three years of hell, I was doing this for my own peace of mind. He suggested I didn't use a certain vet (ho hum) but was open to all others in the area.
Now here's the niggle. I was watching the videos of our session and have noticed that her off hind rotates slightly inwards when she puts it down in walk. It's not noticeable in trot. R (my previous warmblood acquired by accident) used to do this but in a far more pronounced fashion. On her vet check with her previous owners, it said that this was a common KWPN trait - which was an odd thing to put, I thought. Considering R broke down (actually, she was never really sound from the moment she landed on my doorstep), I am absolutely kicking myself for not requesting she be trotted up now.
Is there anything specific this could indicate that I should ask the vet to check for, please? Having had to PTS my TB due to SI subluxation; I may be being over cautious. But the last horse I had vetted failed on all my extra questions.
The last of the cianti if you got that far. Thank you.
Having decided that I have been spending far too long looking for another horse within the confines of my meagre budget to the detriment of my work (no work = no pay = no horse anyway), I decided to bite the bullet, (wo)man up and take a trip out to a dealer who had a few good looking youngish jobs advertised.
I did my homework (i.e. trawled through here and took on board comments, noted that the reputation of said dealer was no worse than some of the others) and armed myself with my husband who was instructed to mention the fact that he is a litigation lawyer at the earliest opportunity
We got there half an hour late thanks to traffic
Went back to the first and had a feel for a pulse - seemed normal - so perhaps this very placid nature was just her. Her fetlocks felt a little warm - but they all did so I thought that could possibly be due to being in on a warm day. He then popped a saddle on and said 'up you hop'. Must admit, that surprised me - but he was in a rush to get to a show. Surprised me enough that I didn't watch her trot up. B***er.
Anyway, to cut a long story short, I loved her. She made me look like an incompetent novice with washing line reins flapping and a somewhat lavatorial seat but I loved her. Our canter was a disaster - wrong leg. Twice. Then she kept going disunited. Fourth time, dealer suggested shortening my reins and using my legs
So, I put a 10% deposit (refundable, with witnessed receipt) down on her and said subject to vet. He told me that she'd been vetted coming off the boat but I told him that after three years of hell, I was doing this for my own peace of mind. He suggested I didn't use a certain vet (ho hum) but was open to all others in the area.
Now here's the niggle. I was watching the videos of our session and have noticed that her off hind rotates slightly inwards when she puts it down in walk. It's not noticeable in trot. R (my previous warmblood acquired by accident) used to do this but in a far more pronounced fashion. On her vet check with her previous owners, it said that this was a common KWPN trait - which was an odd thing to put, I thought. Considering R broke down (actually, she was never really sound from the moment she landed on my doorstep), I am absolutely kicking myself for not requesting she be trotted up now.
Is there anything specific this could indicate that I should ask the vet to check for, please? Having had to PTS my TB due to SI subluxation; I may be being over cautious. But the last horse I had vetted failed on all my extra questions.
The last of the cianti if you got that far. Thank you.
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