windand rain
Well-Known Member
Growing up I wanted a horse I was a very lucky child when dad bought me one,
Horse cost £150 and his leather saddle the same that was 50 years ago when average wage was about 15 per week if that taking average was as 500 per week now
So the value of that horse would now be 36 times more expensive so £5400 for an average four year old nondescript tb the price would be that for the lovely mare I wanted a 4 year old warmblood type she was 1000 so would now be about 36,000 so horses have been very much devalued over the years She was an ordinary riding horse nothing special but bred by a stud
You can still buy a horse similar to mine for between less than £1000 and £1500 so horses have been devalued by about 80% or more just rough off the top of my head figures and because of this are more affordable to the "average joe"
Not entirely a bad thing but perhaps they would be less disposable if they were of greater financial value.
Owning a horse is now cheaper than decent riding lessons too I learned to ride at a hacking center that cost 25p in new money per hour so lessons have certainly kept pace with inflation but horse rices and costs have not
If horses were more expensive and fewer people could afford them would their welfare improve long term Obviously not in the short term as there would be millions of horses that were unaffordable
Horse cost £150 and his leather saddle the same that was 50 years ago when average wage was about 15 per week if that taking average was as 500 per week now
So the value of that horse would now be 36 times more expensive so £5400 for an average four year old nondescript tb the price would be that for the lovely mare I wanted a 4 year old warmblood type she was 1000 so would now be about 36,000 so horses have been very much devalued over the years She was an ordinary riding horse nothing special but bred by a stud
You can still buy a horse similar to mine for between less than £1000 and £1500 so horses have been devalued by about 80% or more just rough off the top of my head figures and because of this are more affordable to the "average joe"
Not entirely a bad thing but perhaps they would be less disposable if they were of greater financial value.
Owning a horse is now cheaper than decent riding lessons too I learned to ride at a hacking center that cost 25p in new money per hour so lessons have certainly kept pace with inflation but horse rices and costs have not
If horses were more expensive and fewer people could afford them would their welfare improve long term Obviously not in the short term as there would be millions of horses that were unaffordable