kellyb
Active Member
Hi, Im looking for some advice from more experieneced than myself please!
We had a pony on loan for my 12 year old daughter. Although we have helped looked after other ponies previously, this was our first pony. After having her for 6 months we have had to make the very sad decision to send her back. We persevered for that time with many problems, none of which showed themselves before we agreed to take her on. Problems varied from biting to bolting and a serious food agression issue. Obviously this was not what we hoped for in our first pony and needless to say our daughter is heartbroken though deep down I think she realised that it had to happen.
We do not regret getting the pony because in the 6 months time we have learned so much!
We are now trying to find another pony. As we dont have much experience with buying a pony a loan feels much safer to us but there are not many Full loan ponies available that dont have "issues" that require a very experienced rider. Our daughter has been having lessons for 4 years and though quite confident most of the loan ponies are too large for her or require more experience and of course the last thing we want is to get into the situation we just were.
We have found a pony that is for sale for a very reasonable price. We have not seen him in person yet or even contacted the owner but according to her the pony is everything we would want....a very safe ride, a confidence giver, gentle , no vices etc but his price reflects the fact that he has "mild arthritis in his hocks".
My initial reaction, is to not even consider him because of the awful time we have had with our other pony but because he sounds like just what we want in every other way I am wondering if I should consider him anyway. He is only 6 years though so does this necessarily mean that the condition will get much worse with time, high vet bills, lameness or am I being overly negative and fearful?
Thank you in advance to anyone who can help.
We had a pony on loan for my 12 year old daughter. Although we have helped looked after other ponies previously, this was our first pony. After having her for 6 months we have had to make the very sad decision to send her back. We persevered for that time with many problems, none of which showed themselves before we agreed to take her on. Problems varied from biting to bolting and a serious food agression issue. Obviously this was not what we hoped for in our first pony and needless to say our daughter is heartbroken though deep down I think she realised that it had to happen.
We do not regret getting the pony because in the 6 months time we have learned so much!
We are now trying to find another pony. As we dont have much experience with buying a pony a loan feels much safer to us but there are not many Full loan ponies available that dont have "issues" that require a very experienced rider. Our daughter has been having lessons for 4 years and though quite confident most of the loan ponies are too large for her or require more experience and of course the last thing we want is to get into the situation we just were.
We have found a pony that is for sale for a very reasonable price. We have not seen him in person yet or even contacted the owner but according to her the pony is everything we would want....a very safe ride, a confidence giver, gentle , no vices etc but his price reflects the fact that he has "mild arthritis in his hocks".
My initial reaction, is to not even consider him because of the awful time we have had with our other pony but because he sounds like just what we want in every other way I am wondering if I should consider him anyway. He is only 6 years though so does this necessarily mean that the condition will get much worse with time, high vet bills, lameness or am I being overly negative and fearful?
Thank you in advance to anyone who can help.