emmab13
Well-Known Member
I've noticed there are soooo many threads about how people have bought their safe, sane confidence giver and as it has stepped off the lorry has turned into the devil incarnate.
Selling a lot of horses, we get this phonecall about once every year. I have driven from Lancashire to Norfolk, and back, in a day, to ride one who had gone from pleasant and a bit boring to 'unrideable' during the journey down South.
After getting on it from the floor (you 'couldn't get on without a leg, and two people holding it') and riding it down the road (it won't leave the yard), I was then told to ride it in a 60 acre hay field (the indoor isn't free). So I did. Then when it became obvious to the customer (who was videoing the whole thing) that I wasn't going to fall off or die the indoor became miraculously free.
I have had the whole yard (think 20 people) hanging over the arena fence waiting for me to be bucked off, driven hundreds of miles just to prove a point before taking a horse back anyway, and only once have I got there to find the horse a lot sharper than it was when we got it, and god knows what happened because it took a month to fix when it came back.
Mostly, it is easier to just take the horse back unless the buyer really wants to try. You do not need someone continually falling off their horse and telling everyone they got it from you.
No offense to anyone who is in this situation, but in my experience there are more and more non-horsepeople getting horses. If your horse is used to being handled in a certain way, and without you even realising looks to you for reassurance, when it goes somewhere else, to someone who perhaps isn't as experienced, it is going to be a bit sensitive. Then when the customer misreads the signals and makes the wrong choice at the wrong time, all hell can break loose.
When we sell to experienced horse people we NEVER (touchwood) have this problem, its when we sell to your everyday, never wants to jump more than 2'6'' sort of person that they occasionally bounce back. JMHO
Selling a lot of horses, we get this phonecall about once every year. I have driven from Lancashire to Norfolk, and back, in a day, to ride one who had gone from pleasant and a bit boring to 'unrideable' during the journey down South.
After getting on it from the floor (you 'couldn't get on without a leg, and two people holding it') and riding it down the road (it won't leave the yard), I was then told to ride it in a 60 acre hay field (the indoor isn't free). So I did. Then when it became obvious to the customer (who was videoing the whole thing) that I wasn't going to fall off or die the indoor became miraculously free.
I have had the whole yard (think 20 people) hanging over the arena fence waiting for me to be bucked off, driven hundreds of miles just to prove a point before taking a horse back anyway, and only once have I got there to find the horse a lot sharper than it was when we got it, and god knows what happened because it took a month to fix when it came back.
Mostly, it is easier to just take the horse back unless the buyer really wants to try. You do not need someone continually falling off their horse and telling everyone they got it from you.
No offense to anyone who is in this situation, but in my experience there are more and more non-horsepeople getting horses. If your horse is used to being handled in a certain way, and without you even realising looks to you for reassurance, when it goes somewhere else, to someone who perhaps isn't as experienced, it is going to be a bit sensitive. Then when the customer misreads the signals and makes the wrong choice at the wrong time, all hell can break loose.
When we sell to experienced horse people we NEVER (touchwood) have this problem, its when we sell to your everyday, never wants to jump more than 2'6'' sort of person that they occasionally bounce back. JMHO