SusannaF
Well-Known Member
I don't get it.
BBC News item:
That's not really an incentive for anyone but the meat man (and if there's a surplus and they have to be slaughtered, well, so be it
) Why don't they bring the stallions in or geld most of them? That's another way of improving breed quality.
Then:
Since when did Welshies become a rare breed
BBC News item:
Up to 100 Welsh mountain ponies will go for sale at market in what organisers say will help strengthen the breed and manage numbers in mid and south Wales.
The foals will be auctioned at Brecon, Powys, later this month, with the Hill Pony Improvement Societies of Wales encouraging people to buy them.
Officials said it would protect the breed and weed out poorer quality animals.
That's not really an incentive for anyone but the meat man (and if there's a surplus and they have to be slaughtered, well, so be it
Then:
Colin Thomas, secretary of the Hill Pony Improvement Societies of Wales, said: "The ponies are a rare breed and this sale, which will be the first of its type in Wales, will protect the breed and weed out inferior ponies and consolidate the numbers.
"They make ideal children's ponies and have excellent temperaments, but those not sold could be slaughtered.
Since when did Welshies become a rare breed